Manulife Shores Up Its Capital Base

Article Excerpt

Canadian life-insurance stocks are down lately on investor concerns that the economic slowdown will continue to hurt their profits. As well, insurers use gains on their bond and stock holdings to cover future claims and to make up underwriting losses. They have suffered as the values of these securities have fallen, along with credit quality and stock markets. Manulife Financial has recently raised a substantial amount of capital, which will help it cope with the current downturn. It also gives it the flexibility to make acquisitions at bargain prices, especially from troubled U.S. insurers. MANULIFE FINANCIAL $20.15 (Toronto symbol MFC; Shares outstanding: 1.5 billion; Market cap: $30.1 billion; SI Rating: Above-Average) sells life and other forms of insurance, as well as mutual funds and investment-management services. Manulife operates in 19 countries and territories worldwide, and adminsters $385.3 billion in assets. In the three months ended September 30, 2008, Manulife’s earnings fell 52.7%, to $503 million, or $0.34 a share, from $1.1 billion, or $0.70…