By Suzanne Barlyn
(Reuters) - U.S. insurer MetLife Inc has entered into an agreement to provide pension benefits for about 41,000 FedEx Corp retirees and beneficiaries through an annuity, the two companies said on Tuesday.
MetLife and FedEx expect to close the deal, which includes about $6 billion in pension obligations, on May 10, they said.
The deal is the first "jumbo-sized" U.S. transfer of pension obligations to an insurer, measured by premium, since 2013, wrote Wells Fargo Securities LLC analyst Sean Dargan in a research note late on Tuesday.
It also marks MetLife's entry into the market for jumbo-sized transfers, Dargan wrote. The insurer has historically competed for pension transfer deals with less than $1 million in premiums, Dargan wrote.
Some life insurers, including Prudential Financial Inc and MetLife, take over corporate pension plans from companies that want to offload them. The insurers then use a group annuity to make regular payments to the retirees and beneficiaries who are entitled to benefits under those pensions.
These deals, known as pension risk transfers, have been around for at least 90 years, but rising interest rates and stock market values are expected to make it easier for more companies unload their plans to insurers.
In 2017, MetLife disclosed that it had failed to make payments to pensioners whom it could not locate after taking over their plans from private companies. MetLife since been trying to locate the individuals, whom it intends to pay, the company has said.
The deal "is a vote of confidence after MET's group annuitant issues and charges of the recent past," Dargan wrote.
FedEx's purchase of the group annuity contract will be funded by assets of its pension plan, the company said.
The amount of monthly payments to the pensioners will not change, the companies said.
(Reporting by Suzanne Barlyn; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Grant McCool)
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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