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Prudential Financial, Inc. (PRU 0.52%)
Q2 2018 Earnings Conference Call
Aug. 1, 2018, 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Ladies and Gentlemen: Thank you for your patience in standing by and welcome to the Prudential second quarter of 2018 earnings call. At this time, all of your participant phone lines are in a listen-only mode and later there'll be an opportunity here for your questions. Just a brief reminder, today's conference is being recorded and I would now like to turn the conference over to Head of Investor Relations, Darin Arita.

Darin Arita -- Head of Investor Relations

Thank you, Justin. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Representing Prudential on today's call are John Strangfeld, Chairman and CEO, Mark Grier, Vice Chairman, Charlie Lowrey, Head of International Businesses, Steve Pelletier, Head of Domestic Businesses, Rob Falzon, Chief Financial Officer, and Rob Axel, Principal Accounting Officer. We will start with prepared comments by John, Mark, and Rob, and then we will take your question.

Today's presentation may include forward-looking statements. IT is possible that actual results may differ materially from the predictions we make today. In addition, this presentation may include references to non-GAAP measures. For a reconciliation of such measures to the comparable GAAP measures and a discussion of factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements please see the section titled forward-looking statements and non-GAAP measures of the materials for today's presentation. These can be found on our website at investor.prudential.com.

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You will notice that we made changes to the format of our slide presentation. We hope this provides you with more color on the strategic direction of our company and the key priorities of our businesses. Also, as a reminder, we will be hosting an investor day in Tokyo on the morning of September 27th. The focus will be on international businesses with an emphasis on Japan. We hope that you will be able to join us. And with that, let's turn to slide two and I will hand it over to John.

John Strangfeld -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Darin. Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us. We are pleased with the momentum of our business in the first half of the year. We continue to bring financial opportunity to more and more customers around the world in new, exciting, and compelling ways. I will expand on our US financial wellness initiative in a few moments. We generated an attractive operating return on equity and double-digit growth in both adjusted earnings per share and adjusted book value per share. And, with our strong capital position, we returned approximately $760 million to shareholders as well significantly strengthened our long-term care reserves. We expect to continue a robust level of capital return and to utilize the remaining $750 million of our share repurchase authorization by the end of the year.

Turning to slide three, I will provide some additional financial highlights on the second quarter. We produced an annualized operating return on equity of 13.5%, which was above our near to intermediate term objective of 12% to 13%. Our second quarter adjusted earnings per share of $3.01 grew significantly from the prior year. This increase was driven by growth in the business, tax reform, and assumption updates. Adjusting for notable items, earnings per share grew 16%. Our current quarter net income was also affected primarily by the significant strengthening of our long-term care reserves as I noted earlier. Rob Falzon will discuss this in more detail.

Our adjusted book value per share of 92.60 is up 14% over the prior year. This increase reflects the earnings we generated as well as the impact of tax reform and accounting changes the start of 2018. Partially offsetting these items were the payment of $3.30 per share of common stock dividends and about 1.4 billion of share repurchases over the past year. With respect to our business segments, here are some highlights from the quarter. PGIM, which is our investment management business, continued to produce positive net flows with 7.3 billion in the quarter.

 Our retirement business had record account values of 433 billion, including net flows of 2.8 billion driven by pension risk transfer and full-service sales. The third quarter has started well with our recently announced pension risk transfer transaction with Raytheon, totaling close to $1 billion. Our individual annuities business produced sales of 2.1 billion, which were 37% higher than the prior year and up 20% sequentially. And, in international, we continue to produce steady in force growth.

Turning to slide four, I'm extremely excited about our potential to accelerate earnings growth as we continue to unlock value through our unique business model. Not only does our model allow us to manage risk and deploy capital in a way that is attractive to shareholders, our model and business mix also allows us to design and deliver integrative solutions at scale to bring financial security more into reach for a growing base of customers. By combining our competencies across disciplines, we generate outcomes that other companies simply cannot replicate.

There are three key points I'd like to make regarding our financial wellness initiative in the United States. First, we have built up significant experience since launching this initiative three years ago and have continued to innovate. Second, we believe our integrated holistic solutions, which are available in person or online, provide meaningful differentiation in the market. And third, our value proposition is resonating with employers and individuals and this is resulting in commercial success. We view financial wellness as a way to help people drive behaviors that allow them to effectively manage their day-to-day finances, achieve their most important financial goals, and protect themselves against key risks.

As a reminder, we launched financial wellness with the introduction of Prudential Pathways. And in this program, our Prudential advisors provide education for employees of our workplace clients. Should these employees want more information and solutions for their needs, they can follow up with our advisors. Customers can also receive education and solutions in digital form since the launch of our digital financial wellness platform. Employers also find significant value in this digital platform, as they can better understand the financial wellness of their overall employee population.

We have critical ingredients to deliver integrative solutions that address the holistic financial needs of individuals and these include our own financial advisors, workplace access to over 20 million people via our retirement and group insurance businesses, income and protection solutions via our individual annuities and individual life businesses, and investment management solutions via PGIM. All of this is built on our own technology platform. This integration creates value in several ways.

First, institutional customers only need to work with one party. Second, we can enhance customer experiences and solutions and these experiences are personalized with solutions tailored to each person's needs. We have the flexibility to adapt and refine the experiences and solutions by having all of the capabilities I previously mentioned. And this is further enabled by our digital and data analytics expertise.

And third, having all the parts of the value chain will allow us to lever sustainable value to our shareholders. Our solutions that I'm describing are resonating. Since launching financial wellness, over 350 employers representing more than 4 million employees have signed up with Prudential Pathways. When people attend the educational seminars, many schedule follow up meetings with our financial advisors. The types of employers that have signed up represent a broad spectrum and include several well-known brands from among the largest and fastest growing companies in the country.

Also, approximately 200 employers are using our digital financial wellness platform. We're very excited about how our business has come together to make a meaningful difference in the financial health for people. And innovations like Prudential Pathways and our digital financial wellness platform don't happen without an inclusive, empowering culture, that promotes internal partnerships. We've witnessed the power of bringing together different perspectives, experiences, and expertise to gain deeper insights, develop new offerings, and enter new markets.

 Our own pension risk transfer business was born from this type of an entrepreneurial culture and partnering capability and financial wellness is another great example. I continue to believe that Prudential's culture is a competitive advantage and I'm excited to see how our talented people continue to push the company into new areas for growth; areas that are consistent with our mission and our purpose. With that, I'll turn it over to Mark who will provide an update on how our businesses are executing on key priorities.

Mark Grier -- Vice Chairman

Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening. Thank you, John. I'll be going through comments on each of our businesses in a few minutes but let me start off by reminding you that we've often talked about ourselves as a very good story around developing thoughtful strategies, executing well, building good business fundamentals, and realizing attractive financial results. And in fact, we often start our earnings calls by talking about the attractive business fundamentals reflected in sales and flows for example that we're experiencing in our businesses.

So under that umbrella of the themes; strategy, executive, fundamentals, and results, I'm going to make a few comments on each of our businesses. I won't be going through that whole equation for everything we do everywhere but there are things that are worth highlighting in the context of each of our businesses. Before I get into a business-by-business discussion though, let me mention a few common themes that run across our businesses. And these are themes that are not necessarily so visible. These are things that are in the heart of our execution processes that are making differences to us in our markets and with our clients.

The first common theme and its part of a lot of what John talked about is the notion of enhancing our value propositions. The practical consequence of that is that we are able to compete on a basis other than just price because of the attraction of the value proposition that we put in front of our clients. Importantly, this is not a theoretical aspiration for us. We're seeing real results in the marketplace reflecting differentiation and reflecting the attraction of a value proposition that goes beyond price competition.

The second common theme that runs across our businesses relates to what we're doing to impact the front end, our customer-facing activities. And almost everywhere, we're doing things that are changing our client experiences folding into the notion of enhanced value propositions and again, having concrete results with respect to either individual or institutional businesses. And then finally, technology runs across so many of the things that we're doing that it's worth highlighting the idea of digital, mobile, and data in a number of aspects of our businesses.

John mentioned how important technology is to the financial wellness proposition but technology runs through a lot of the things that we're doing in the context of that front-end impact and also in the context of the enhanced value proposition. So a big deal there, and each of these impacting what we do in the markets every day are things that are driving the attractive business fundamentals that you're seeing. I want to now comment on the individual businesses. I'm gonna start with slide five. This one is titled PGIM -- and again, I'm not gonna go through the whole equation for everything everywhere but I want to make some points that tie things together around our themes.

With respect to PGIM, our headline for a while has been net flows. Every year we've counted one more year of consecutive positive flows, up now to 15 years of consecutive, positive net flows in our institutional business. Thirteen consecutive years of positive net flows in our retail businesses. But the story isn't just arithmetic. These net flows tie specifically to the key priorities that are mentioned on the right-hand side of this slide. I guess if there's a leading indicator of future flows, it's the first bullet under key priorities, which is investment performance.

You see metrics there that provide extremely attractive messages and signals about the prospects where future flows in this business. As our performance ages, we'll see three-year records becoming five-year records, and five-year records becoming 10-year records, and you see very attractive performance relative to benchmark. That has been one of the anchors over time driving our flows in the institutional and retail investment businesses. Then you see some strategy bullets and we've talked about these.

Leveraging scale, realizing the benefits of operating leverage, especially as we've highlighted in public fixed income. But also expanding our global footprint. We are getting mandates from around the world. We are receiving recognition as an asset manager in publications in Europe, for example, and in publications in Asia, for example. So the global footprint story really is working. I think the PGIM brand has been very helpful to us in that regard.

And then, diversification with respect to products and capabilities. We've talked about strategy initiatives and I've highlighted PGIM over and over as a great story over the past five or six years that relates strategy execution and results and so those flows do tie back to exacting the things that are listed under priorities to grow. I comment finally, on the lower right-hand side of this, our overall fee rate is holding up very well in PGIM. And we've talked about the mix changes that are helping to offset some of the dynamics of product changes within asset management. And those mix changes continue to serve us well.

Turning to the next slide that's on retirement. The big story here, I think, is probably across the board flows. You see on the bottom institutional investment product flows and full-service net flows in institutional investment products. We did about $1 billion of PRT deals in the second quarter. John mentioned a big deal that's been done since then. And we did about $2.4 billion in two jumbo longevity swaps during the quarter. So we continue to see robust business flows on the institutional side.

On the full-service side, in the first half of the year, we had $16 billion in sales and deposits and that resulted in the $3 billion net positive full-service flow for the first half of the year. On the point I made earlier about differentiated value proposition, I would highlight the first bullet under key priorities to grow, which is the potential impact on our retirement businesses, especially full service, of the thing that we're doing in financial wellness and how important that can be as part of our value proposition to clients. And as I said, it's not just a theoretical aspiration, it's happening. We see business coming in because of what we can do in the wellness arena.

Turning to the next slide group insurance. I guess the highlight here is to tie again back to the idea that our value proposition is resonating. We're closing, as John's slide mentioned, marquee business, not just on the basis of price but on the basis of the wellness proposition and other dimensions of service. Under key priorities here, we mentioned financial wellness again, but the third bullet also mentions improved organizational and process efficiencies.

And we're doing things there that are impacting our customer experience and impacting our value propositions and these things are paying off. The way in which we're approaching customers goes beyond the inclusion of the wellness initiative in our overall package to some specific aspects of how we deal with and how we treat clients. How we service customers, both at the individual level as beneficiaries, for example, but also at the institutional level as group insurance clients.

Turning to the next slide individual annuities. I want to highlight three things. On the bottom left, you see that sales are growing. And what I would say about sales is that they're growing, they're well diversified, and we're selling at prices that are achieving or exceeding our target returns. So it's a good, solid, attractive sales picture reflecting efforts we've made in the product arena but also reflecting our pricing discipline with respect to meeting profit targets.

The second thing I want to highlight is on the bottom right and that is the flow of dividends from our annuity business 2PFI. We have promised you as we structured and talked about the potential in this business that we would generate healthy cash flows from our variable annuity business to the parent. And we are realizing that as you see in that slide.

And then finally, the third bullet under key priorities to grow reflects part of what variable annuities can do to be part of the integrated solutions that John mentioned, that we're delivering across businesses, particularly with respect to secure retirement income in the workplace as it relates to individual annuities. We've launched a product called guaranteed income for tomorrow. The short phrase for that is GIFT. And this is a specific extension of secure retirement income products into the workplace market in a way that we feel is very attractive and is an important complement to what we're doing overall in financial wellness.

Let me turn now individual life in the next slide. I want to talk about two things here. One is the broad sales picture, which we would describe as very solid. But then this is an area where we're doing things that are impacting value proposition and impact on our client interfaces that are extremely important. We've added a capability that we call PruFast Track, which is an end-to-end solution that combines policies in as quickly as 48 hours. This compares to a traditional issue process that may take several weeks. This process eliminates the need for health examinations.

This capability is unique in the marketplace coming from Prudential in several dimensions. One is, we're selling our own products and our binding. We offer a broad array of products, including term, variable universal life, fixed universal life, and indexed universal life. We sell face amounts up to $1 million for age ranges between 18 and 60. We anticipate fully rolling this out in our third-party channels by the end of August and we're optimistic that processes like this, which make life easier for people to do business with an insurance company, can have a significant positive impact on sales. The analogy generally is the whole digital world where things are just easier and we're making things easier in our individual life business.

Let me turn now to international and there are two slides. And I want to highlight common themes and then a couple of specifics on each. There are three drivers of our international story at this point and they're probably familiar. One is the importance of dollar products overall but particularly in Japan. Our ability to sell dollar products because of the quality of our sales forces has allowed us to maintain strong sales results and strong profitability even in an environment in which some of the local currency products. Again, especially referring to yen, have been challenged in terms of both attractiveness in the marketplace as well as profitability.

Headline number one is the importance of dollar products. And you see graphs of sales mix by currency on both of the pieces of the international picture. Second key bullet; the management of our life planner and life consultant forces. This includes growth, it includes quality, and I just referenced quality in talking about dollar sales, and it also includes productivity, all of which are strong and improving for us and terrific assets in terms of the way we do business.

And then finally, a new one for us to talk about in international, which is digital, mobile, and data analytics initiatives. And I would describe this as something below the level of total international, thoughtful, market-by-market, tailored to the circumstances in our individual markets. But a package of initiatives that we'll be talking more and more about as we mature both in terms of our front-end initiatives and in our back office and other capabilities.

So just quickly on life planners. We've been through a couple of experiences, which we've talked about where we've had a blip in sales manager growth followed by better results in terms of life planner growth. We're kind of nearing one of those blips right now. We have appointed a lot of sales managers and we're anticipating that there will be some reflection of that sales manager growth in life planner hiring over the next couple of years. It doesn't happen the next day but there's a strong basic dynamic around the second bullet under priorities, which is growth life planners. And that important dynamic relates to appointing sales managers. And then I mentioned sales mix by currency just to highlight that on the bottom of that slide on the right.

And then turning to Gibraltar Life. Two comments here, one is the currency results. And again, how important US dollar products are and tying that back to the quality of our sales force and what they can do in the market that many others can't do. But I also want to highlight the multi-channel approach that's reflected in Gibraltar's results. Looking at the sales mix on the left where you see distribution, we have life consultants. We also have independent agents and we also have the bank channel.

And so we continue to optimize across those channels with respect to both product design and ultimately, volume and price. Good attractive results there. That said, as I said, I've highlighted some pieces under the strategy executive fundamentals and results equation. Good stories everywhere for us and some things that may not have been so visible that we're happy to be able to talk about. And with that, I'll hand it over to Rob.

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Mark. I'm gonna pick it up beginning on slide 12 by highlighting the notable items, which have impacted the current quarter adjusted operating results. We have combined what we previously called market driven and discreet items with trend considerations into a single list of notable items. These items consist of the impact on results from our annual reviews, including assumption updates, and other refinements, the quarterly updated estimate of individual annuities profitability driven by market performance, and the impact attributable to variances from our expectations for selected variable revenues and expenses. We highlight these items because their contribution to current quarter results may not be indicative of future performance.

This year's actuarial review included economic and insurance assumption updates and other refinements and resulted in a net unfavorable pre-tax adjusted operating income impact of $160 million on our ongoing businesses. We expect no meaningful change to our run rate earnings across our businesses from these updates and refinements. Current quarter returns on non-coupon investments and prepayment fees were about $10 million below our long-term expectations.

In addition, the current quarter underwriting experience was approximately $85 million better than our average expectations, including favorable pension transfer case experience in retirement. And finally, our group insurance business incurred elevated expenses in the current quarter including the costs to terminate a third-party underwriting service provider contract. These services will be performed internally, which should reduce future underwriting costs. In total, these notable items reduced earnings by $102 million or $0.19 per share. Excluding these notable items, earnings per share would be $3.20 up 16% from the year-ago quarter.

Turning now to slide 13, I'll spend a few minutes discussing our long-term care business. We entered the long-term care business in the 1990s and actually issued our first individual long-term care product in 1999. In 2012, we discontinued all sales of long-term care products, classified this business as a divested business, and strengthened reserves by $700 million. We currently have approximately 211,000 policies in force with about 2% of these policies currently generating claims. We have been actively managing our long-term care bloc by enhancing our claims manager programs, optimizing our cost structure, and successfully pursuing rate increases.

Our experience of applying for and receiving approvals for rate increases is consistent with the assumptions in our reserves. Included in our reserves is $1 billion of combined future rate increases and benefit reductions in lieu of rate increases, which have not yet been approved. During the quarter, we strengthened our GAAP reserves by $1.5 million as a result of updating our actuarial assumptions. We removed our morbidity improvement assumption of a 1% reduction in claims cost per year over a 20-year period, which increased our best estimate reserve by $1.4 billion. In addition, there were a number of other changes to our assumptions, the net effect of which was largely offset by the margin in our reserves that existed prior to the update. These changes align our assumptions with experience and industry data.

Although we removed our morbidity improvement assumption, we retained our mortality improvement assumption. If we also removed this latter assumption, our best estimate reserve would've been reduced by about $850 million. While strengthening our reserves, we continue to maintain a strong capital position and do not anticipate any change through our capital deployment plants, including the level of dividends and stock repurchases.

For additional detail, we have included the key assumptions and sensitivities to changes in these assumptions in the appendix of this slide deck. We've also included in the appendix additional details about the bloc. Here are a few of the highlights from that data. Our average attained age is 65 years old, which is relatively young and therefore likely to provide more time to collect premiums. About two-thirds of our book is group issue, which tends to have lower benefits than individual policies. And as a result, less than 10% of our total policies have lifetime benefits and less than 30% contained compound inflation features.

Now, turning to slide 14, I will provide an update on key balance sheet items and financial measures. Our cash and highly liquid assets of the parent company amounted to $4.7 billion at the end of the quarter. The sequential quarter decline of about $400 million was driven primarily by our redemption of high coupon junior subordinated note partially offset by cash inflows, which were in excess of shareholder distributions during the quarter.

Shareholder distributions included dividends of $382 million and share repurchases of $375 million. The share repurchase authorization for the remainder of the year was $750 million as of June 30th. Our domestic and international regulatory capital ratios are above our AA financial strength targeted levels. And our financial leverage and total leverage ratios remain within our targets as of the end of the second quarter. In addition, we do not expect material impacts to capital for the proposed variable annuities statutory framework changes adopted by the NAIC variable annuities issues working group last week.

In summary, we are executing on our strategies and generating strong returns in growth in our adjusted earnings per share and adjusted value per share while maintaining a robust capital position. Now, we'll turn it to the operator for questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. So, ladies and gentlemen, it is *1 if you'd like to queue up here for any question. First, we'll go to the line of John Nadel of UBS. Your line is open.

John Nadel -- UBS -- Analyst

Hey, good morning. So this has been a long day and there's a lot going on. I guess the first question I have is when I think about the morbidity improvement in the removal of that assumption from your long-term care reserves, was that something that was an internally motivated decision or was there any external influence on that decision, whether from regulatory bodies or rating agencies or any other constituents?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

John, it's Rob. That decision was entirely an internally motivated decision. It was done with the benefit of consulting with industry experts and others in the industry from which we were able to glean insides as to trends that were occurring within the industry. But was not done in reaction to any regulatory stimulus. If I expand on that a little bit, perhaps, and perhaps a little redundant with what I might've stated in my opening remarks. We discontinued the business back in 2012 and we took a $700 million strengthening of our reserves at that point in time.

As I mentioned, we incorporated our reserve estimates for the morbidity improvement, which means people living healthier, which reduced our required reserves. As well as mortality improvement, which meant that people living longer, which conversely increases our reserves. Given the lack of the statistically significant experience in our book at that point in time, we relied on guidance from consultants, academic research, and industry practice. Since then, neither our experience, which now has sort of more statistical significant associated with it or any of that consultation or survey within the industry has indicated that there's been any morbidity improvement trend.

At the same time, we're seeing the mortality improvements in this business and in other businesses. Based on that, we elected to remove the morbidity improvement assumption and that gave rise to that $1.4 billion charge while maintaining the mortality improvement assumption. And as I indicated in my remarks, that's about an $850 million addition to reserves, or attribution to reserves as a part of our assumption update process. Recognizing that that's a more conservative approach that others in the industry have taken but it's consistent with our updated view of best estimate.

John Nadel -- UBS -- Analyst

That's really helpful, I really appreciate that. And then, just following up on that; is that change applied to both the individual and the group long-term care bloc? Did you have that assumption in both places? And if so, can you give us an estimate on how to allocate that piece of it?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

So yes, the assumption was pertained to both blocs of business group and individual. And the old assumption and in the update, so it's been removed by both. The impact on either of those blocs in any given assumption actually is gonna be variable so there's not a consistent rule of thumb that you can use. With regard to this particular assumption, roughly what I would say is about 60% of it would've been driven from the individual bloc and about 40% of it from the group bloc.

John Nadel -- UBS -- Analyst

Okay, and then just one quick follow-up on an actual business question. Within investment management or PGIM, results really stepped up in terms of the pre-tax operating income contribution. Looks like that was -- I mean, revenues were sort of in line. You continue to grow very nicely. It looked like the biggest driver of the jump was the reduction in spending. Is that sustainable? And if so, what is driving that? Is it just sort of the runoff of some of the investment spending you've been making?

Steve Pelletier -- Head of Domestic Businesses

John, this is Steve, I'll address your question. There's going to be some variability in relation to timing of expenses. For example, on a sequential quarter, our first quarter expenses were ordinarily be elevated by how we account for our long-term incentive compensation in the asset management business. And you're not seeing that show up in the same way in the second quarter.

Also, as you note, looking at a longer-term time trend some of the investments that we've been making in the business are reaching maturity and are yielding very, very significant benefits. But I would say that the main drivers looking at a year timeframe or a multi-year timeframe in the asset management business and the growth and earnings there have been continuing to attract very strong and robust flows; attracting those flows into areas where we already have existing strategies so therefore we're able to onboard the flows in a very effective way and expand our margins and our ability -- our ability that we've spoken about before, which we think is pretty distinctive in the industry to maintain a stable average fee structure across the entire book of business at about 22 basis points. So all of those factors together we see as really being the underpinning of positive earnings flow in positive earnings trends in PGIM.

Operator

Next, we have the line of Tom Gallagher of Evercore. Your line is open.

Tom Gallagher -- Evercore -- Analyst

Good morning. Hey, Rob, first just to follow-up to John's question. Removing the morbidity improvement assumption with only 2% of your book now on claim, do you really have enough experience in terms of your own data to see that you're not seeing the emergence of morbidity improvement? Or did you have to rely pretty heavily to that assumption change on the third party consulting advice as well? Or was it a mix? Any help on that would be appreciated.

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

So, Tom, I would say it was a balance between the two. I would say, well when we initially took this we had very little experience. We've now got five, six years worth of experience that statistically you would call significant. As we look at that data, there's noise and it clearly, as you would think given it still is a relatively shorter measurement period and as we indicated the number of claims that we have is small relative to the overall book and to the population of claimants that are across the industry.

So we complemented that with looking externally and talking with consultants that we know have insights into what's happening across the industry to confirm that what we're seeing isn't any different than what others are experiencing across the industry. And based on what we got from those conversations and looking at our own book, felt that there was no discernable trend toward morbidity change.

And so, our best estimate there for recognizing that it could go either way. So it's something that you're trying to get, as a midpoint is that there is no morbidity improvement occurring in our book or across the industry that would cause us to think that our book would ultimately behave in a different way than it has been. And if you don't mind, let me just sort of add-on further thoughts on that. I think that this was, as we noted, it was somewhat unusual vis-a-vis peers in the industry we recognize that. And while the charge associated with it at $1.4 billion is in excess of what street expectations might've been as we're beginning to look at this.

But I would emphasize that we have a very strong capital position and it is largely unaffected by our across the board second quarter assumption updates. We continue to have the flexibility to finance our growth, including investments in our new business initiatives while redeploying capital. Including, as I mentioned in my opening remarks, to our shareholders through dividends and stock repurchases. It's completely consistent with our existing plans. And all of that incidentally includes absorbing fuller the impact of the tax act while maintaining our targeted AA solvency ratios. Currently still at a 400% FICO ratio. And remaining within our targets for liquidity and leverage as well.

Tom Gallagher -- Evercore -- Analyst

Thanks for that. And then, just a question about the trends you're seeing in the long-term care bloc. I know in 2017, there was sort of this spike in incurred claims up around 50%. As that trend continued into 2018, was that also part of the upsizing of the charge here or has that calmed down in terms of the actual trend?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

So let me try taking a stab at that this way, Tom. When we did our assumptions, our assumptions now reflect our full historical experience through 2017 and based on that, our actual to expected is running at 100% over that period of time. And as we look at our 2018 experience as it's emerging, it is entirely consistent with those revised set of assumptions. You sort of think about as an average over that period of time and 2018 being reflective of what that average is, recognizing that in any given period, be it quarter or year, you can get noise, as we saw during 2017.

Tom Gallagher -- Evercore -- Analyst

Thanks. And just one other quick one. The statutory charge you took, the 600 million, was that just on claim reserves or did you adjust active life reserves at all?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

No, that was the ALR. That was the active life reserve adjustment, Tom. So the $600 million -- there was a small adjustment in GAAP and stat for the disabled life. The driver in both statutory and in GAAP was on our active life reserve. The 600 million was significantly less than the GAAP reserve because we had more margins in our reserves on a statutory basis relative to GAAP. But the same set of assumptions are used in the adjustments that we made in GAAP in stat with the only difference being that stat, as you can see in the total reserves, they're slightly larger as a result of the pads that you have in stack relative to our GAAP results.

Operator

Next, we have the line of Suneet Kamath of Citi. Your line is open.

Suneet Kamath -- Citi -- Analyst

Thanks. Just wanted to go back to the morbidity improvement. You've removed the 1% assumption but could that go the other way? In other words, if claims costs go up by 1% over 20 years would that essentially, based on your sensitivities require and other 1.4 billion of reserves?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

Let me try, Suneet, to answer that question this way. We removed the morbidity improvement assumption, as you indicated. We did provide to you sensitivities with regard to claims costs. And so, if you think about the potential variability in our claims cost, we said; a reasonable, stressed kind of sensitivity around that, we put in there at plus or minus 5%. If our assumptions are that morbidity improvement -- not only is there not morbidity improvement but that we experience some level of morbidity deterioration. If there was a 5% deterioration, not a 5% per year for forever, but a 5% holistic deterioration in that, that would be about a $500 million adjustment to our reserves recognizing over the fullness of time with health innovation, et cetera, there might be an upward bias to that.

But if it were to be downward, that would be the order of the magnitude to that. We've provided similar assumptions across the rest of what we believe to be the primary drivers to the reserves that we hold for this business. I think I would characterize what we've done and the sensitivities being provided there in the following way.

One, it is comprehensive and so we've looked holistically at all of the assumptions underlying our business and tried to reflect in those assumptions the experience that we've been seeing and what we can glean from what's happening across the industry. Our desire was to put this issue to bed in the eyes of investors and to allow investors to focus on the strong fundamental and growth that we have in our operating businesses.

Suneet Kamath -- Citi -- Analyst

Okay, got it. And then, just on the same slide 21. If we look at the $1 billion of future rate increases assumed in your reserves, is that the same number for GAAP and stat? And separately, what was the prior assumption? In other words, what did you have built in before you did your second quarter of '18 reserve and review in terms of benefit from future reaction?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

The first part of your question, yes, the same assumption being used in both GAAP and statutory reserves as I'd indicated before. The second question, let me try approaching it a little differently to see if I can actually get at what I think you want to understand with respect to that $1 billion. Think about that as being in three traunches. The first is, about 10% of that we've already filed for.

First, actually, let me also start with, put that in the context of we've actually already received about $0.9 billion worth of rate increases on this bloc over time from the point at which we impaired it back in 2012. So hopefully, that adds some perspective in terms of balancing this $1 billion against almost $1 billion that we've already achieved to date. And the assumption is driving the $1 billion that we have in there are consistent with our experience in the first rounds of price increases that we sought. And incidentally, is subject to very robust underwriting in order to quantify that number, to begin with.

And so going back to sort of thinking about those in buckets. 10% of what's already been filed. About 30% of that actually represents instances where we've already had filings with the states where we've implemented a price increase but where we have agreed to come back to the state and do it in multiple steps as opposed to do it in a single rate increase.

We implemented a rate increase but we've agreed to come back and seek approval for a further rate increase in order to make it a more palatable outcome for consumers at the end of the day. And then the remaining 60% would be new filings. And within those new filings, that would represent both some of our legacy -- adverse experience that we've had. As well as the new adverse experience that we updated as a result of this update. And think about that as being roughly evenly split between where we expect to get price increases and where we expect to actually come out in the form of benefit reductions in lieu of price increases.

Suneet Kamath -- Citi -- Analyst

Lastly, on the same topic. The assumption to get rid of the morbidity improvement. It seems like that's what your third party actuarial consultants are recommending as a best practice. I'm just trying to think through where the range is of these assumptions are across different companies.

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

To be clear: We did not engage any consultants in the evaluation of the process that we went through. We consulted with outside parties but there's no consultants that recommended to use this as the best estimate. Obviously, our accountants who have actuarial expertise have weighed in on this and they have confirmed that they believe that our approach to this is a reasonable approach to take with regard to establishing the best estimate.

Operator

Next, we have the line of Alex Scott of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Alex Scott -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

So my question is around just the cash flows and Rob, I think you mentioned that you were able to absorb a good amount here and how you maintain the capital of deployment plans. What are the parts of the business that are driving free cash flow? And as we kind of think out to next year and beyond, is there upside as maybe you have some of these things that have been a drag fall away and kind of have continued acceleration in cash in some of the businesses like variable annuities and maybe others?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

A couple thoughts on that. First, as I mentioned before, we start from a position of having a very robust capital structure that's able to absorb a lot of the changes that are going through in the industry. So you have the Q2 assumption updates that we've been through. You have the impact of the tax law change. You'll also have certain regulatory changes occurring that are occurring at the NAIC that are net chewing away that the RBC ratios of companies.

And despite all of that, where we are at the end of the day is pro forma for all of it, including the full year anticipated impacts of the tax act. We're able to maintain above our currently targeted RBC ratio of 400%. So we start out at a very strong position. We also have the benefit of continuing to generate strong cash flow and capital. And so in the course of the second quarter just by way of example, what was a statutory charge for long-term care business was actually the increase in the strengthening of reserves in our long-term care business was about $600 million. In other parts of RBC calculation, we actually generated incremental capital that almost entirely offset that reserve strengthening.

And so, we see that dynamic. If you look at sort of the fullness of this year and even what we experienced to date this year, what you're gonna find is we have diversified businesses, each of which provides robust cash flow and diversified sources of cash flow. In a current year, while we're strengthening PICA's reserves in order to respond to the impact from the tax law changes, we are getting from our international business, significant free cash flow we are getting from our PGIM business, a very high free cash ratio relative to the strong earnings that we're generating from that.

And as we've highlighted in the deck through the bar charts that we provided, our annuities business at the current levels of sales is throwing off a significantly high level of free cash flow. We're able to continue to generate free cash flow through the portfolio of businesses that we have and absorb the variety of reserve strengthening initiatives that we in the industry are facing during the course of this year.

Alex Scott -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

That's really helpful, thank you. Maybe just a follow-up on the 12% to 13% ROE. How should I think about that near to intermediate term ROE just in light of maybe the move up in interest rates and sort of the environment? Are we at a point where maybe you revert back to the 13% to 14% that you guys have targeted historically? Or sort of where do we need to get in terms of rates to achieve that?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

I think about it this way. I think first, as you see in our results and observe in the market, interest rates have been rising and that's been beneficial to us and to others in the industry. If you look at what I'll call our adjusted portfolio yields, so adjusting it for taking out the impact of alternatives and for where we've invested in treasuries as we've waited to take the premiums and reinvest them into corporates.

In the first quarter, our portfolio yield was about 4.3%. If you look at our new money rates in the first quarter, it was about 4.25%. So we're at the time now where we're investing is crossing over to our portfolio rate, whereas in the past you would've seen a very large gap between those two numbers. And so I think the interest rate environment is rapidly ceasing to be a drag. And we'll be pivoting over toward being actually a positive to earnings growth on a go-forward basis.

 Now, it took a compounding of several years for us to drag us down from 13 to 14 to our intermediate range of 12 to 13. And we'll need to see some compounded period of being in that better interest rate environment before you'd expect on a sustainable basis our ROE to be in a 13% to 14% range. I would note, that if you look at our ROE this quarter adjusted for the notable items that we've called out, it's 13.5%. So while we've provided guidance of 12% to 13%, the reality is in this current environment with the robust performance we're getting out of our businesses, we're actually exceeding that range that we've provided.

Operator

And next, we have the line of Ryan Krueger of KBW. Your line is open.

Ryan Krueger -- KBW -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. On the annuity ROA, it's been 121 basis points the last two quarters. How much more near-term downside do you expect from the additional hedging actions? Or are we mostly complete with that at this point?

Steve Pelletier -- Head of Domestic Businesses

Ryan, this is Steve, maybe I'll jump in and Rob can add on. If you look at the annuities ROA on a year-over-year basis, there was a decline. I'd attribute that to three factors consistent with what we saw before. First, lower non-coupon earnings driving lower spread results. Second, the aging of the book of business and fee compression that gradually results from that.

And finally, amortization of hedging costs as you mentioned. The first of those three factors varies from quarter to quarter. The second and the third I would say, they're obviously real impacts but they emerge very, very gradually over time over an extended time period. So if you're talking about near-term ROAs, I would say there's sustainability of our ROAs for the near-term at our current level.

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

The only thing I'd add to that, and Ryan, this may be obvious by virtue of how you asked the question but just to make sure that it's very clear. Our expected hedging costs are entirely in ALI today. And so, that's built into our ALI. We include the cost of hedging in that.

Secondly, that when we have variances against that expected hedging, so what we call hedge breakage, that works its way into our benefit ratios and therefore also is amortized into our ALI. So full cost of hedging is reflected in ALI over time. That hedge experience has been generally on the positive side but calls it around neutral and what you're seeing as a result of that is still a robust level of ROA as Steve just walked through.

Ryan Krueger -- KBW -- Analyst

Thanks. And then, the corporate segment I know is volatile but been pretty favorable for a couple of quarters. Has anything changed there or should we expect it to revert back to a higher loss over time?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

Our guidance for that, Ryan, has been that -- think about it as being as an average of $350 million a quarter subject to seasonality. So obviously, we get the fourth quarter seasonality that we've walked through a number of times in the past. If you look at the actual average of the last four quarters, it's been slightly below that. So it averages out around $340 million. And in the first and second quarters are driving that because they've been below our run rate expectations. Each of those quarters benefited by somewhere in the range of $15 million to $20 million of lower than expected compensation costs, both long-term and deferred that are associated with market experience, including incidentally, our own stock price performance.

The remainder of the variance came from lower net expenses across a whole variety of activities. So, while that experience can be sustained, we don't believe that that experience would change our view going forward of what the run rate and seasonality would be. So we've benefited from it but not to the point where we would take a different view toward what we stated in the past with regard to sort of the going forward run rate of the business of the segment.

Operator

Our last question comes from the line of Erik Bass of Autonomous Research. Your line is open.

Erik Bass -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Hi, thank you. I guess following up on Alex's question. If we look at the dividends paid from PALAC year to date it's been about 70% to 75% of AOI. Is this a reasonable way to think about the sustainable cash generation of the annuities business? And how sensitive is this to the level of sales volumes?

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

So I would say that the annuities business is a positive contributor to our overall targeted free cash flow. So think about our free cash flow, as we've articulated as being around 65% of earnings. And at current levels of sales, we would expect the annuities business to actually be reasonably materially in excess of that. And we believe that that's a sustainable level.

We don't believe that it's particularly volatile on a go forward basis either. The changes that would occur there would be, as Steve has expressed before, things that would be reflected over a fairly long period of time. We're very well capitalized within that business and so changes in market conditions and/or other drivers to the reserves would not alter the level of distributions from free cash flow that we anticipate and are currently getting from the business.

Erik Bass -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

Thank you. And then, yesterday Fidelity got a fair amount of press coverage for eliminating fees on certain of its index products. Do you see this having implications for pricing in the asset management or defined contribution retirement businesses more broadly?

Steve Pelletier -- Head of Domestic Businesses

Eric, it's Steve, I'll address your question. For some time, we've been very acutely aware of the fact that the most rapid fee compression in the asset management business has really been taking place over multiple years within the passive space. You saw the press coverage yesterday referring to yesterday's move as the race to zero and this being the logical conclusion of it. It's a race that we're not participating in.

Several years ago, we made the strategic decision that we were not going to compete in the passive space. But even back then, it was a space well spoken for by a handful of competitors. And instead, we would focus on the long-standing value proposition of our investment management business, which is alpha generation. Alpha that our clients can use alongside the index exposure that they can draw from passive managers on a cost-effective basis. But really focusing on our ability to generate alpha through active management.

 And the result of that decision over multiple years has been that passive assets represent less than 2% of total AUM and well under 1% of total fees. Our fees are based on our generation of alpha, based on the foundation of strong investment performance, and strong distribution capabilities generating attractive flows at stable fee levels. That 22 basis points I mentioned, which has been stable for us now over an extended period of time and we expect it to remain so.

Operator

At this point, I will be happy to turn it back to John Strangfeld for any closing remarks.

John Strangfeld -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you very much. I'd just like to bring this back and close it with just a few final thoughts. The bottom line of this whole discussion is our businesses are performing very well. They're supported by a strong balance sheet. We're very confident in our ability to both innovate and execute and our talented employees who embody our purpose-driven culture are ultimately at the core of who we are and what we do and collectively, we deliver sustainable value for our customers, our community, and our stakeholders. And I'd like to thank you very much for your time and attention today and have a good day.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen still connected, that does conclude the presentation for this morning. Again, we thank you very much for your participation and using our executive teleconference service. You may now disconnect.

Duration: 62 minutes

Call participants:

Darin Arita -- Head of Investor Relations

John Strangfeld -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Mark Grier -- Vice Chairman

Rob Falzon -- Chief Financial Officer

John Nadel -- UBS -- Analyst

Steve Pelletier -- Head of Domestic Businesses

Tom Gallagher -- Evercore -- Analyst

Suneet Kamath -- Citi -- Analyst

Alex Scott -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Erik Bass -- Autonomous Research -- Analyst

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