Manulife trims its risk

Article Excerpt

MANULIFE FINANCIAL CORP. $26.10 (Toronto symbol MFC; Shares outstanding: 2.0 billion; Market cap: $52.5 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Above Average; Dividend yield: 3.1%; www.manulife.ca) is now Canada’s largest life insurer. As the company’s new CEO, Roy Gori plans to cut Manulife’s dependence on its “alternative assets.” They include direct investments in timberland, agricultural crops, and oil and gas wells. Gori’s predecessor, Donald Guloien, saw those purchases as a way to boost returns for Manulife’s investment portfolio at a time of low interest rates. They have, however, led to increased earnings volatility, including the company’s $875 million writedown of its energy assets in 2015. Valued at $35 billion, alternative assets represent nearly 11% of Manulife’s $325 billlion investment portfolio. The company plans to reduce the holdings over the next 12 to 18 months, but will first write down the value of those assets by $1 billion when it reports its 2017 fourth quarter results. Selling alternative assets should cut risk. The proceeds can also be invested in…