All right. I want the full 25 minutes here.
Oh.
Again, we're going to get the going here. So we have Colin Simpson, CFO of Manulife Financial. You've been CFO now for how many?
Two and a half years, I think.
Two and a half years.
Yeah. Exciting times. I met you before I was CFO.
Yes. When you were at Aviva.
That's right.
That was, this was when you were in Canada, not in the U.K.
That's right.
It's been a while, so thank you very much for participating in the conference, our inaugural conference in Toronto. We do appreciate that. You know, I think it's your, I've been starting with big picture, kind of, you know, strategic kind of priorities, but you're a bit different because you've come out with a refreshed strategy.
That's right.
A video with it, which is interesting. Maybe you can talk a bit about the new refreshed strategy. More importantly, like what's different?
Yeah.
Maybe I'll start there and then we can kind of dig into it a bit.
Yeah, Doug, I think when you look at a company like Manulife, we've got so much forward momentum and we issued new targets last year to go, you know, to generate an 18%+ ROE. I'm sure we'll get onto that. That it wasn't, the time and the place was not here to go, we're going to throw everything out and start all over again because we've just got such good momentum and we've got a new CEO who's been in the business for, you know, a decade. At the same time, we wanted to send a message that this is a different company. I'll give you a classic example. I think if you'd listened to this conversation, maybe when I joined Manulife, you would have heard a lot about Asia and GWAM. It's like Asia, GWAM, Asia, GWAM. That's what we want to be.
We want to be a wealth and asset management, bigger in wealth and asset management, and we want to have 50% of our earnings come from Asia. Today, it's a bit more balanced in that, you know, we still want to be much bigger in Asia and asset management, but we've got these great businesses in Canada and the U.S.. We want to grow those as well because we want to be that stable global champion that people gravitate towards. Because when I look around and this is what drew me to Manulife is I genuinely don't feel that there are other life insurance companies that offer the same level of geographic diversification that we do and quality of earnings. If we can grow them together, then that protects us in a very uncertain world. That's different.
We use the opportunity to really underscore how important AI is, distribution, people and culture, and then also health, wealth, and longevity.
Yeah. AI came up and you gave a specific dollar target. Can you define what goes into that? Cost versus other items that would go, I think it was a billion dollars.
That's right. A billion dollars of value created from AI and that will come through 3 areas, just straightforward earnings increase. That will often come from operational efficiency. The other is CSM growth. For those of you who are not familiar with life insurance, CSM is really our store of future earnings. If we're able to grow more through AI, then that's going to increase our CSM. The third area, which is going to frustrate you probably the more out of the 3, is cost avoidance. Because, you know, I'd love to say to you, you know, we made, and I get told this all the time as the CFO, like, oh, you should be really happy. We avoided $500 million of costs. I was like, actually, I didn't even know we were at risk of losing that $500 million.
You know, cost avoidance is something that is important to us and we need to work on it, but it's not something that you track as a separate item, nor should you, and it doesn't feed into earnings. You know, this is a long, this is a long way of me saying the billion dollars is real, we're going to track it, but it's not necessarily going to drive a billion dollars of incremental earnings.
When you talk about CSM growth, how does AI grow CSM?
Yeah, sure. When you think about what AI can do for us, and a lot of our business, particularly in Asia, comes from agents and distributors. When you think about how an agent goes out to hunt for new business, they wake up in the morning and they go, you know, who am I going to call today? We have an AI tool that says, today, you've got one of your clients, Peter, he has just had a kid. Why don't you congratulate him for having a kid and then offer to sell them 3 different products? The agent goes, you know, I'm just waking up, good idea. Up pops an email that scribes to Peter and then go, no, hang on a minute. I actually know Peter a lot better than how you've written. You've written it quite formally.
Let's try again. You press another button and it's like, hey Peter, like great news on the kid. Can't wait to see you next week. That drives extra sales. That will increase our CSM. Our ability to reprice products and be faster to market will drive CSM. You know, we have this quick quotes process in the U.S. where distributors send us a quote in and they say, oh, I've got a customer. I think that they're looking for life insurance. These are the biometrics. This is the information. We send back a quote straight away. It's quick. That in itself allows the customer to say, hey, would you be interested in life insurance? I think it's going to cost you $200 a month. Those are the sorts of things that drive CSM growth.
Yeah. So when you look at those 3 buckets, is it equal?
Don't know. Honestly, don't know. I think, and we're at that stage of Gen AI and AI that we are exploring a lot. You know, we just don't have all the answers.
Yeah. So then the other big part of the strategy has been the legacy business. Mark, who ran the legacy business, he did corporate development as well, recently departed. Naveed, who's excellent, is now in charge of legacy, but he's also got a day job running Canada. And so, like, is this to infer that, you know, maybe there's less to do on that side in terms of the legacy businesses, in terms of reinsuring? Thoughts on that?
Yeah, I think by definition, you know, because we've already done 3 deals, those are 3 deals that we don't have to do going forward. Sure, the pipeline of deals is now smaller because we've successfully done 3 deals. I think, you know, when I'm talking about the 3 year journey that we've been on, which is easier for me to talk about because that's my tenure, we had a lot of concern over the validity of our assumptions related to long-term care. It took external transactions, highly respected external parties validating our reserves through a transaction to get people to say, you know what, maybe these reserves are current. Maybe management is, you know, maybe management has more than just their word to put behind the reserve. I don't feel we need to do them quite as much. Do I want to do more LTC deals?
Absolutely. I think, you know, we've got just over $30 billion of long-term care exposure on our balance sheet. It's going really well. The experience is quite positive. We've just had an assumption review, which turned out to be neutral. The reality is, is it's not a business we write going forward. Should the opportunity come for us to reduce it, we will take it. Just like the last transaction we did with RGA, it's not like the market turned around and gave us a huge re-rating on the back of the last LTC deal we did. Actually, we didn't necessarily outperform. I'm not expecting this to be a watershed moment in the investment thesis for Manulife, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't pursue it.
Yeah. Okay. Am I in the ballpark if I thought 25%-30% of your equity was backing the legacy businesses? To be fair, it used to be 50%.
You know, and we've been slaying.
It's down quite a bit.
We've stayed clear of like putting a ring fence around legacy because the second reinsurance transaction that we did was not technically in the legacy bucket. You know, we stay clear around labels, but, you know, I'm not offended by that guess.
I would say legacy too, it's not just long-term care insurance. I would say there's opportunities probably to reinsure secondary guarantee UL stuff, vent fixed annuities, and just to set aside. Maybe we can move on to the division side of things. Asia obviously continues to be a big part of the strategy. That hasn't changed. You've got some headwinds from the MPF. You've got some tailwinds from the accounting change that came through this quarter related to health products in Hong Kong. You know, like there's some puts and takes. Maybe you can talk about some of the puts and takes, but are you still comfortable with that 2027 target of mid-teen quarter earnings growth and 21% ROE? You don't give ROE by division, but where would you stand relative, or maybe I'm wrong, but maybe where would you stand relative to that 21%?
Yeah, once a year we give ROE. We'll give it at the end of the year for the full year. You know, I think our last printed number was 19%. I'm seeing a nod in the audience. That's very helpful. You know, we're very close to 21% core ROE for the Asia segment. Feeling really good about that. Yeah, puts and takes, you've called them out quite well. I mean, the reality is that in Asia, we're selling to people who haven't bought policies before. The natural demographic growth that we are offering our customers is incredible. That's a huge benefit for being with Manulife. You know, we see CSM growth that other companies don't see to the same extent. That in itself is great.
When you look at the wealth hubs that come from Singapore and Hong Kong, and we recently opened an office in Dubai, that's an attractive opportunity. When you consider, you know, is it all about hopefully Asian markets grow and demographics take us through? Yes, but at the same time, we're seeing centers, wealth centers pop up in the world that weren't there before. We want to be there. We want to be a key part in people's savings decision. That's serving all parts of demographics from people who've never bought an insurance product before to people who have quite a lot of money and who are looking to diversify their wealth. Lots of tailwinds in Asia. On the headwinds, you know, we're in 14 different markets when you include asset management.
You know, these markets all operate independently to a large extent. Some things can happen that you do not expect. Our diversification allows us not to be derailed by any particular market that has an issue.
No change to the targets. You talked about entering, or you are entering the Indian insurance market. It was not long ago in India that there were some issues around the selling and unit-linked products and lapse agent. That was a while back. It seems like it has worked through the system and the mix has changed and the economics have changed. Is that your sense? Are you getting in at a period of time of inflection or is it already inflected in India?
I mean, let's also be clear. It's going to take 12-18 months before we sell a single policy. This is not Manulife trying to time the market. This is us taking a very long-term view on a mega economy and 3 mega economies, China, U.S., and India. Fantastic that we're now in all 3 of them. I feel that the regulatory environment in India has improved quite a lot, whether it be foreign ownership limits, whether it'll be banks opening up their shelves to more providers, some of the product structures. I think that's benefited a lot, but also the Indian consumer is incredibly digital native. The opportunity for us to sell through maybe channels that weren't quite as developed as they were 20 years ago is extreme.
We've also, and being a fast follower, not necessarily fast, but being a follower, it also gives us the opportunity to see where others have made mistakes and avoid those. It is a combination of a lot of factors, but as I said, it is going to be a long time before we get the business up and running, a long time, 12-18 months before we sell a policy. Then we have to scale the business in a way that is responsible as well. It is going to be exciting for us and it is going to be exciting for the future generations of management.
3-4 years before you break even, is that typical? Depends on sales.
You know, I think that's not unreasonable.
Yeah. The other region that you were in way back in the day, you're not in South Korea.
Yeah.
Any interest in other regions in Asia and not just ones that pops out?
Yeah. No, I know I won't go into South Korea in a lot of detail because the local players there, Samsung Life, they're dominant there. It would be very difficult for us to come in there and make inroads. Geographic expansion is not key to us beyond the India debate, which we've been having for a number of years. You know, we feel that we've got wonderful opportunities on an organic basis and plenty to keep us busy with that we don't need to go into new countries or regions.
Lastly, just on Asia, like I think it was many investor days ago that it was conveyed that maybe China would one day contribute more into Manulife than Canada would. It always stuck with me. Clearly that has not been the case. There have been a bunch of headwinds and we do not need to kind of do a full history lesson. What is the outlook for China? Big country, a lot of population, underpenetrated, hard maybe to drive the profitability that you expected.
Yeah. And we own a 51% JV in China. You know, not all of the earnings go to us. We've got a fantastic JV partner in Sinochem. I think what you've just described and maybe the hope for China's contribution to Manulife's earnings not materializing in the same magnitude is exactly why we're pursuing a balanced strategy. You know, it is very difficult in today's day and age to figure out what economy is going to be the number one winner, what geopolitical environment is going to happen. We need an element of diversification. Did China, you know, not grow quite as much? Did we expect the Chinese long end of the yield curve to be where it is now? Absolutely not. We take a prudent approach when we write insurance products. We're not overly exposed.
I like our position in China because I think some of the regulatory change that's happening in the market is something that we've seen elsewhere in the world. We are able to adapt to it quite well. Our product suite is not overly exposed to the long end of the curve going down. When you look at the foreign insurers' share of profitability for the industry, it's only 8%. In my opinion, that 8% is going to grow and we are going to be a key beneficiary to it. The bigger contribution for the foreseeable future will be from Hong Kong.
Yeah. Okay. Maybe going out of Asia, the U.S., renewed kind of focus strategy. At some point, if you're running off a business, you'll have to either sell or grow. I guess that's kind of where at the period of time where you're looking to grow. Like maybe I'll ask it this way, what will the U.S. division look like in 4-5 years? Like very simplistically, size or ROE or return, like however you want to describe it.
The US right now makes about $250 million. That's what it made in Q1. We had two quarters of adverse mortality experience. That shouldn't happen. We need to, you know, have stable mortality experience and overall policyholder experience. I think, you know, in some time, our long-term care reserves will peak. There will be a natural decline in earnings from long-term care business. That is good in the sense that some of that risk is running off, but it's also a challenge because it means our earnings are not going to grow at double digit unless we do something about it. I would say that $250 million grows steady single-digit earnings. What's important is that we don't see declines.
If you look back over the last 2- 3 years, you've seen the U.S. earnings come down because we have done transactions that have reduced earnings. We have had basis changes that have right-sized the earnings of that business. We need to make sure that we harvest what is a fantastic brand in John Hancock. We've got the ownership rights to the licensing rights to Vitality on behavioral insurance. We're going to really empower our customers to live longer, healthier lives. They're going to reward us by being loyal and great risks. I feel really good about the U.S., but I don't think we're talking step change yet. I just think it's a strong commitment to growing the earnings in a stable, responsible fashion.
When does that pivot point happen in long-term care?
We're a few years out. You know, again, it changes with basis changes, but it's certainly not in the next 2-3 years.
Yeah. Okay. Canada, renewed focus on Canada.
Yeah.
Again, mass market. What's driving that? What areas? Can you give some examples of where you think you can take some market share?
I think the obvious place to look is where we do not have the same level of market share that we have in some of our individual business or our group benefits. A classic example is the bank. We have the number 8 bank in the market. It is core to us. We now believe that there is opportunity for us to take market share. We are not talking about huge market shares against much bigger competitors, but it is just an opportunity for us to do more with what we have. I think the health space in Canada is really interesting. When you look at the current balance of provision of healthcare between public and private, is that going to be the same forever? I do not think so.
Can we take more market share, not necessarily from our competitors, but maybe from what's done by other providers in a way that is responsible and a win-win? That'll be a gradual win. At the same time, can we improve our customer experience? Can we improve our systems? Can we use AI to become more efficient? All of those are absolutely yes. Canada's a fantastic country to operate in. Margins are good. Margins are stable. There should be, you know, once we get to more normalized population growth, that provides some decent GDP growth and, again, a great economy to be a leader in.
Okay. Capital, excess capital, buybacks. You know, you've been active. You bought back $1.74 billion year to date, 2025, I think, as you've got $6 billion of excess capital and capacity by our math. You expect 60%-70% of core earnings to be cash remittance and $6 billion this year. Why not be more aggressive on buybacks? I know you've got the Comvest deal that you're spending money on, but it seems like you've got a lot of flexibility.
Yeah.
Is there a renewed focus, potentially more on M&A? You've done the Comvest deal. Is there other areas where you see opportunities to deploy capital and acquisitions?
I can see why buying back stock makes a lot of sense for us. That is why we bought back 5% last year and why we are buying back 3% this year. It definitely acts as a, you know, to gear up our core EPS growth. The question mark that I think every good management team should ask themselves is, can we get synergies from buying something else? Is there a gap in what we offer that we need to plug? Clearly, Comvest was one of those gaps. We did not have a private equity, private credit manager that we used or built in-house. That was a fantastic opportunity for us to plug a gap. It was not at the expense of a share buyback.
I, you know, I'm very focused on making sure Manulife is not just all about being a share buyback because that is, you know, that lacks the ability to create value through real growth. I think it's a great tool. I will say to you, if we don't buy back stock, if we stopped our share buyback program, it would be incredibly difficult to hit our 18% ROE target. It is a tool that we use and we see good use in. I want Manulife to be more than just a company that earns money and then gives it back to shareholders through share buyback despite, you know, it being the reasonable tailwind on share price, I suspect.
I'm going to ask you this. Has the tone changed on M&A in the last 6 months to a year?
Yeah, it definitely has, but not because we're like, oh, you know, we've got money that's burning a hole in a pocket and let's go out and buy it. I think it's more under Roy, our former CEO's leadership. We had so many fires to fight. It was like, you know, we've got to go out and do a reinsurance transaction to do. We've got to right-size expenses. We had so many different fires to fight along the way since 2017. Now we've got Phil and he's come at a time when it's like, okay, we've done a lot. And actually, when you have a share price that has, you know, better reflected valuation itself, it allows us to think longer term as opposed to, you know, the real job of the day is to try and get our share price to adequately reflect the quality of the business.
We're getting closer to that point. When we traded at $21 forever, you know, it was much more, it was very difficult to take a 10-year view and take the view that, oh, I'm sure investors will be fine if we don't show demonstrable progress in the near term.
Yeah. What would be the areas of interest in M&A? Is it Asia? Is it wealth?
I would look at any opportunity in Canadian wealth. You know, I think that's a wonderful, it's a great market for us, great brand. Margins are attractive. Anything we would do there, I think would look good. I think within the U.S., anything that, you know, adds to our scale. You know, if a small book of retirement business came up for acquisition, I think to add to our $260 billion of retirement assets, that would make sense. I don't think looking, chasing wealth in the U.S. makes sense from where we're coming from. In Asia, you've got distribution agreements that come up from time to time that we absolutely would look at. Nothing transformational. We've got a lot of exciting opportunities organically, actually.
You brought up ROE, you're probably 16%, give or take, core ROE by our math in 2025, target 18% plus. Buybacks could be a big contributor. You know, you've got a lot, like I calculate 1% of LICATs with 25 basis points to ROE. So, you know, you more than easily can add one to 2 percentage points by bringing your LICAT issue. Like what's that path from 16 to 18?
I think a better place to start is the Q3 number because the basis change did change the earnings trajectory a little bit. $30 million a quarter. I would take the, we had an 18.1% ROE in the third quarter of this year. If you normalize for credit and some of the tax benefit we got, you get down to 17%. 17% versus 18% plus by the end of 2027, we're not far off. On top of that, you've got adverse mortality. If, you know, mortality normalizes, that's going to be a tailwind. We still got a buyback program to complete this year. I made some other comments on buyback program. That's a lever to build to get there. On top of that, we've got, you know, we're growing well. Our CSM growth is double digit this last quarter.
That should feed future earnings. You know, one of the great things about IFRS 17, and this is another thing that's been underappreciated, is it produces quite stable earnings. We should be a lot more boring than sometimes we trade. Part of that is because our earnings stability is underappreciated. I do not have too many, you know, rabbits that I plan to pull out a hat to get to the 18%. It is just block and tackle, get the earnings up. You know, if there is buyback, makes sense, do the buyback and get to the 18%.
Yeah. With that, I know we're coming down towards the very end here, but maybe I'll pass it over to you for any, you know, closing remarks or anything you want to touch on that maybe we didn't touch on.
No, I think the investment thesis, in my opinion, is very clear. We are on a journey to be a quality world-renowned franchise. I think we've got all the ingredients. We want to think long-term. We want to continue delivering. We've got a lot on our plate. We really thank our shareholders for being with us. We look forward to welcoming many more. The journey is exciting ahead. Thanks again for having us.
I appreciate you again contributing and participating in our growth conference. I look forward to next year too. We will talk about all this again. Have a great rest of the day.
Thanks a lot.