CNA to Sell Life, Group Insurance Unit to Wilton Re

February 10, 2014

CNA Financial Corp. said it would sell its life and group insurance business, on the same day that parent Loews Corp. reported a bigger quarterly loss, hurt by impairment charges.

CNA said it was selling the business, Continental Assurance Co., to a subsidiary of Wilton Re Holdings Ltd., and was expecting to book an after-tax charge of about $220 million in the first quarter of 2014.

CNA said it expected net proceeds of about $615 million from the sale and a portion of this would be in the form of a dividend from Continental.

The sale will reduce CNA’s non-core life and group gross GAAP insurance reserves by $3.4 billion, or 25 percent, and dispose of most of CNA’s payout annuity business.

CNA said it expected the transaction to close in the second quarter of 2014.

Loews’ net loss widened to $198 million, or 51 cents per share, in the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31 from $32 million, or 8 cents per share, a year earlier.

The company said it took goodwill impairment charges of $398 million in the quarter, primarily related to low market prices for natural gas and natural gas liquids in its HighMount Exploration & Production LLC unit.

Loews, owned by the billionaire Tisch family, also booked a charge of $111 million, related to CNA’s transfer of its asbestos and pollution liabilities to Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s National Indemnity Co. unit.

Loews’ revenue rose 5 percent to $3.89 billion in the quarter.

Excluding charges, the company had an income of $356 million for the quarter, mainly due to higher earnings at CNA and increased investment income.

CNA posted a profit for the fourth quarter compared with a loss a year earlier, helped by an improvement in its underwriting results and lower disaster-related claims.

Shares of Loews, which has a market capitalization of about $17 billion, closed at $45.18 on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange.