Image source: The Motley Fool.
DATE
Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026 at 9 a.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- President and Chief Executive Officer — Michel Khalaf
- Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer — John McCallion
- Regional President, U.S. — Ramy Tadros
- President, Asia — Lyndon Oliver
TAKEAWAYS
- Adjusted Earnings -- $1.6 billion for the quarter, or $2.49 per share, with adjusted EPS ex notable items at $2.58, marking a 24% increase over the prior year's quarter.
- Full-Year Adjusted Earnings Ex-Notables -- $6 billion, or $8.89 per share, reflecting approximately 10% growth.
- Group Benefits Adjusted Earnings -- $465 million in the quarter, up 12%, with full-year ex-notables at $1.7 billion; group life mortality ratio for the quarter was 81.1% and for the year 83.1%, both below the company’s 2025 target range.
- Retirement and Income Solutions (RIS) Adjusted Earnings -- $454 million in the quarter (up 18%), full-year at $1.7 billion; segment achieved record pension risk transfer sales exceeding $14 billion for the year.
- Asia Segment -- Adjusted earnings of $444 million for the quarter, flat year over year; annual sales rose 18% on a constant currency basis, led by Japan and Korea.
- Latin America Segment -- Quarterly adjusted earnings of $227 million, up 13%; adjusted PFOs climbed 25%, and sales rose 26%, both on a constant currency basis.
- EMEA Segment -- Adjusted earnings of $97 million for the quarter, up 64%; adjusted PFOs gained 21%, and sales were up 24% on a constant currency basis.
- MetLife Investment Management (MIM) -- Newly reported as a business segment, delivered $60 million in adjusted earnings for 2025; assets under management reached $742 billion, up from about $600 billion a year earlier following the PineBridge acquisition.
- Variable Investment Income (VII) -- $497 million for the quarter; full-year VII at $1.5 billion, below the $1.7 billion target mainly due to real estate and other funds, with private equity returns at 8.2% for the year.
- Direct Expense Ratio -- 11.7% for the full year, ahead of the target and aided by AI-driven efficiency measures.
- Capital Deployment -- Nearly $4 billion allocated to organic new business, plus $2.9 billion returned via share repurchases, and $1.5 billion in dividends, totaling roughly $4.4 billion returned to shareholders.
- PineBridge Acquisition -- Closed during the quarter, supporting the launch of MIM as a formal segment and expected to increase direct expense ratio by 50 basis points in the coming year.
- 2026 Outlook Highlights -- Management guides to double-digit adjusted EPS growth, adjusted ROE of 15%-17%, and 2026 share repurchases consistent with 2025.
- Free Cash Flow -- $4.9 billion in 2025, contributing to the five-year $25 billion target; two-year average free cash flow ratio reached 81%, above the target range.
- Strategic Reinsurance Activity -- Two Chariot deals totaling about $11 billion of liabilities, and a $10 billion risk transfer agreement with Talcott completed in 2025.
Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email [email protected]
RISKS
- Private equity returns for 2025 were 8.2%, below the expected 9%, and real estate and other funds drove variable investment income to come in under the $1.7 billion annual target.
- Disability results trailed expectations in the quarter due to higher average severity and increased incidents, impacting group benefits margin, though this was not considered a new trend by management.
- Latin America segment's 2026 earnings outlook incorporates a roughly $50 million adverse impact from Mexico VAT changes, expected mostly in the first half of the year.
- Corporate and Other segment projected an after-tax adjusted loss of $500 million to $700 million for 2026, influenced by recent reinsurance transactions and seasonality in preferred dividend costs.
SUMMARY
MetLife (MET 3.31%) delivered record adjusted EPS and returned substantial capital to shareholders while closing transformative transactions such as the PineBridge Investments acquisition and multiple large-scale reinsurance deals during the quarter. The newly launched MetLife Investment Management segment reported $60 million in adjusted earnings and $742 billion in assets under management, showing immediate scale benefits post-acquisition. Across core geographies, Asia led with 18% sales growth driven by foreign-currency product momentum, while Latin America and EMEA both produced double-digit growth in revenue and sales. Management reaffirmed five-year financial commitments, guided toward continued double-digit adjusted EPS growth, and signaled disciplined expense controls despite headwinds including higher expense ratios from asset management expansion and variable investment income shortfalls.
- Michel Khalaf said, "we are on track to achieve our five-year commitments for adjusted EPS, adjusted ROE, direct expense ratio, and free cash flow."
- The company initiated flow reinsurance in U.S. retail retirement, with two new partners and transactions already underway.
- Adjusted earnings definition was revised to exclude noncash real estate depreciation, resulting in a $57 million positive impact in Q4 and an expected $200 million annual benefit primarily to corporate and other segments.
- Cash and liquid assets at year-end stood at $3.6 billion, within MetLife’s stated liquidity buffer of $3 billion to $4 billion, after retiring $500 million in debt and executing nearly $1 billion in acquisitions and investments in the quarter.
- The Japan solvency margin ratio was estimated at 770% at year-end, with a transition to an economic solvency ratio anticipated in March 2026.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- Pension Risk Transfer (PRT): Insurance transaction in which a pension plan sponsor shifts some or all pension liabilities and assets to an insurer.
- VII (Variable Investment Income): Earnings derived from variable and alternative assets including private equity, real estate, and mark-to-market funds, recognized on a lagged basis.
- PFO (Premiums, Fees, and Other Revenues): Revenue metric aggregating adjusted premiums, fee income, and other operating revenue streams.
- Direct Expense Ratio: Operating expenses as a percentage of adjusted premiums, fees, and other revenues, excluding specified nonrecurring or indirect costs.
- ESR (Economic Solvency Ratio): Pending regulatory metric replacing Japan's solvency margin ratio, designed to reflect an insurer’s economic capacity to absorb losses under stress scenarios.
- Chariot Re: Special purpose reinsurer established by MetLife to support reinsurance transactions in the U.S. retirement market.
- PineBridge: Asset management firm acquired by MetLife, increasing the scale and scope of its Investment Management segment.
- MIM (MetLife Investment Management): MetLife’s institutional asset management business, now operated as a standalone reporting segment.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Michel Khalaf: Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. When we launched New Frontier a year ago, we introduced four strategic priorities, with a greater emphasis on growth. Over the past twelve months, we have advanced these strategic priorities, growing our business responsibly, deploying capital soundly, and operating with speed and discipline, all while navigating a dynamic market and economic environment. Reinforcing our market leadership, our best-in-class group benefits business added approximately $100 million of new adjusted premiums, fees, and other revenues in 2025, with higher margin voluntary PFOs rising 10% year over year. Scale, technology, and discipline continue to drive this attractive business forward.
We capitalize on our unique retirement platform by seeding a sidecar, Chariot Re, tapping the US retail retirement space via flow reinsurance, and originating more than $14 billion of pension risk transfer sales, MetLife's highest ever annual PRT total. To accelerate growth in asset management, we closed on the acquisition of PineBridge Investments and established a new business segment, MetLife Investment Management. At year-end, MIM had $742 billion of assets under management, up from roughly $600 billion a year ago. And our high-growth international markets demonstrated their strategic importance with impressive growth rates.
In 2025, Asia saw constant currency sales jump 18%, aided by a strong contribution from Japan, while Latin America saw constant currency sales rise by 12%, with Mexico leading the charge. Our business growth has been fueled by sound capital deployment and capital management. And 2025 was a seminal year for MetLife on this front. We expect to have deployed close to $4 billion to support organic new business in 2025, driven in part by the PRT origination and the Asia and LATAM sales production that I just mentioned. We returned roughly $2.9 billion to shareholders via common stock repurchase and another $1.5 billion through common stock dividends, bringing the total to approximately $4.4 billion.
We did this while funding about $1.2 billion of acquisitions and business investments, including PineBridge and Mesero, making two investments in Chariot Re as well as boosting our investment in PNB MetLife, our India joint venture. And we executed several strategic reinsurance transactions. Among these were two separate deals with Chariot totaling about $11 billion of liabilities, and a risk transfer agreement with Talcott, totaling $10 billion of liabilities. When we introduced our New Frontier strategic priorities last year, we also established a fresh set of five-year financial commitments that underscore MetLife's superior value proposition. These commitments not only serve to challenge us but, more importantly, to hold us accountable.
We committed to achieving double-digit adjusted EPS growth over the time frame, recognizing this will not always be a linear path. And in 2025, we delivered roughly 10% adjusted EPS growth excluding notable items. We committed to achieving a 15% to 17% adjusted return on equity. For the full year, ex notable items, we delivered 16%. We committed to shaving 100 basis points over five years to achieve a direct expense ratio of 11.3%. In 2025 alone, aided by AI and other emerging technologies, we lowered our direct expense ratio to 11.7%, putting us well ahead of schedule. And where it all comes together, free cash flow—we committed to generate $25 billion over the course of five years.
In 2025, we made a $4.9 billion down payment toward that cumulative target. Throughout Next Horizon, now through New Frontier, the prevailing constant has been change. The all-weather nature of our market-leading businesses positions MetLife to adapt and succeed in a variety of economic environments. One year into New Frontier, it is clear we have the right strategy at the right time, focused on the right growth opportunities, and measuring ourselves against the right metrics. Turning to fourth-quarter results. We reported strong quarterly adjusted earnings of $1.6 billion or $2.49 per share. Excluding notable items, we reported $2.58 per share, up 24% compared to $2.08 per share a year ago.
On an ex-notable basis, this represents MetLife's highest single EPS quarter. Contributing to the outperformance in the quarter was robust underlying business momentum across most segments, aided by another consecutive quarter of improved variable investment income, which totaled $497 million. Our private equity portfolio returned 2.8% in the quarter, and we also saw a modest rebound in returns on our real estate and other funds as well. Adjusted premiums, fees, and other revenues, or PFOs, rose 8% to $12.8 billion and rose 29% to $18.6 billion when retained pension risk transfer deals are included. For the full year 2025, we reported adjusted earnings excluding notable items of $6 billion or $8.89 per share, up roughly 10%.
Higher variable investment income, volume growth, and capital management drove the growth in earnings per share. As we do each fourth quarter, we included our outlook for certain near-term targets and other elements of guidance in our earnings call presentation. This year, in view of our resegmentation, we have taken a more prescriptive approach. In a moment, John will delve into our near-term outlook in greater detail. But on a high level, it should be evident we are on track to achieve our five-year commitments for adjusted EPS, adjusted ROE, direct expense ratio, and free cash flow, among others established under New Frontier. Turning to MetLife's businesses.
Group benefits adjusted earnings excluding notable items totaled $465 million in the fourth quarter, contributing to full-year adjusted earnings ex notables of $1.7 billion. Life mortality continues to trend favorably, which we expect to persist in 2026. Repricing has returned dental to target profitability, while disability experience trailed our expectations in the quarter. This year anticipates 7% to 9% growth in adjusted earnings year over year, driven by PFO growth and supported by underwriting. In retirement and income solutions, adjusted earnings excluding notable items were $454 million for the quarter, up 18%, bringing full-year adjusted earnings ex notables to $1.7 billion. For the year, RIS benefited from record origination in both PRT and UK longevity reinsurance.
For Asia, adjusted earnings ex notable totaled $444 million for the quarter, and $1.6 billion for the year. Strong annual sales growth from new products, in particular, foreign currency-denominated products, in Japan and Korea, pushed general account assets under management to advance 7% on a constant currency basis in 2025.
John McCallion: Looking to Latin America, adjusted earnings excluding notable items came to $227 million, up 13% in the quarter. Business momentum in the region has been outstanding over the past several years, supplemented by the expansion of digital platforms such as Accelerator, and growing strategic partnerships. Given the segment's strength in the quarter, it is not hard to see a pathway to $1 billion in annual earnings over the near term. With EMEA, the segment continues to punch above its weight class relative to last year's outlook. The segment reported adjusted earnings ex notables of $97 million in the quarter, which is close to the run rate implied by our 2026 outlook.
And to close out business highlights, in the fourth quarter, we transitioned to new segmentation with the introduction of MetLife Investment Management as a business segment. This aligns with our New Frontier strategic priorities, reflects the critical mass we've gained with the acquisition of PineBridge, and underscores our intent to grow and further capitalize on the increasing convergence of life insurance and asset management. Moving to cash and capital. The fourth quarter serves as an excellent reminder of MetLife's capital strength and flexibility.
After retiring half a billion dollars of debt, buying back around $430 million of common stock, paying roughly $370 million of common stock dividends, and funding close to $1 billion of acquisitions and other investments, we ended the year with $3.6 billion of cash and cash equivalents. This falls firmly within our target liquidity buffer of $3 billion to $4 billion. A final note on capital: In the month of January, we repurchased another $200 million of our common stock. We expect 2026 repurchases to be in line with 2025.
To wrap up, the strategic actions we took in 2025 set the table for the coming years of New Frontier and position MetLife to deliver on our financial commitments and our superior value proposition of responsible growth and attractive returns with less risk. We are entering 2026 as a stronger company with sustained business momentum and expanding market leadership. While the macro and market environments continue to evolve, we remain laser-focused on the levers we control and on relentless execution to generate responsible growth, deploy capital with rigor, and further drive operating efficiency. MetLife's financial strength feeds our ability to deliver for our shareholders as well as other stakeholders, including our customers, employees, and communities.
In 2025, MetLife paid roughly $50 billion in policyholder benefits and claims and invested more than $90 billion to support our liabilities. The sheer scale of these numbers highlights the dedication of our people to MetLife's purpose—always with you, building a more confident future. I am energized by our team's commitment and look forward to the future. There is still much for us to achieve. Now I'll turn it over to John to cover our performance and outlook in greater detail.
John McCallion: Thank you, Michel, and good morning, everyone. I'll review our fourth-quarter results and refer to the fourth-quarter earnings call presentation for financial highlights, including our near-term outlook. Starting on Page three, we made significant progress in 2025 toward our five-year financial goals. Achieved 10% adjusted EPS growth and adjusted ROE of 16%, within our target range. A two-year average free cash flow ratio of 81%, surpassing our target. And a full-year direct expense ratio of 11.7%, also beating our target. Overall, an excellent first year, which establishes a strong foundation for our New Frontier strategy. Net income was approximately $800 million and $3.2 billion for the fourth quarter and full year of 2025, respectively.
The difference between net income and adjusted earnings was mostly attributable to net derivative losses, primarily due to rising long-term interest rates, favorable equity markets, and a stronger US dollar. We use derivatives to hedge economic exposures where these offsets are either reported elsewhere in the financial statements or where the offsetting economic emerges over time. In addition, net investment losses were largely the result of normal trading activity on the portfolio, and credit remained stable. We had two notable items in the fourth quarter that reduced adjusted earnings by $61 million in the aggregate or $0.09 per share.
The notable items were the Mexico VAT impact, we discussed in the third quarter, and higher asbestos litigation reserves recorded in corporate and other. Moving to Page four, this slide compares fourth-quarter year-over-year adjusted earnings, excluding notable items, by segment, and corporate and other. All my comments refer to figures excluding notable items. Adjusted earnings rose 18%, 17% in constant currency to $1.7 billion, driven by higher variable investment income, strong volume growth, and favorable expense margins, partially offset by lower recurring interest margins. Also, we have revised our definition of adjusted earnings to exclude the noncash accounting of real estate depreciation.
To align the impact of real estate asset value changes and better reflect the recurring cash flow and returns of the investment in adjusted earnings. This change increased fourth-quarter adjusted earnings by $57 million and is expected to add about $200 million annually, mostly benefiting corporate and other. Adjusted earnings per share were $2.58, up 24%, and 23% on a constant currency basis. Growth was supported by disciplined capital management. Moving to the businesses, Group Benefits adjusted earnings were $465 million, up 12% year over year, largely driven by favorable underwriting, primarily in life and dental, partially offset by weaker disability. The group life mortality ratio is 81.1% for the quarter and 83.1% for the full year.
Below our 2025 target range of 84% to 89%, reflecting continued improvement in working-age mortality trends. The fourth-quarter nonmedical health interest adjusted benefit ratio of 72.2% was within our annual target range. Seasonally low dental utilization was in line with expectations. However, disability results came in below expectations due to higher average severity and higher incidents in the quarter, albeit within pricing expectations. Group Benefits adjusted PFOs for the fourth quarter and full year 2025 was up 2% year over year. Excluding the impact of roughly two percentage points from participating life contracts, the growth would be 4%. RIS adjusted earnings were $454 million, up 18% year over year, primarily driven by higher variable investment income.
Investment spreads, excluding VII, remained relatively stable at 99 basis points, up one basis point sequentially. RIS delivered substantial inflows in 2025, driven by record sales of $42 billion in the year. Pension risk transfers were more than $14 billion, and UK longevity transactions were $11 billion, including $7 billion in the fourth quarter. The strength of this origination platform and growth throughout 2025 underscores the global demand for life and retirement solutions as well as our focus in leveraging strategic reinsurance to enhance our capital flexibility to support this trend. Asia adjusted earnings were $444 million, essentially flat year over year, up 1% on a constant currency basis. The primary drivers were volume growth and favorable expense margins.
These were partially offset by less favorable underwriting margins versus the prior year quarter, which had positive reserve refinements that benefited adjusted earnings by roughly $30 million. Asia's key top-line growth metrics were robust in the fourth quarter and full year of 2025. The general account assets under management and amortized costs were up 7% on a constant currency basis. Sales were up 18% on a constant currency basis on both a quarterly and a full-year basis, primarily driven by Japan and Korea, our two largest markets in the region. Latin America adjusted earnings were $227 million, up 13% and up 4% on a constant currency basis, driven by volume growth across the region.
Latin America's adjusted PFOs were up 25% on a constant currency basis, while sales were up 26% on a constant currency basis due to strong growth across the region, most notably in Mexico and Brazil. EMEA adjusted earnings were $97 million, up 64% on both a reported and constant currency basis. The primary drivers were robust volume growth as well as favorable underwriting margins. EMEA adjusted PFOs were up 21% and up 17% on a constant currency basis. Sales were up 24% on a constant currency basis, reflecting strong strength across most markets, led by Turkey and the UK. Turn to MetLife Investment Management or MIM, which we are reporting as a standalone business segment for the first time.
MIM delivered adjusted earnings of $60 million in '25 versus $16 million in 2024. The primary driver year over year was the transition to general account market fees as part of becoming a business segment. Looking ahead, we would point you toward MIM's key financial metrics as shown in our quarterly financial supplement. In addition to the statement of adjusted earnings, we provided AUM and revenue information for both institutional clients and the general account. Corporate and other, which now includes MetLife Holdings, our legacy runoff business, reported an adjusted loss of $38 million for '25, compared to an adjusted loss of $72 million in the same period last year. The primary drivers were favorable investment margins and expense margins.
These were partially offset by less favorable life underwriting margins. Page five shows our pretax variable investment income or VII for the four quarters and full year 2025 as well as full year 2024. Variable investment income was $497 million in Q4, driven by private equities, which had an average return of 2.8%, while real estate and other funds had an average return of 1.1%. As a reminder, PE and real estate and other funds are reported on a one-quarter lag and accounted for on a mark-to-market basis. For the full year, VII was $1.5 billion, below our 2025 target of $1.7 billion but well ahead of the prior year.
Real estate and other funds accounted for much of the shortfall, while PE returns, which generated a full-year 2025 return of 8.2%, were modestly below our annual expected return of 9%. On page six, we provide VII post-tax by segment, and corporate and other for the four quarters and full year 2025. Most of the VII assets are concentrated in Asia, RIS, and our legacy runoff business now in corporate and other, consistent with the long-term nature of these obligations. As of December 31, 2025, total VII assets stood at approximately $19 billion. Asia represented nearly 45% of the assets, while RIS and corporate and other accounted for about 30% and 25%, respectively. Turning to page seven.
This chart shows a comparison of our direct expense ratio for the fourth quarter and full year 2024 and 2025. As you can see, we continue to benefit from our efficiency mindset in driving down our cost curve, with our direct expense ratio falling to 11.7% for the year, which is well ahead of target. This includes seeing the benefits from the adoption of AI tools and other emerging technology broadly across our company. As we've seen the opportunities to reengineer processes while also injecting AI tools to enhance the speed and accuracy of our delivery, all of which improves the lives of our customers and our employees.
Let me now review our cash and capital position as detailed on Page eight. MetLife remains strongly capitalized with robust liquidity. As of December 31, cash and liquid assets at the holding companies totaled $3.6 billion, in line with our target cash buffer of $3 billion to $4 billion. The acquisition of PineBridge, which closed in the quarter, was the main driver of the reduction in Holdco cash sequentially. In addition, total cash returned to shareholders in the fourth quarter was about $800 million, including approximately $430 million of share repurchases. An additional roughly $200 million of shares were repurchased in January.
For the two-year period, 2024 and 2025, our average free cash flow ratio, excluding total notable items, was 81%, exceeding our 65% to 75% target range. In terms of statutory capital, for our US companies, our combined 2025 NAIC RBC ratio is expected to be above our 360% target. Our estimated US statutory adjusted capital on an NAIC basis stood at approximately $17.2 billion as of December 31, up 1% from the third quarter. We anticipate the Japan solvency margin ratio to be around 770% as of December 31, pending the final statutory filings in the coming weeks.
As a reminder, this will be the last stat filing in Japan based on the SMR, which will be transitioning to an economic solvency ratio or ESR. As we have previously disclosed, we expect to report an initial ESR within a range of 170% to 190% from March 2026. Now let's discuss our outlook starting with the overview on page 10. Based on the forward currency curve, we expect the US dollar to be stable in 2026 relative to 2025. The forward interest rate curve projects long-term interest rates to be modestly higher and the yield curve expected to steepen—a positive development. And we use an assumption of 5% annual return for the S&P 500.
For our near-term targets, we expect to achieve double-digit adjusted EPS growth. We expect adjusted ROE to be in the range of 15% to 17%. Expect to maintain our two-year average free cash flow ratio of 65% to 75% of adjusted earnings, which supports our five-year commitment to generate $25 billion plus of free cash flow. Specifically for 2026, given asset management businesses tend to have higher expense ratios, the acquisition of PineBridge will add 50 basis points to our direct expense ratio in 2026, with our 2026 target being 12.1%.
However, with the considerable progress we've made in the first year under New Frontier, towards achieving 100 basis point improvement over the five years, we intend to maintain our 2029 target of 11.3%, despite the higher expense ratios associated with accelerating growth in our asset management business. Favorable investment income is expected to be approximately $1.6 billion pretax. Our corporate and other adjusted loss is expected to be between $500 million and $700 million after tax. We are maintaining our expected effective tax rate range of 24% to 26%. And we expect our 2026 share repurchases to be in line with 2025.
At the bottom of the page, you will see certain interest rate sensitivities relative to our base case, reflecting a relatively modest impact on adjusted earnings over the near term. Page 11 provides our outlook for VII. We expect the average asset balances for private equities to decline in 2026 and over the near term as we continue to strategically reposition the portfolio to higher-yielding fixed income securities, consistent with the higher interest rate environment. We are assuming annual returns for private equity to be 9%, real estate and other funds to be 7% over the near term. Finally, as a reminder, we include prepayment fees on fixed maturities and mortgage loans in VII.
Moving to our business segments on page 12. Starting with group benefits. We are maintaining our adjusted PFO growth target of 4% to 7% over the near term as we continue to strengthen our market leadership. We are reducing our group life mortality ratio target range by one point to 83% to 88% as we expect favorable mortality trends will continue in 2026. For group nonmedical health, we are increasing our interest adjusted benefit ratio target range by one point, to 70% to 75%. We are seeing the benefits of our leave and absence capability in technology take hold in the market, and therefore, this range is reflective of our updated view of product mix over the near term.
Taking all these factors into account, we expect Group Benefits adjusted earnings ex notables to grow 7% to 9% in 2026. Please keep in mind Q1 tends to be a seasonally low quarter with both life and nonmedical health results skewing to the higher end of the target ratio ranges. RIS near-term outlook is on page 13. As part of New Frontier, we are strategically leveraging reinsurance to augment our organic capital with third-party capital to support the building demand for retirement solutions. This further supplements our liability growth while allowing us to maintain capital discipline. The common theme is capital flexibility.
With our expanded toolkit, we're able to support liability growth and at the same time generate additional investable assets to be managed by MetLife Investment Management. As a result, we've enhanced the statistical pages in the QFS to more clearly reflect the impact of our growing use of reinsurance. As such, RIS segment earnings will be driven by retained liability exposures net of reinsurance. More specifically, the average retained liability exposures, which we expect to grow 3% to 5% in 2026, with growth weighted toward the second half of the year. Expect RIS adjusted earnings in 2026 to be between $1.6 billion and $1.8 billion.
Given growth is weighted to the second half of 2026, Q1 adjusted earnings are expected to be relatively flat year over year. Finally, we expect total general account investment spread to range from 100 to 120 basis points in 2026. For Asia, on Page 14, we expect annual sales growth to be mid to high single digits on a constant currency basis over the near term. And general account AUM growth in the mid-single digits. Asia adjusted earnings, excluding notable items, are expected to grow mid-single digits over the near term.
Regarding the Japan ESR, assuming a 100 basis point change up or down in either or both the ten-year US Treasury and or the thirty-year JGB rates, we expect to remain within the 170% to 190% target range. On page 15, for Latin America, we expect adjusted PFOs to grow high single digits over the near term. Expect the Latin America adjusted earnings excluding notable items to increase 6% to 8% in 2026, including a roughly $50 million impact from the Mexico VAT change, which we expect to be mostly in the first half of the year. Expect adjusted earnings to return to high single digits growth in 2027 and 2028.
Moving to EMEA, we expect adjusted PFOs to continue to grow high single digits given the strong momentum in the business. For adjusted earnings, we expect EMEA's new quarterly run rate to increase to $90 million to $100 million in 2026, and then grow mid to high single digits in 2027 and 2028. Finally, for MIM, we expect revenues to grow roughly 30% in 2026, largely driven by the combination of PineBridge and then increase by mid-single digits thereafter. For MIM adjusted earnings, we expect to be between $240 million and $280 million in 2026, then grow 15% to 20% per year in 2027 and 2028 from a combination of revenue and expense synergies as well as greater operating leverage.
By 2028, we are targeting an operating margin of approximately 32%. In addition, we expect MIM's Q1 adjusted earnings to be approximately $50 million lower than the implied quarterly run rate due to higher seasonal expenses in the first quarter. In total, MetLife delivered a strong quarter to close out another strong year. We successfully executed key strategic initiatives to support New Frontier while achieving our financial commitments. Building on our clear momentum and solid fundamentals across our diverse set of market-leading businesses, we achieved robust top-line growth, maintained disciplined underwriting, and exercised prudent expense management.
With a strong balance sheet and reliable free cash flow generation, we are well-positioned to achieve responsible growth and deliver attractive returns with lower risk, creating sustainable value for both our customers and our shareholders. And with that, I'll turn the call back to the operator for your questions.
Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you have dialed in and would like to ask a question, please press 1 on your telephone keypad. To raise your hand and join the queue. If you would like to withdraw your questions, simply press 1 again. As a reminder, we ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up to allow everyone an opportunity to ask a question. We'll take our first question from Jimmy Bhullar at JPMorgan.
Jimmy Bhullar: Hey. Good morning. So first, just had a question on group benefits. For Rami. Just comment on what you've seen through renewal season in various product lines. I know you've been pricing up dental over the past year. How you're seeing your like, what you've done in terms of pricing in various product lines and whether you're seeing competition, pickup, or ease in any of the products in group benefits?
Ramy Tadros: Thanks for the question, Jimmy. I would say we look at our one-one results, in particular, with respect to persistency and renewals, we're seeing pretty robust results. I would say increase in particular, in dental. As we've talked about, we did take actions in one-one of '25 with respect to the dental business. And responded quickly to kind of get back to our target margins. And I would say at this point, persistency is improving and is pretty robust.
And, although we'll come back and talk to you about our full Q1 results, at this point, we also have good sales growth across our book of business and, in particular, would highlight disability here as an area of strength that we're starting to see based on our 01/01 results.
Jimmy Bhullar: And then just another topic for Linden or maybe Michel. In Japan, you've seen pretty dramatic moves in some of the macro variables, it's currency or interest rates. How is that affecting your business in terms of persistency, maybe the sales mix and any comments on the competitive environment in that market? As well?
Lyndon Oliver: Hey, Jimmy. It's Lyndon here. So yeah, we have seen some macroeconomic volatility recently. Both in the FX as well as the rates up. But just if you think about it, the short-term impact on sales could be due to rates. Would we see a short-term impact during periods when we see significant macroeconomic fluctuations. And what happens here, our customers tend to wait for the markets to stabilize before going out and buying foreign currency products. So we see these temporary just fluctuations, but for the most part, our value propositions continue to remain solid with the customers.
And given the breadth of our product portfolio and our distribution strength here, it really gives us puts us in a good position to meet the demand through these periods. Whether it's yen or dollar products.
Jimmy Bhullar: And just with the issues at Prudential, obviously, they're more company-specific and don't have anything to do with you guys. But do you see any impact on your business just because of Peru and you both being American companies? In terms of sales, persistency, and recruiting?
Lyndon Oliver: Yeah. Look. We know, thanks for the question. We really don't have much to say about it. I mean, we're aware of the situation. We're very optimistic about our position in Japan as heard during Investor Day, we think it's a very attractive market. Given the higher rate environment as well as all these positive macroeconomic trends. There's a lot of capital coming into the market, and it continues to be a competitive market. But as I said, we've got a really good platform. Strong multi-channel distribution, a very diversified product portfolio. You can see our sales results have been very strong this year. They've been up 17%.
So we're very optimistic about our position in Japan and optimistic about our potential and going into 'twenty-three.
Jimmy Bhullar: Thank you.
Operator: We'll move next to Tom Gallagher at Evercore ISI.
Tom Gallagher: Good morning. First question, John, just a question on this change in GAAP earnings. For real estate accounting. I think the $200 million benefit that you flagged, is this a GAAP-only impact? Any expected change in statutory or did statutory already have that adjustment? And why change this? Is this were you more conservative than peers? Or is that more reflective of what you think the economics are? Thanks.
John McCallion: Yes, thanks. Good morning, Tom. It's something we've thought about for some time and know, I think just the resegmentation and change kinda gave us an opportunity to rethink just the reporting, in adjusted earnings. And, you know, I think you know, relative to peers, we probably had a higher to real estate because of our expertise in the area, and so we tend to lean into this asset class. So we did a review as we thought about it, you know, quite honestly, the noncash cost accounting construct really is not ideal for representing kind of the annual cash flows and annual returns of this product.
It also doesn't really align with, you know, the changes, the book value, and then you have a sale that goes below. And so we try to make this you know, this change create a little more alignment in know, kind of the overall economics of the asset class and just more reflective of our operating cash flow.
Tom Gallagher: That makes sense. Hey. I thought I'd throw out a MIM question since it's the new bright shiny object this quarter. And it's a question that we've been getting recently, so I'm curious to what extent you can comment on Brighthouse, obviously, gonna be acquired by Aquarion. I know that they're a partner of yours. That's part you know, you have an investment management agreement with them. Any way you can sort of frame how meaningful that could be if that contract changes with the acquisition. And is that is anything for that baked into your '26 guide, or would that more likely be a '27 issue? Thanks.
John McCallion: Yeah. Let me start with first, we're very excited about just closing PineBridge at the end of the year. I think there's just been excellent momentum hitting the ground one-one as one team. And just to kinda highlight know, we have historically in MIM know, been kind of a one MIM platform. We really haven't built this boutique style. So there's a natural process for, you know, how these complementary businesses can come together and integrate. And we're really excited about what's ahead. You know, even looking at things from between sign and close, you saw kind of our flows in MIM were very strong, and PineBridge did great.
And that's just as a testament to why this makes sense and how it's resonated in the market. And so we're really excited about you know, what's ahead. And it just gives us a bigger a full you know, a even further, expansion of our solutions that we can provide to clients and particularly insurance clients. You know, we can be a full-service provider to insurance clients not a product pusher, but just really kind of focusing on what's best for them, We serve their needs. And, you know, as you mentioned, Brighthouse is a know, great relationship for us. We have a long history. We take pride in that.
You know, we're excited to have the opportunity to work you know, with the new combined firm that they have, and I know they're going through a process right now. So you know, we're here to help them. Look. At the end of the day, we have a diversified set of clients. Across, our MIM platform. You know, we have close to $150 billion of AUM, in insurance, and, you know, it's we have a diversified set. And to the, you know, I think when it comes to exposure, you know, while we are excited about keeping and growing our relationship with Brighthouse, that's kind of our expectations.
Know, at the end of the day, you know, to the overall firm, this would be, you know, you know, worst-case scenario would you know, at the end of the day, would be a very modest impact to EPS.
Tom Gallagher: Okay. Thanks for that.
Operator: We'll move next to Joel Hurwitz at Dowling.
Joel Hurwitz: Hey. Good morning. Michel, in your prepared remarks, you mentioned that you guys had tapped the US retail retirement space with low reinsurance. Can you just provide an update on what you've done to date and your outlook for that opportunity at this point?
Ramy Tadros: Hey, Joel. It's Rami here. I'll take this one. You know, I would say, first, you just need to put this in the broader context of our retirement strategy in the US. That we talked about, as part of our New Frontier strategy, and at the highest level look. Our approach here is to compete in the retirement space in areas which play to our strength. And leverage our competitive advantage. And we looked at that, and as part of that, looked at a fast-growing US retail annuity market and identified an opportunity to participate in that market in a way that does leverage our competitive advantages.
And in this case, the path that we have chosen is to participate in that market on an institutional basis as a reinsurer. And, look, testament to the discipline of execution here, in under a year, we executed against that strategy. We now have two partners with flow reinsurance deals in place that have kicked off over the past couple of months. We value these partnerships and our partners value what we bring to the table. In particular, in terms of financial strength, investment capability, capital flexibility. So this is exactly what we mean when we say we're looking for opportunities that play to our strength.
And at the end of the day, this is gonna add to our ability to grow liability origination. And capture the momentum that we're seeing in the retirement market, in a way that works well for economics and plays to what we can bring to the table here.
Joel Hurwitz: Got it. That makes sense. And then just wanted to follow-up on Jimmy's question on Japan and the macro and on persistency. Did you guys see any increased surrender activity in Q4 thus far in Q1? And I guess, is there anything baked into your outlook for potentially higher surrenders given the FX and rates?
Lyndon Oliver: Yeah. Hey, Joel. It's Lyndon here. So yeah, we did see the surrender trend in the fourth quarter was a little bit higher than it had been in the third quarter, and that was primarily because we saw the yen had depreciated relative to the US dollar. For the full year in '25, our surrenders have come down relative to where they were in '24, and for '26, we're assuming that surrenders come back to our long-term assumption over there. And that is baked into our 2026 guidance.
Joel Hurwitz: Gotcha. Thank you.
Operator: We'll go next to Suneet Kamath at Jefferies.
Suneet Kamath: Thanks. Good morning. I wanted to start with group. One of the questions we always get is, AI is coming in. It's gonna take out x percent of the workforce. That's gonna negatively impact group benefits companies. And if I look at your guidance, it looks like growth on top of pretty good growth this year. So it doesn't feel like you're building anything in related to that. Can you just talk about what you're seeing maybe at the customer level in terms of either hiring or layoffs just so we can kinda see what the scope is? In terms of where we are.
Ramy Tadros: Thank you, Suneet. It's Rami here. So look, when we construct our PFO outlook, we look at a number of factors. We have certainly incorporated what we have been seeing in our book with respect to employment actions that some of our clients have taken be they AI-driven or otherwise. And the outlook assumes that this trend would continue in 2026. So we are taking a very grounded view of where that picture is heading. But look at the same time, in our outlook, we also incorporate what we're seeing in terms of growth. Be it in terms of adding coverages to existing employers, and new sales, increase in participation rates, via enrollment effort.
And a piece of that is the very strong start to one-one, which I talked about earlier, and that's been a strong start both in terms of persistency in sales and really sales across the entire book inclusive of disability. So you put all of this thing together, we feel comfortable with the outlook range. The diversified nature of our book across the size of employers, and geography are all helpful factors, for us here. If we were to see more ebbs and flows in terms of the employment levels across economies as well as across sectors.
So net-net, we feel comfortable with the outlook, and we are incorporating what we're actually seeing by way of employment actions in our book as well.
Suneet Kamath: Okay. That's helpful. And then I guess for John on capital, I wanted to ask about Japan because one of the things that we're hearing is that unrealized losses in Japan can influence the sort of dividend formulas in terms of getting capital out. So I just wanted you to maybe address that and kind of you think that could play out in 2026.
John McCallion: Thanks. Yeah. Good morning, Suneet. Yeah. Like you said, they're in Japan and elsewhere, quite honestly, you know, there's multiple factors when you think about dividend capacity. Right? You have your solvency ratios. You also need to look at kind of the retained earnings. And that is true. But, you know, there's other factors that go into that, from the balance sheet as well. So there's, there's multiple things that get in there. I think at the end of the day, for us, we're not seeing any constraints on our dividend capacity, in Japan. So there's really no change, and that includes, you know, as it relates to transition to the ESR.
And we feel like we're in a healthy position when it comes to, you know, retained earnings as well.
Suneet Kamath: Can you just size what percentage of the Japan book has been reinsured out of Japan?
John McCallion: We I don't have that off the top of my head. We've done but we've done reinsurance for quite some time. Over the course of, you know, the last probably decade, and, we've utilized mostly, you know, our Bermuda entity. When it comes to that. But it's a it's a portion, but it's, you know, it's not a it's certainly not a majority.
Suneet Kamath: Okay. Thanks.
Operator: We'll go next to Wes Carmichael at Wells Fargo.
Wesley Carmichael: Good morning, and thank you. First question on group disability. I think you had a little bit less favorable experience the quarter. I think the nonmedical health loss ratio was kind of flattish sequentially. We've heard similar comments, I think, from peers. Just wondering if you could unpack a little bit what you saw in disability and if you'd expect that to kinda continue into 2026.
Ramy Tadros: Yes. It's Rami here. So we did have some pressure in the quarter with respect to disability. Think about it as just slightly over a point in our nonmedical health ratio. There are a few moving parts here. So one, we did see a slightly higher average severity across our long-term disability book. We did see Social Security decisions come a bit down this quarter. Those tend to kind of fluctuate quarter to quarter. Recoveries and incidents, I would say recoveries were slightly down in the quarter. But for the full year, they were strong and above expectations. Incidents, slightly ticked up in the quarter. Again, for the full year, they were also largely in line with expectations.
So if you think about how we were to trend this while this has been an unfavorable quarter, it certainly does not make a trend, and I wouldn't extrapolate from the outcomes in this quarter into 2026.
Wesley Carmichael: That's very helpful. And maybe, Rami, just sticking with you, but in terms of mandatory paid family leave and related products, I think a few states are rolling out new mandatory programs. But as I kind of look across the map of the US, with mandatory leave. It looks like there's a lot of white space. You know, there's no Texas, no Florida. A lot of Central US states don't have the programs yet. So I know the offerings maybe aren't as profitable as some of the other products in group, but do you see that as a big opportunity to take more market share from MetLife as more states come online?
Ramy Tadros: Yeah. Thank you for the question. So maybe I'll just step back and talk about disability in general and then come back to paid family leave and really also bring you back to the context that we talked about at our investor day. We identified the disability space in general as an attractive growth opportunity. A lot of secular trends are driving that growth, of the state-based regulations that are coming through. We made investments in this space. Both to provide best-in-class capabilities to employers and employees. We talked about some of our digital capabilities as well, and that value proposition is resonating well in the market.
And, look, as part of that strategy, we also talked about employers wanting to do more with fewer and talked about absence and disability as an anchor product for us. And the proof point in here is that the vast majority of our absence and disability sales are actually bundled with our overall suite of products. That's kind of the broader context around disability and absence in general. When you think about paid family medical leave, this has been a piece of that puzzle and one that has given us some nice tailwinds as more states have rolled out programs, including Minnesota and others. And we talked about the picture of that continuing.
Because of the white space you've just mentioned. And our approach in this space leverages all the capabilities that talked about, but also leverages the breadth of our product portfolio. And just to give you another data point here, when I look at our one-on-one sales for PFML, on average, they came with four or five additional coverages that were bundled with those sales. So this is just a really classic example of us identifying an opportunity, formulating a strategy, and just executing really well against it, and we're very pleased with the outcome.
Wesley Carmichael: Thank you.
Operator: We'll go next to Alex Scott at Barclays.
Alex Scott: Hi. Thanks for taking it. First one is on corporate. I just wanted to understand the five hundred and seven hundred. I mean, there's some different moving pieces there with the resegmentation. So is it there any I guess in particular, is there anything that more specific to 26 in that number? It just felt a little higher than I was expecting when I was sorta going back and understanding holdings and corporate and what the combination and MIM would mean.
John McCallion: Hey. Good morning, Alex. You're saying, you were assuming a higher would assume I was thinking it wouldn't be quite that high of a or I wouldn't loss. Expect it as big a loss, I guess. So I just wanted to understand if there was something more one-time in nature for 26 in the numbers. Sorry.
Alex Scott: Yeah. I mean, maybe I'll use Q4 to maybe try to get you there. Right? So on an ex-notable basis, our loss was 38. And you have to take into account if there were some I'd say, nonrecurring items in taxes, expenses. We had some reserve releases. And, we had some excess quarterly NII. In that in CNO. That probably gets you up to a run rate of around a 100. And then when you translate that into the next year, you have to take into account, and I think this is important, so I appreciate the question, the you know, we did some reinsurance transactions in the fourth quarter.
So the Talcott rent transaction we announced, you know, about a 100 million of lost earnings, and we did the Chariot one. So think close to 30. Of additional lower earnings from MLH, is now in corporate and other. And then the other thing you have to take into account just for seasonality is, remember, every first and third quarter, we have about $15 million more of cost for preferred dividend. So that should help you with your quarterly modeling, but that's a little bit of what you're missing.
Alex Scott: Got it. Very helpful. Next one for you is just on the artificial intelligence topic, and I think you touched some on just employment sensitivity in group. Is there any other, you know, opportunities or risks that you'd point out in can you talk about even in just your investment portfolio, your exposure to software, etcetera, this is just a topic that we're beginning to get a lot more questions on, and it's very theoretical, hard to answer. But would be interested in your take.
John McCallion: Hey. Good morning, Alex. So maybe I'll just start. I mean, look, I think you know, one of the things that we pride ourselves in and not just in the investment portfolio, but across our firm is and we referenced this quite a bit at investor day is diversification. And whether that's diversification, geographically, we have in types of businesses. So we have, you know, healthy, balance sheet businesses, and then we have very healthy, capital-light businesses across the globe. On top of that, we have different risk profiles.
And then if you go to the investment portfolio, I think it's fair to say, and we've seen other numbers of internal analyses that kind of prove we're probably the most diversified, across the industry in terms of our approach. We're able to do that because we have a fully scaled global asset manager where we are you know, because some people, if you say diversified, you say, well, how do you stay close? We're able to stay close to every credit that we underwrite and monitor because we have scale. So we're able to do this because of our scale and our competitive advantages.
And, when it comes to the software point that you referenced, the end of the day, you know, there's a variety of different cycles out there. This is probably in places where I think in the industry, we're probably not that exposed just given our approach to kind of ingress investment-grade oriented investing. So I we've seen it. I'm not so sure it you know, I we really, you know, weigh in too much here because we don't think it's that much of an exposure to the industry or us.
Alex Scott: Got it. Okay. Thank you.
Operator: And that is all the time we have for questions today. I will now turn the conference back over to John Hall for closing remarks.
John Hall: Thanks, everybody, for joining us today, and have a good day. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation.
Operator: You may now disconnect.
