Delaware |
06-1059331 |
(State
or other jurisdiction |
(I.R.S.
Employer |
of
incorporation or organization) |
Identification
No.) |
Page
No | ||
PART
I. |
FINANCIAL
INFORMATION |
|
Item
1. Financial Statements |
4 | |
Consolidated
Income Statements |
5 | |
Consolidated
Balance Sheets |
6 | |
Consolidated
Statements of Comprehensive |
||
Income and Changes in Shareholders' Equity |
7 | |
Consolidated
Statements of Cash Flows |
8 | |
Notes
to the Financial Statements |
9 | |
Item
2. Management's Discussion and Analysis |
||
of Financial Condition and Results of Operations |
29 | |
Item
4. Controls and Procedures |
60 | |
PART
II. |
OTHER
INFORMATION |
60 |
Item
6. Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K |
60 | |
SIGNATURE |
61 | |
EXHIBIT
INDEX |
E-1 |
CIGNA
CORPORATION |
|||||||||||||
CONSOLIDATED
STATEMENTS OF INCOME |
|||||||||||||
(In
millions, except per share amounts) |
|||||||||||||
Three
Months Ended |
Six
Months Ended |
||||||||||||
June
30, |
June
30, |
||||||||||||
2004 |
2003 |
2004 |
2003 |
||||||||||
(As
Restated, see Note 3) |
(As
Restated, see Note 3) |
||||||||||||
REVENUES |
|||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
3,507 |
$ |
3,859 |
$ |
7,131 |
$ |
7,774 |
|||||
Net
investment income |
355
|
668
|
958
|
1,326
|
|||||||||
Other
revenues |
356
|
(2 |
) |
830
|
356
|
||||||||
Realized
investment gains |
415
|
109
|
436
|
78
|
|||||||||
Total
revenues |
4,633
|
4,634
|
9,355
|
9,534
|
|||||||||
BENEFITS,
LOSSES AND EXPENSES |
|||||||||||||
Benefits,
losses and settlement expenses |
2,485
|
3,330
|
5,449
|
6,579
|
|||||||||
Policy
acquisition expenses |
61
|
61
|
125
|
120
|
|||||||||
Other
operating expenses |
1,345
|
1,323
|
2,720
|
2,634
|
|||||||||
Total
benefits, losses and expenses |
3,891
|
4,714
|
8,294
|
9,333
|
|||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS |
|||||||||||||
BEFORE
INCOME TAXES (BENEFITS) |
742
|
(80 |
) |
1,061
|
201
|
||||||||
Income
taxes (benefits): |
|||||||||||||
Current |
449
|
63
|
591
|
(8 |
) | ||||||||
Deferred |
(200 |
) |
(88 |
) |
(235 |
) |
77
|
||||||
Total
taxes (benefits) |
249
|
(25 |
) |
356
|
69
|
||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS |
493
|
(55 |
) |
705
|
132
|
||||||||
INCOME
FROM DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS |
-
|
-
|
-
|
48
|
|||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) BEFORE CUMULATIVE EFFECT |
|||||||||||||
OF
ACCOUNTING CHANGE |
493
|
(55 |
) |
705
|
180
|
||||||||
CUMULATIVE
EFFECT OF ACCOUNTING CHANGE, |
|||||||||||||
NET
OF TAXES |
-
|
-
|
(139 |
) |
-
|
||||||||
NET
INCOME (LOSS) |
$ |
493 |
$ |
(55 |
) |
$ |
566 |
$ |
180 |
||||
EARNINGS
PER SHARE - BASIC |
|||||||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS |
$ |
3.55 |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
$ |
5.06 |
$ |
0.94 |
||||
INCOME
FROM DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS |
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.35
|
|||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) BEFORE CUMULATIVE EFFECT |
|||||||||||||
OF
ACCOUNTING CHANGE |
3.55
|
(0.39 |
) |
5.06
|
1.29
|
||||||||
CUMULATIVE
EFFECT OF ACCOUNTING CHANGE, |
|||||||||||||
NET
OF TAXES |
-
|
-
|
(1.00 |
) |
-
|
||||||||
NET
INCOME (LOSS) |
$ |
3.55 |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
$ |
4.06 |
$ |
1.29 |
||||
EARNINGS
PER SHARE - DILUTED |
|||||||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) FROM CONTINUING OPERATIONS |
$ |
3.51 |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
$ |
5.00 |
$ |
0.94 |
||||
INCOME
FROM DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS |
-
|
-
|
-
|
0.34
|
|||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) BEFORE CUMULATIVE EFFECT |
|||||||||||||
OF
ACCOUNTING CHANGE |
3.51
|
(0.39 |
) |
5.00
|
1.28
|
||||||||
CUMULATIVE
EFFECT OF ACCOUNTING CHANGE, |
|||||||||||||
NET
OF TAXES |
-
|
-
|
(0.98 |
) |
-
|
||||||||
NET
INCOME (LOSS) |
$ |
3.51 |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
$ |
4.02 |
$ |
1.28 |
||||
DIVIDENDS
DECLARED PER SHARE |
$ |
0.025 |
$ |
0.330 |
$ |
0.355 |
$ |
0.660 |
|||||
The
accompanying Notes to the Financial Statements are an integral part of
these statements. |
CIGNA
CORPORATION |
|||||||||||||
CONSOLIDATED
BALANCE SHEETS |
|||||||||||||
(In
millions, except per share amounts) |
|||||||||||||
As
of |
As
of |
||||||||||||
June
30, |
December
31, |
||||||||||||
2004 |
2003 |
||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||
ASSETS |
(As
Restated, see Note 3) |
||||||||||||
Investments: |
|||||||||||||
Fixed maturities, at fair value (amortized cost, $15,776;
$15,772) |
$ |
16,415 |
$ |
17,121 |
|||||||||
Securities supporting experience-rated pension
policyholder |
|||||||||||||
contracts, at fair value (amortized cost, $-; $10,558) |
-
|
11,222
|
|||||||||||
Equity securities, at fair value (cost, $111; $47) |
155
|
78
|
|||||||||||
Mortgage loans |
3,707
|
8,655
|
|||||||||||
Policy loans |
1,585
|
1,572
|
|||||||||||
Real estate |
74
|
146
|
|||||||||||
Other long-term investments |
379
|
717
|
|||||||||||
Short-term investments |
284
|
147
|
|||||||||||
Total investments |
22,599
|
39,658
|
|||||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents |
3,033
|
1,392
|
|||||||||||
Accrued
investment income |
275
|
468
|
|||||||||||
Premiums,
accounts and notes receivable |
2,672
|
3,026
|
|||||||||||
Reinsurance
recoverables |
21,759
|
6,395
|
|||||||||||
Deferred
policy acquisition costs |
481
|
580
|
|||||||||||
Property
and equipment |
868
|
973
|
|||||||||||
Deferred
income taxes |
1,633
|
1,040
|
|||||||||||
Goodwill
|
1,620
|
1,620
|
|||||||||||
Other
assets, including other intangibles |
465
|
447
|
|||||||||||
Separate
account assets |
36,658
|
35,393
|
|||||||||||
Total
assets |
$ |
92,063 |
$ |
90,992 |
|||||||||
LIABILITIES |
|||||||||||||
Contractholder
deposit funds |
$ |
26,339 |
$ |
26,979 |
|||||||||
Unpaid
claims and claim expenses |
4,144
|
4,708
|
|||||||||||
Future
policy benefits |
11,298
|
11,545
|
|||||||||||
Unearned
premiums |
357
|
326
|
|||||||||||
Total
insurance and contractholder liabilities |
42,138
|
43,558
|
|||||||||||
Accounts
payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities |
7,460
|
5,960
|
|||||||||||
Long-term
debt |
1,438
|
1,500
|
|||||||||||
Nonrecourse
obligations |
47
|
23
|
|||||||||||
Separate
account liabilities |
36,658
|
35,393
|
|||||||||||
Total
liabilities |
87,741
|
86,434
|
|||||||||||
CONTINGENCIES
- NOTE 13 |
|||||||||||||
SHAREHOLDERS'
EQUITY |
|||||||||||||
Common
stock (par value per share, $0.25; shares issued, 276;
275) |
69
|
69
|
|||||||||||
Additional
paid-in capital |
3,687
|
3,597
|
|||||||||||
Net
unrealized appreciation, fixed maturities |
$ |
219 |
$ |
610 |
|||||||||
Net
unrealized appreciation, equity securities |
25
|
29
|
|||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, derivatives |
(6 |
) |
(12 |
) |
|||||||||
Net
translation of foreign currencies |
(16 |
) |
(14 |
) |
|||||||||
Minimum
pension liability adjustment |
(819 |
) |
(667 |
) |
|||||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) |
(597 |
) |
(54 |
) | |||||||||
Retained
earnings |
10,019
|
9,503
|
|||||||||||
Less
treasury stock, at cost |
(8,856 |
) |
(8,557 |
) | |||||||||
Total
shareholders' equity |
4,322
|
4,558
|
|||||||||||
Total
liabilities and shareholders' equity |
$ |
92,063 |
$ |
90,992 |
|||||||||
SHAREHOLDERS'
EQUITY PER SHARE |
$ |
31.46 |
$ |
32.42 |
|||||||||
The
accompanying Notes to the Financial Statements are an integral part of
these statements. |
CIGNA
CORPORATION |
|||||||||||||
CONSOLIDATED
STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME AND CHANGES IN |
|||||||||||||
SHAREHOLDERS'
EQUITY |
|||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
|||||||||||||
Three
Months Ended June 30, |
2004
|
2003
|
|||||||||||
Compre-
hensive
Income |
Share-
holders'
Equity |
Compre-
hensive
Income |
Share-
holders'
Equity |
||||||||||
(As
Restated, see Note 3) |
|||||||||||||
Common
stock |
$ |
69 |
$ |
68 |
|||||||||
Additional
paid-in capital, April 1 |
3,646
|
3,533
|
|||||||||||
Issuance of common stock for employee benefits plans |
41
|
8
|
|||||||||||
Additional
paid-in capital, June 30 |
3,687
|
3,541
|
|||||||||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive loss, April 1 |
1
|
(125 |
) | ||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation), fixed
maturities |
$ |
(544 |
) |
(544 |
) |
$ |
186 |
186
|
|||||
Net unrealized depreciation, equity securities |
(3 |
) |
(3 |
) |
(1 |
) |
(1 |
) | |||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities |
(547 |
) |
185
|
||||||||||
Net unrealized depreciation, derivatives |
(1 |
) |
(1 |
) |
(3 |
) |
(3 |
) | |||||
Net translation of foreign currencies |
(11 |
) |
(11 |
) |
6
|
6
|
|||||||
Minimum pension liability adjustment |
(39 |
) |
(39 |
) |
(13 |
) |
(13 |
) | |||||
Other comprehensive income (loss) |
(598 |
) |
175
|
||||||||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive income (loss), June 30 |
(597 |
) |
50
|
||||||||||
Retained
earnings, April 1 |
9,529
|
9,227
|
|||||||||||
Net income (loss) |
493
|
493
|
(55 |
) |
(55 |
) | |||||||
Common dividends declared |
(3 |
) |
(46 |
) | |||||||||
Retained
earnings, June 30 |
10,019
|
9,126
|
|||||||||||
Treasury
stock, April 1 |
(8,577 |
) |
(8,538 |
) | |||||||||
Repurchase of common stock |
(284 |
) |
-
|
||||||||||
Other treasury stock transactions, net |
5
|
(5 |
) | ||||||||||
Treasury
stock, June 30 |
(8,856 |
) |
(8,543 |
) | |||||||||
TOTAL
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)
AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY |
$ |
(105 |
) |
$ |
4,322 |
$ |
120 |
$ |
4,242 |
||||
Six
Months Ended June 30, |
|||||||||||||
Common
stock |
$ |
69 |
$ |
68 |
|||||||||
Issuance of common stock for employee benefits plans |
-
|
-
|
|||||||||||
Common
stock, June 30 |
69
|
68
|
|||||||||||
Additional
paid-in capital, January 1 |
3,597
|
3,503
|
|||||||||||
Issuance of common stock for employee benefits plans |
90
|
38
|
|||||||||||
Additional
paid-in capital, June 30 |
3,687
|
3,541
|
|||||||||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive loss, January 1 |
(54 |
) |
(202 |
) | |||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation), fixed
maturities |
$ |
(391 |
) |
(391 |
) |
$ |
254 |
254
|
|||||
Net unrealized depreciation, equity securities |
(4 |
) |
(4 |
) |
(4 |
) |
(4 |
) | |||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on securities |
(395 |
) |
250
|
||||||||||
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation), derivatives |
6
|
6
|
(5 |
) |
(5 |
) | |||||||
Net translation of foreign currencies |
(2 |
) |
(2 |
) |
20
|
20
|
|||||||
Minimum pension liability adjustment |
(152 |
) |
(152 |
) |
(13 |
) |
(13 |
) | |||||
Other comprehensive income (loss) |
(543 |
) |
252
|
||||||||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive income (loss), June 30 |
(597 |
) |
50
|
||||||||||
Retained
earnings, January 1 |
9,503
|
9,038
|
|||||||||||
Net income |
566
|
566
|
180
|
180
|
|||||||||
Common dividends declared |
(50 |
) |
(92 |
) | |||||||||
Retained
earnings, June 30 |
10,019
|
9,126
|
|||||||||||
Treasury
stock, January 1 |
(8,557 |
) |
(8,510 |
) | |||||||||
Repurchase of common stock |
(284 |
) |
-
|
||||||||||
Other treasury stock transactions, net |
(15 |
) |
(33 |
) | |||||||||
Treasury
stock, June 30 |
(8,856 |
) |
(8,543 |
) | |||||||||
TOTAL
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY |
$ |
23 |
$ |
4,322 |
$ |
432 |
$ |
4,242 |
|||||
The
accompanying Notes to the Financial Statements are an integral part of
these statements. |
CIGNA
CORPORATION |
|||||||
CONSOLIDATED
STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS |
|||||||
(In
millions) |
|||||||
Six
Months Ended June 30, |
|||||||
2004 |
2003 |
||||||
|
(As
Restated, see Note 3) |
||||||
CASH
FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES |
|||||||
Income from continuing operations |
$ |
705 |
$ |
132 |
|||
Adjustments to reconcile income from continuing operations
|
|||||||
to net cash provided by operating activities: |
|||||||
Insurance
liabilities |
(699 |
) |
(19 |
) | |||
Reinsurance
recoverables |
155
|
128
|
|||||
Deferred
policy acquisition costs |
(49 |
) |
(33 |
) | |||
Premiums,
accounts and notes receivable |
341
|
69
|
|||||
Accounts
payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities |
(63 |
) |
(70 |
) | |||
Current
income taxes |
471
|
319
|
|||||
Deferred
income taxes |
(235 |
) |
77
|
||||
Realized
investment (gains) |
(436 |
) |
(78 |
) | |||
Depreciation
and amortization |
113
|
117
|
|||||
Gains
on sales of businesses (excluding discontinued operations)
|
(75 |
) |
(33 |
) | |||
Proceeds
from sales and maturities of securities supporting |
|||||||
experience-rated pension policyholder contracts, |
|||||||
net of purchases |
954
|
-
|
|||||
Other,
net |
81
|
31
|
|||||
Net cash provided by operating activities of continuing operations
|
1,263
|
640
|
|||||
CASH
FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES |
|||||||
Proceeds from investments sold: |
|||||||
Fixed maturities |
1,124
|
4,049
|
|||||
Equity securities |
19
|
184
|
|||||
Mortgage loans |
79
|
541
|
|||||
Other (primarily short-term investments) |
4,474
|
3,090
|
|||||
Investment maturities and repayments: |
|||||||
Fixed maturities |
447
|
1,343
|
|||||
Mortgage loans |
408
|
505
|
|||||
Investments purchased: |
|||||||
Fixed maturities |
(2,477 |
) |
(5,428 |
) | |||
Equity securities |
(14 |
) |
(67 |
) | |||
Mortgage loans |
(478 |
) |
(1,058 |
) | |||
Other (primarily short-term investments) |
(4,344 |
) |
(3,221 |
) | |||
Proceeds from sale of business |
2,103
|
209
|
|||||
Property and equipment, net |
(32 |
) |
(46 |
) | |||
Other, net |
(25 |
) |
-
|
||||
Net cash provided by investing activities of continuing
operations |
1,284
|
101
|
|||||
CASH
FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES |
|||||||
Deposits and interest credited to contractholder deposit
funds |
2,045
|
3,242
|
|||||
Withdrawals and benefit payments from contractholder deposit
funds |
(2,577 |
) |
(3,561 |
) | |||
Net change in short-term debt |
-
|
(3 |
) | ||||
Repayment of long-term debt |
(76 |
) |
(127 |
) | |||
Repurchase common stock |
(272 |
) |
-
|
||||
Issuance of common stock |
24
|
-
|
|||||
Common dividends paid |
(50 |
) |
(92 |
) | |||
Net
cash used in financing activities of continuing operations
|
(906 |
) |
(541 |
) | |||
Net
increase in cash and cash equivalents |
1,641
|
200
|
|||||
Cash
and cash equivalents, beginning of period |
1,392
|
1,575
|
|||||
Cash
and cash equivalents, end of period |
$ |
3,033 |
$ |
1,775 |
|||
Supplemental
Disclosure of Cash Information: |
|||||||
Income taxes paid (received), net |
$ |
107 |
$ |
(327 |
) | ||
Interest paid |
$ |
57 |
$ |
59 |
|||
The
accompanying Notes to the Financial Statements are an integral part of
these statements. |
Three
Months Ended June 30 |
2004 |
2003 | |||||||||||
(In
millions) |
As
Reported |
|
|
As
Restated |
|
|
As
Reported |
|
|
As
Restated |
| ||
Other
Operating Expenses |
$ |
1,311 |
$ |
1,345 |
$ |
1,320 |
$ |
1,323 |
|||||
Income
(loss) from
Continuing Operations |
$ |
515 |
$ |
493 |
$ |
(53 |
) |
$ |
(55 |
) | |||
Net
Income (loss) |
$ |
515 |
$ |
493 |
$ |
(53 |
) |
$ |
(55 |
) | |||
Income
(loss) from
Continuing Operations
per share |
|||||||||||||
Basic |
$ |
3.71 |
$ |
3.55 |
$ |
(0.38 |
) |
$ |
(0.39 |
) | |||
Diluted |
$ |
3.67 |
$ |
3.51 |
$ |
(0.38 |
) |
$ |
(0.39 |
) | |||
Net
Income (loss) per share |
|||||||||||||
Basic |
$ |
3.71 |
$ |
3.55 |
$ |
(0.38 |
) |
$ |
(0.39 |
) | |||
Diluted |
$ |
3.67 |
$ |
3.51 |
$ |
(0.38 |
) |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
Six
Months Ended
June 30 |
2004 |
2003 | |||||||||||
(In
millions) |
As
Reported |
|
|
As
Restated |
|
|
As
Reported |
|
|
As
Restated |
|||
Other
Operating Expenses |
$ |
2,678 |
$ |
2,720 |
$ |
2,630 |
$ |
2,634 |
|||||
Income
from
Continuing Operations |
$ |
732 |
$ |
705 |
$ |
135 |
$ |
132 |
|||||
Net
Income |
$ |
593 |
$ |
566 |
$ |
183 |
$ |
180 |
|||||
Income
from
Continuing Operations
per share |
|||||||||||||
Basic |
$ |
5.25 |
$ |
5.06 |
$ |
0.97 |
$ |
0.94 |
|||||
Diluted |
$ |
5.19 |
$ |
5.00 |
$ |
0.96 |
$ |
0.94 |
|||||
Net
Income per share |
|||||||||||||
Basic |
$ |
4.25 |
$ |
4.06 |
$ |
1.31 |
$ |
1.29 |
|||||
Diluted |
$ |
4.21 |
$ |
4.02 |
$ |
1.30 |
$ |
1.28 |
As
of
June
30, 2004 |
As
of
December
31, 2003 |
||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
As
Reported |
As
Restated |
As
Reported |
As
Restated |
|||||||||
Deferred
Tax Asset |
$ |
1,583 |
$ |
1,633 |
$ |
1,001 |
$ |
1,040 |
|||||
Shareholders’
Equity |
$ |
4,272 |
$ |
4,322 |
$ |
4,519 |
$ |
4,558 |
(In
millions, |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | |||||||||||
except
per share amounts) |
2004 |
2003 |
2004 |
2003 |
|||||||||
|
(As
Restated) | ||||||||||||
Net
income (loss) as
reported |
$ |
493 |
$ |
(55 |
) |
$ |
566 |
$ |
180 |
||||
Compensation
expense
(recovery) for restricted
stock grants, net of taxes
(benefits), included in net
income (loss) as reported |
(3 |
) |
— |
1 |
4 |
||||||||
Compensation
expense for
stock options, net of
taxes, included in net
income( loss) as reported |
22 |
2 |
27 |
3 |
|||||||||
Total
compensation
expense for stock
options and restricted
stock grants under
fair value method for all
awards, net of taxes |
(8 |
) |
(9 |
) |
(22 |
) |
(22 |
) | |||||
Pro
forma net income
(loss) |
$ |
504 |
$ |
(62 |
) |
$ |
572 |
$ |
165 |
||||
Basic
- as reported |
$ |
3.55 |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
$ |
4.06 |
$ |
1.29 |
||||
Basic
- pro forma |
$ |
3.63 |
$ |
(0.44 |
) |
$ |
4.10 |
$ |
1.18 |
||||
Diluted
- as reported |
$ |
3.51 |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
$ |
4.02 |
$ |
1.28 |
||||
Diluted
- pro forma |
$ |
3.59 |
$ |
(0.44 |
) |
$ |
4.07 |
$ |
1.18 |
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
(In millions) |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, 2003 | ||||||
Income
Statement Data |
|||||||
Revenues |
$ |
— |
|||||
Loss
before income tax benefits |
$ |
(3 |
) | ||||
Income
tax benefits |
(1 |
) | |||||
Loss
from operations |
(2 |
) | |||||
Gains
on sales, net of taxes of $25 |
50 |
||||||
Income
from discontinued operations |
$ |
48 |
(In
millions) |
Health
Care/ Disability and Life*. |
Corporate |
Total |
|||||||
First
quarter 2004 charge: |
||||||||||
Severance |
$ |
39 |
$ |
31 |
$ |
70 |
||||
Real estate and other |
5 |
— |
5 |
|||||||
Total |
44 |
31 |
75 |
|||||||
First
quarter 2004
payments: |
||||||||||
Severance |
(2 |
) |
(4 |
) |
(6 |
) | ||||
Balance
as of March 31, 2004 |
42 |
27 |
69 |
|||||||
Second
quarter 2004
charge: |
||||||||||
Severance |
— |
4 |
4 |
|||||||
Real estate and other |
3 |
— |
3 |
|||||||
Total |
3 |
4 |
7 |
|||||||
Second
quarter 2004
payments: |
||||||||||
Severance |
(10 |
) |
(8 |
) |
(18 |
) | ||||
Real estate and other |
(1 |
) |
— |
(1 |
) | |||||
Balance
as of June 30, 2004 |
$ |
34 |
$ |
23 |
$ |
57 |
· |
$580
million, reflecting the reduction in assumed future equity market returns
as a result of implementing the program. CIGNA determines liabilities
under the reinsurance contracts using an assumption for expected future
performance of equity markets. A consequence of implementing the program
is, effectively, a reduction in the assumption for expected future
performance of equity markets, as the futures contracts essentially
eliminate the opportunity to achieve previously expected market
returns; |
· |
$100
million, reflecting deterioration in equity markets that occurred in the
third quarter of 2002 (prior to implementation of the program);
and |
· |
$40
million, driven by changes for the
following: |
· |
lower
assumed lapse rates based on expectations that lower surrenders will occur
due to increased death benefits resulting from stock market
declines; |
· |
higher
assumed mortality based on experience since
mid-2001; |
· |
higher
assumed market volatility, based on recent experience and expected higher
S&P 500 volatility; and |
· |
a
lower assumed discount rate to reflect anticipated funding of the reserve
increase at yields lower than the existing
assumption. |
· |
$169
million for the addition of an explicit assumption for both actual and
projected future partial surrenders. This estimate is based on annual
election rates that vary depending on the net amount at risk for each
policy (see below for more information); |
· |
$56
million primarily reflecting refinements to assumptions relating to the
timing of lapses, death benefits and premiums to better reflect CIGNA's
experience; |
· |
$39
million due to higher assumed mortality reflecting adverse experience
based on annuitant deaths during the period from late 2000 into 2003;
and |
· |
$22
million resulting from a decrease in assumed mean investment performance
reflecting experience and future expectations based on history for similar
investments and considering CIGNA's program to reduce equity market
exposures. |
· |
The
reserves represent estimates of the present value of net amounts expected
to be paid, less the present value of net future premiums. Included in net
amounts expected to be paid is the excess of the guaranteed death benefits
over the values of the contractholders’ accounts (based on underlying
equity and bond mutual fund investments). |
· |
The
reserves include an estimate for partial surrenders that essentially lock
in the death benefit for a particular policy based on annual election
rates that vary from 0-10% depending on the net amount at risk for each
policy. |
· |
The
mean investment performance assumption is 5% considering CIGNA's program
to reduce equity market exposures using futures and forward contracts
(described above). |
· |
The
volatility assumption is 16-31%, varying by equity fund type; 4-8%,
varying by bond fund type; and 1% for money market
funds. |
· |
The
mortality assumption is 70-75% of the 1994 Group Annuity Mortality table,
with 1% annual improvement beginning January 1,
2000. |
· |
The
lapse rate assumption is 0-15%, depending on contract type, policy
duration and the ratio of the net amount at risk to account
value. |
· |
The
discount rate is 5.75%. |
As
of |
|||||||
(Dollars
in millions) |
June
30, 2004 |
December
31, 2003 |
|||||
Highest
annuity value |
|||||||
Account value |
$ |
39,241 |
$ |
41,497 |
|||
Net amount at risk |
$ |
9,658 |
$ |
10,951 |
|||
Average attained age of contractholders |
65 |
65 |
|||||
Anniversary
value reset |
|||||||
Account value |
$ |
3,122 |
$ |
4,474 |
|||
Net amount at risk |
$ |
260 |
$ |
309 |
|||
Average attained age of contractholders |
59 |
59 |
|||||
Other
|
|||||||
Account value |
$ |
4,347 |
$ |
6,530 |
|||
Net amount at risk |
$ |
1,258 |
$ |
1,660 |
|||
Average attained age of contractholders |
63 |
64 |
|||||
Total |
|||||||
Account value |
$ |
46,710 |
$ |
52,501 |
|||
Net amount at risk |
$ |
11,176 |
$ |
12,920 |
|||
Average attained age of contractholders
(weighted by exposure) |
65 |
64 |
|||||
Number of contractholders |
1.2
million |
1.4
million |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | ||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Service
cost |
$ |
16 |
$ |
20 |
$ |
38 |
$ |
40 |
|||||
Interest
cost |
55 |
56 |
110 |
111 |
|||||||||
Expected
return on plan
assets |
(48 |
) |
(50 |
) |
(96 |
) |
(100 |
) | |||||
Amortization
of |
|||||||||||||
net loss from past
experience |
30 |
5 |
48 |
11 |
|||||||||
Net
pension cost |
$ |
53 |
$ |
31 |
$ |
100 |
$ |
62 |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Service
cost |
$ |
— |
$ |
— |
$ |
1 |
$ |
1 |
|||||
Interest
cost |
8 |
7 |
17 |
18 |
|||||||||
Expected
return on plan
assets |
— |
— |
(1 |
) |
(1 |
) | |||||||
Amortization
of prior
service cost |
(4 |
) |
(3 |
) |
(8 |
) |
(8 |
) | |||||
Net
other postretirement
benefit cost |
$ |
4 |
$ |
4 |
$ |
9 |
$ |
10 |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Fixed
maturities |
$ |
107 |
$ |
40 |
$ |
116 |
$ |
17 |
|||||
Equity
securities |
10 |
52 |
12 |
36 |
|||||||||
Mortgage
loans |
219 |
— |
219 |
(1 |
) | ||||||||
Real
estate |
54 |
— |
52 |
(1 |
) | ||||||||
Derivatives
and other |
25 |
17 |
37 |
27 |
|||||||||
Realized
investment gains,
before income taxes |
415 |
109 |
436 |
78 |
|||||||||
Less
income taxes |
146 |
37 |
153 |
27 |
|||||||||
Net
realized investment
gains |
$ |
269 |
$ |
72 |
$ |
283 |
$ |
51 |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Proceeds
from sales |
$ |
490 |
$ |
2,610 |
$ |
1,143 |
$ |
4,233 |
|||||
Gross
gains on sales |
$ |
176 |
$ |
134 |
$ |
210 |
$ |
189 |
|||||
Gross
losses on sales |
$ |
(31 |
) |
$ |
(5 |
) |
$ |
(34 |
) |
$ |
(44 |
) |
(In
millions) |
Fair
Value |
Amortized
Cost |
Unrealized
Depreciation |
|||||||
One
year or less: |
||||||||||
Investment
grade |
$ |
4,226 |
$ |
4,365 |
$ |
(139 |
) | |||
Below
investment grade |
$ |
349 |
$ |
375 |
$ |
(26 |
) | |||
More
than one year: |
||||||||||
Investment
grade |
$ |
181 |
$ |
187 |
$ |
(6 |
) | |||
Below
investment grade |
$ |
52 |
$ |
55 |
$ |
(3 |
) |
(In
millions) |
Pre-Tax |
Tax
(Expense) Benefit |
After-
Tax
|
|||||||
Three
Months Ended June 30, | ||||||||||
2004 |
||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities: |
||||||||||
Unrealized
depreciation on securities held |
$ |
(462 |
) |
$ |
157 |
$ |
(305 |
) | ||
Gains
realized on securities |
(117 |
) |
41 |
(76 |
) | |||||
Reclassification
to other liabilities for
modified coinsurance |
(256 |
) |
90 |
(166 |
) | |||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities |
$ |
(835 |
) |
$ |
288 |
$ |
(547 |
) | ||
Net
unrealized depreciation, derivatives |
$ |
(3 |
) |
$ |
2 |
$ |
(1 |
) | ||
Net
translation of foreign currencies |
$ |
(17 |
) |
$ |
6 |
$ |
(11 |
) | ||
Minimum
pension liability adjustment |
$ |
(60 |
) |
$ |
21 |
$ |
(39 |
) | ||
2003 |
||||||||||
Net
unrealized appreciation,
securities: |
||||||||||
Unrealized
appreciation on securities held |
$ |
377 |
$ |
(133 |
) |
$ |
244 |
|||
Gains
realized on securities |
(92 |
) |
33 |
(59 |
) | |||||
Net
unrealized appreciation, securities |
$ |
285 |
$ |
(100 |
) |
$ |
185 |
|||
Net
unrealized depreciation, derivatives |
$ |
(5 |
) |
$ |
2 |
$ |
(3 |
) | ||
Net
translation of foreign currencies |
$ |
9 |
$ |
(3 |
) |
$ |
6 |
|||
Minimum
pension liability adjustment |
$ |
(21 |
) |
$ |
8 |
$ |
(13 |
) | ||
Six
Months Ended June 30, |
||||||||||
2004 |
||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities: |
||||||||||
Unrealized
depreciation on securities held |
$ |
(218 |
) |
$ |
72 |
$ |
(146 |
) | ||
Gains
realized on securities |
(128 |
) |
45 |
(83 |
) | |||||
Reclassification
to other liabilities for
modified coinsurance |
(256 |
) |
90 |
(166 |
) | |||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities |
$ |
(602 |
) |
$ |
207 |
$ |
(395 |
) | ||
Net
unrealized appreciation, derivatives |
$ |
8 |
$ |
(2 |
) |
$ |
6 |
|||
Net
translation of foreign currencies |
$ |
(4 |
) |
$ |
2 |
$ |
(2 |
) | ||
Minimum
pension liability adjustment |
$ |
(234 |
) |
$ |
82 |
$ |
(152 |
) | ||
2003 |
||||||||||
Net
unrealized appreciation,
securities: |
||||||||||
Unrealized
appreciation on securities held |
$ |
437 |
$ |
(153 |
) |
$ |
284 |
|||
Gains
realized on securities |
(53 |
) |
19 |
(34 |
) | |||||
Net
unrealized appreciation, securities |
$ |
384 |
$ |
(134 |
) |
$ |
250 |
|||
Net
unrealized depreciation, derivatives |
$ |
(8 |
) |
$ |
3 |
$ |
(5 |
) | ||
Net
translation of foreign currencies: |
||||||||||
Net
translation on foreign currencies held |
$ |
14 |
$ |
(5 |
) |
$ |
9 |
|||
Foreign
currency translation losses realized on
sale of business |
17 |
(6 |
) |
11 |
||||||
Net
translation of foreign currencies |
$ |
31 |
$ |
(11 |
) |
$ |
20 |
|||
Minimum
pension liability adjustment |
$ |
(21 |
) |
$ |
8 |
$ |
(13 |
) |
(Dollars
in millions, except per share
amounts) |
Basic |
|
Effect
of Dilution |
|
Diluted |
|||||
Three
Months Ended June 30, |
||||||||||
2004 |
||||||||||
Income
from continuing operations |
$ |
493 |
$ |
— |
$ |
493 |
||||
Shares
(in
thousands): |
||||||||||
Weighted
average |
138,801 |
— |
138,801 |
|||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants |
1,701 |
1,701 |
||||||||
Total
shares |
138,801 |
1,701 |
140,502 |
|||||||
EPS |
$ |
3.55 |
$ |
(0.04 |
) |
$ |
3.51 |
|||
2003 |
||||||||||
Loss
from continuing operations |
$ |
(55 |
) |
$ |
— |
$ |
(55 |
) | ||
Shares
(in
thousands): |
||||||||||
Weighted
average |
139,735 |
— |
139,735 |
|||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants* |
— |
— |
||||||||
Total
shares |
139,735 |
— |
139,735 |
|||||||
EPS |
$ |
(0.39 |
) |
— |
$ |
(0.39 |
) | |||
Six
Months Ended June 30, |
||||||||||
2004 |
||||||||||
Income
from continuing operations |
$ |
705 |
$ |
— |
$ |
705 |
||||
Shares
(in
thousands): |
||||||||||
Weighted
average |
139,402 |
— |
139,402 |
|||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants |
1,503 |
1,503 |
||||||||
Total
shares |
139,402 |
1,503 |
140,905 |
|||||||
EPS |
$ |
5.06 |
$ |
(0.06 |
) |
$ |
5.00 |
|||
2003 |
||||||||||
Income
from continuing operations |
$ |
132 |
$ |
— |
$ |
132 |
||||
Shares
(in
thousands): |
||||||||||
Weighted
average |
139,712 |
— |
139,712 |
|||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants |
695 |
695 |
||||||||
Total
shares |
139,712 |
695 |
140,407 |
|||||||
EPS |
$ |
0.94 |
— |
$ |
0.94 |
Three
Months Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
2003 |
2004 |
2003 |
|||||||||
Premiums
and fees |
|||||||||||||
Individual
life insurance and
annuity business sold |
$ |
74 |
$ |
81 |
$ |
147 |
$ |
159 |
|||||
Other |
39 |
40 |
77 |
85 |
|||||||||
Total |
$ |
113 |
$ |
121 |
$ |
224 |
$ |
244 |
|||||
Reinsurance
recoveries |
|||||||||||||
Individual
life insurance and
annuity business sold |
$ |
70 |
$ |
74 |
$ |
149 |
$ |
149 |
|||||
Other |
15 |
53 |
52 |
85 |
|||||||||
Total |
$ |
85 |
$ |
127 |
$ |
201 |
$ |
234 |
· |
the
sold retirement benefits business is now reported in the Run-off
Retirement segment; |
· |
the
corporate life insurance business (previously reported in the Retirement
segment) was retained and is now reported in Other Operations;
and |
· |
results
from the disability and workers’ compensation case management activities
(previously reported in the Health Care segment) are now included in the
Disability and Life segment. |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | ||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Premiums
and fees and other revenues |
|||||||||||||
Health
Care |
$ |
2,944 |
$ |
3,325 |
$ |
5,987 |
$ |
6,690 |
|||||
Disability
and Life |
519 |
483 |
1,046 |
956 |
|||||||||
International
|
255 |
208 |
496 |
422 |
|||||||||
Run-off
Retirement |
94 |
63 |
328 |
135 |
|||||||||
Run-off
Reinsurance |
(9 |
) |
(297 |
) |
(18 |
) |
(218 |
) | |||||
Other
Operations |
71 |
92 |
152 |
180 |
|||||||||
Corporate |
(11 |
) |
(17 |
) |
(30 |
) |
(35 |
) | |||||
Total |
$ |
3,863 |
$ |
3,857 |
$ |
7,961 |
$ |
8,130 |
|||||
Income
(loss) from continuing
operations
|
|||||||||||||
Health
Care |
$ |
175 |
$ |
80 |
$ |
327 |
$ |
200 |
|||||
Disability
and Life |
48 |
40 |
87 |
79 |
|||||||||
International
|
20 |
11 |
35 |
21 |
|||||||||
Run-off
Retirement |
29 |
52 |
56 |
97 |
|||||||||
Run-off
Reinsurance |
(13 |
) |
(306 |
) |
(23 |
) |
(321 |
) | |||||
Other
Operations |
18 |
26 |
36 |
56 |
|||||||||
Corporate
(restated) |
(53 |
) |
(30 |
) |
(96 |
) |
(51 |
) | |||||
Segment
earnings (restated) |
224 |
(127 |
) |
422 |
81 |
||||||||
Realized
investment gains , net of
taxes |
269 |
72 |
283 |
51 |
|||||||||
Income
from
continuing operations
(restated) |
$ |
493 |
$ |
(55 |
) |
$ |
705 |
$ |
132 |
· |
CIGNA
guarantees that separate account assets will be sufficient to pay certain
retiree or life benefits. The sponsoring employers are primarily
responsible for ensuring that assets are sufficient to pay these benefits
and are required to maintain assets that exceed a certain percentage of
benefit obligations. This percentage varies depending on the asset class
within a sponsoring employer’s portfolio (for example, a bond fund would
require a lower percentage than a riskier equity fund) and thus will vary
as the composition of the portfolio changes. If employers do not maintain
the required levels of separate account assets, CIGNA has the right to
redirect the management of the related assets to provide for benefit
payments. As of June 30, 2004, employers maintained assets that exceeded
102% to 133% of benefit obligations. Benefit obligations under these
arrangements were $3.5 billion as of June 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003.
As of June 30, 2004 approximately 90% of these guarantees are reinsured by
an affiliate of the buyer of the retirement benefits business. There were
no additional liabilities required for these guarantees as of June 30,
2004, or December 31, 2003. |
· |
For
certain employer-sponsored savings and retirement plans, CIGNA guarantees
that participants will receive the value of their accounts at the time of
withdrawal. These guarantees could require payment by CIGNA in the event
that a significant number of plan participants withdraw their accounts
when the market value of the related separate account assets is less than
plan participant account values at the time of withdrawal. Participant
account values under these arrangements are invested primarily in fixed
income investments and were $2.0 billion as of June 30, 2004, and December
31, 2003. There were no additional liabilities required for these
guarantees as of June 30, 2004, or December 31, 2003.
|
· |
CIGNA
guarantees a minimum level of earnings (based on investment, mortality and
retirement experience) for a certain group annuity contract. If the actual
investment return is less than the minimum guaranteed level, CIGNA is
required to fund the difference. The guaranteed benefit obligation was
$303 million as of June 30, 2004, and $304 million as of December 31,
2003. CIGNA had additional liabilities for this guarantee of $16 million
as of June 30, 2004, and $15 million as of December 31, 2003. The fair
value of separate account assets for this group annuity contract were as
follows: |
(In
millions) |
June
30,
2004 |
December
31, 2003 |
|||||
Fixed
maturities |
$ |
329 |
$ |
342 |
|||
Mortgage
loans |
105 |
134 |
|||||
Other |
20 |
3 |
|||||
Total |
$ |
454 |
$ |
479 |
· |
No
annuitants surrendered their accounts, and |
· |
All
annuitants lived to elect their benefits;
and |
· |
All
annuitants elected to receive their benefit on the first available date
(beginning in 2004 through 2014); and |
· |
All
underlying mutual fund investment values remained at the June 30, 2004
value of $3.3 billion, with no future
returns. |
· |
additional
mandated benefits or services that increase costs without improving the
quality of care; |
· |
legislation
that would grant plan participants broader rights to sue their health
plans; |
· |
changes
in ERISA regulations resulting in increased administrative burdens and
costs; |
· |
additional
restrictions on the use of prescription drug formularies;
|
· |
additional
privacy legislation and regulations that interfere with the proper use of
medical information for research, coordination of medical care and disease
management; |
· |
additional
rules establishing the time periods for payment of health care provider
claims that vary from state to state; and |
· |
legislation
that would exempt independent physicians from antitrust
laws. |
INDEX |
|
Introduction |
30 |
Overview |
30 |
Consolidated
Results of Operations (As
Restated,
See
Note 3) |
32 |
Sale
of Retirement Benefits Business |
34 |
Other
Matters |
35 |
Health
Care |
40 |
Disability
and Life |
43 |
International
|
44 |
Run-off
Retirement |
45 |
Run-off
Reinsurance |
46 |
Other
Operations |
49 |
Corporate
(As
Restated, See Note 3) |
50 |
Discontinued
Operations |
50 |
Liquidity
and Capital Resources |
50 |
Investment
Assets |
56 |
Market
Risk |
57 |
Cautionary
Statement |
59 |
· |
cost
trends and inflation levels for medical and related
services; |
· |
patterns
of utilization of medical and other
services; |
· |
employment
levels; |
· |
the
tort liability system; |
· |
interest
rates and equity market returns; |
· |
regulations
and tax rules related to the provision and administration of employee
benefit plans; and |
· |
initiatives
to increase health care regulation. |
· |
the
absolute level of and trends in benefit
costs; |
· |
the
volume of customers served and the mix of products and services purchased
by those customers; |
· |
competitiveness
of CIGNA's product design and service
quality; |
· |
the
ability to price products and services competitively at levels that
appropriately account for underlying cost inflation and utilization
patterns; and |
· |
the
relationship between administrative costs and
revenue. |
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | ||||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
2004 |
2003 |
||||||||||
|
(As
Restated, See Note 3) | |||||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
3,507 |
$ |
3,859 |
$ |
7,131 |
$ |
7,774 |
||||||||
Net
investment income |
355 |
668 |
958 |
1,326 |
||||||||||||
Other
revenues |
356 |
(2 |
) |
830 |
356 |
|||||||||||
Realized
investment gains |
415 |
109 |
436 |
78 |
||||||||||||
Total
revenues |
4,633 |
4,634 |
9,355 |
9,534 |
||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses |
3,891 |
4,714 |
8,294 |
9,333 |
||||||||||||
Income
(loss) from continuing
operations before taxes
(benefits) |
742 |
(80 |
) |
1,061 |
201 |
|||||||||||
Income
taxes (benefits) |
249 |
(25 |
) |
356 |
69 |
|||||||||||
Income
(loss) from continuing
operations |
493 |
(55 |
) |
705 |
132 |
|||||||||||
Income
from discontinued
operations |
— |
— |
— |
48 |
||||||||||||
Income
(loss) before cumulative
effect of accounting change |
493 |
(55 |
) |
705 |
180 |
|||||||||||
Cumulative
effect of accounting
change, net of taxes (See Note
2 to the Financial Statements) |
— |
— |
(139 |
) |
— |
|||||||||||
Net
income (loss) |
$ |
493 |
$ |
(55 |
) |
$ |
566 |
$ |
180 |
|||||||
Realized
investment gains,
net of taxes |
$ |
269 |
$ |
72 |
$ |
283 |
$ |
51 |
SPECIAL
ITEMS
(in
millions) |
Pre-Tax
Benefit
(Charge) |
|
After-Tax
Benefit (Charge) |
| |||
Three
Months Ended June 30, |
|||||||
2003 |
|||||||
Reserve
charge on guaranteed minimum death
benefit contracts (see page 32) |
$ |
(441 |
) |
$ |
(286 |
) | |
Restructuring
items, net* |
5 |
3 |
|||||
Total |
$ |
(436 |
) |
$ |
(283 |
) | |
Six
Months Ended June 30, |
|||||||
2004 |
|||||||
Restructuring
charge (see page 24) |
$ |
(75 |
) |
$ |
(49 |
) | |
Effect
of new accounting pronouncement (see
page 31) |
(17 |
) |
(11 |
) | |||
Total |
$ |
(92 |
) |
$ |
(60 |
) | |
2003 |
|||||||
Reserve
charge on guaranteed minimum death
benefit contracts (see page 32) |
$ |
(441 |
) |
$ |
(286 |
) | |
Restructuring
items, net* |
11 |
7 |
|||||
Total |
$ |
(430 |
) |
$ |
(279 |
) |
· |
lower
premiums and fees in the Health Care segment primarily due to lower
membership; and |
· |
reduced
net investment income primarily related to the sale of the retirement
benefits business. |
· |
higher
realized investment gains primarily due to the recognition of a portion of
the gain on sale of the retirement benefits business;
and |
· |
lower
losses recognized from futures and forward contracts, in connection with
the program to reduce equity market risks (see guaranteed minimum death
benefit contracts on page 46). |
· | realized investment gains (losses); or |
· | special items for the second half of 2004 including: |
· |
any
accelerated recognition of the deferred gain associated with the sale of
the retirement benefits business (see below for additional information);
and |
· |
the
impact of any ongoing volatility from certain modified coinsurance
arrangements with the buyer of the retirement benefits business (see
below). |
· | it requires assumptions to be made that were uncertain at the time the estimate was made; and |
· | changes in the estimate or different estimates that could have been selected could have a material impact on CIGNA’s consolidated results of operations or financial condition. |
· | future policy benefits - guaranteed minimum death benefits; |
· | unpaid claims and claim expenses for guaranteed cost and minimum premium programs and retrospectively experience-rated health care products; |
· | reinsurance recoverables for Run-off Reinsurance; and |
· | investments - recognition of losses from “other than temporary” impairments of public and private placement fixed maturities. |
(In
millions) |
Health
Care/ Disability and Life* |
Corporate |
Total |
|||||||
First
quarter 2004 charge: |
||||||||||
Severance |
$ |
39 |
$ |
31 |
$ |
70 |
||||
Real estate and other |
5 |
— |
5 |
|||||||
Total |
44 |
31 |
75 |
|||||||
First
quarter 2004 payments: |
||||||||||
Severance |
(2 |
) |
(4 |
) |
(6 |
) | ||||
Balance
as of March 31, 2004 |
42 |
27 |
69 |
|||||||
Second
quarter 2004
charge: |
||||||||||
Severance |
— |
4 |
4 |
|||||||
Real estate and other |
3 |
— |
3 |
|||||||
Total |
3 |
4 |
7 |
|||||||
Second
quarter 2004
payments: |
||||||||||
Severance |
(10 |
) |
(8 |
) |
(18 |
) | ||||
Real estate and other |
(1 |
) |
— |
(1 |
) | |||||
Balance
as of June 30, 2004 |
$ |
34 |
$ |
23 |
$ |
57 |
· |
additional
mandated benefits or services that increase costs without improving the
quality of care; |
· |
legislation
that would grant plan participants broader rights to sue their health
plans; |
· |
changes
in ERISA regulations resulting in increased administrative burdens and
costs; |
· |
additional
restrictions on the use of prescription drug formularies;
|
· |
additional
privacy legislation and regulations that interfere with the proper use of
medical information for research, coordination of medical care and disease
management; |
· |
additional
rules establishing the time periods for payment of health care provider
claims that vary from state to state; and |
· |
legislation
that would exempt independent physicians from antitrust
laws. |
· |
the
sold retirement benefits business is now reported in the Run-off
Retirement segment; |
· |
the
corporate life insurance business (previously reported in the Retirement
segment) was retained and is now reported in Other Operations;
and |
· |
results
from the disability and workers’ compensation case management activities
(previously reported in the Health Care segment) are now included in the
Disability and Life segment. |
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
2003 |
2004 |
2003 | ||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
2,689 |
$ |
3,097 |
$ |
5,475 |
$6,240 | |||||||||
Net
investment income |
69 |
74 |
141 |
142 | ||||||||||||
Other
revenues |
255 |
228 |
512 |
450 | ||||||||||||
Segment
revenues |
3,013 |
3,399 |
6,128 |
6,832 | ||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses |
2,748 |
3,269 |
5,627 |
6,513 | ||||||||||||
Income
before taxes |
265 |
130 |
501 |
319 | ||||||||||||
Income
taxes |
90 |
50 |
174 |
119 | ||||||||||||
Segment
earnings |
$ |
175 |
$ |
80 |
$ |
327 |
$200 | |||||||||
Realized
investment gains,
net of taxes |
$ |
— |
$ |
19 |
$ |
4 |
$11 | |||||||||
Special
items (after-tax) included
in segment earnings: |
||||||||||||||||
Restructuring
charge |
$ |
— |
$ |
— |
$ |
(28 |
) |
$— | ||||||||
Restructuring
item |
$ |
— |
$ |
11 |
$ |
— |
$15 |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
2003 |
|
2004 |
|
2003 |
||||||
HMO
operations |
$ |
149 |
$ |
72 |
$ |
287 |
$ |
175 |
|||||
Indemnity
operations |
26 |
8 |
40 |
25 |
|||||||||
Total |
$ |
175 |
$ |
80 |
$ |
327 |
$ |
200 |
|||||
Total
special items (after-
tax) for HMO and
Indemnity operations: |
|||||||||||||
HMO
operations |
$ |
— |
$ |
6 |
$ |
(3 |
) |
$ |
8 |
||||
Indemnity
operations |
$ |
— |
$ |
5 |
$ |
(25 |
) |
$ |
7 |
· |
favorable
prior year claims development compared to unfavorable development in the
same period last year; |
· |
underlying
improvement in the Commercial HMO medical cost ratio, excluding the impact
of prior year claims development, reflecting execution of CIGNA's medical
management model resulting in improved inpatient utilization and pricing
actions; |
· |
reduced
operating expenses due to lower spending and increased productivity
largely resulting from organizational changes, restructuring actions and
higher attrition; and |
· |
higher
earnings in pharmaceutical fulfillment and disease management
services. |
· |
improved
underwriting and medical cost management in the experience-rated and
guaranteed cost businesses; and |
· |
the
impact of reprocessing certain claims reflected in 2003
results. |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | |||||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
2003 |
2004 |
2003 | ||||||||||||
Guaranteed
cost |
$ |
1,369 |
$ |
1,528 |
$ |
2,731 |
$3,086 | |||||||||
Experience-rated |
962 |
1,156 |
2,003 |
2,307 | ||||||||||||
Administrative
services only |
358 |
413 |
741 |
847 | ||||||||||||
Total
premiums and fees |
$ |
2,689 |
$ |
3,097 |
$ |
5,475 |
$6,240 |
(In
millions) |
2004 |
2003 |
||||
HMO |
5.4 |
6.3 |
||||
Indemnity
(estimated) |
4.6 |
5.7 |
· |
lowering
medical cost trends; |
· |
continuing
to deliver quality member service; |
· |
lowering
administrative expenses; and |
· |
improving
medical membership results. |
· |
a
diverse product portfolio; |
· |
consistent
member service delivery; |
· |
competitive
provider networks; |
· |
strong
clinical quality in medical, specialty health care and disability
management; and |
· |
an
effective suite of customer and provider tools;
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
2003 | |||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
471 |
$ |
432 |
$ |
946 |
$855 | |||||||||||||||
Net
investment income |
64 |
60 |
124 |
121 | ||||||||||||||||||
Other
revenues |
48 |
51 |
100 |
101 | ||||||||||||||||||
Segment
revenues |
583 |
543 |
1,170 |
1,077 | ||||||||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses |
518 |
488 |
1,051 |
970 | ||||||||||||||||||
Income
before taxes |
65 |
55 |
119 |
107 | ||||||||||||||||||
Income
taxes |
17 |
15 |
32 |
28 | ||||||||||||||||||
Segment
earnings |
$ |
48 |
$ |
40 |
$ |
87 |
$79 | |||||||||||||||
Realized
investment gains,
net of taxes |
$ |
— |
$ |
31 |
$ |
1 |
$22 | |||||||||||||||
Special
item (after-tax)
included in segment
earnings: |
||||||||||||||||||||||
Restructuring
items, net |
$ |
— |
$ |
1 |
$ |
(1 |
) |
$1 |
· |
favorable
mortality experience in the life insurance business and continued strong
disability management execution; and |
· |
reduced
operating expenses due to restructuring-related actions and improved
expense management. |
FINANCIAL SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
|||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
252 |
$ |
207 |
$ |
491 |
$ |
421 |
|||||
Net
investment income |
14 |
15 |
26 |
26 |
|||||||||
Other
revenues |
3 |
1 |
5 |
1 |
|||||||||
Segment
revenues |
269 |
223 |
522 |
448 |
|||||||||
Benefits
and expenses |
238 |
206 |
468 |
415 |
|||||||||
Income
before taxes |
31 |
17 |
54 |
33 |
|||||||||
Income
taxes |
11 |
6 |
19 |
12 |
|||||||||
Segment
earnings |
$ |
20 |
$ |
11 |
$ |
35 |
$ |
21 |
|||||
Realized
investment gains,
net of taxes |
$ |
— |
$ |
5 |
$ |
1 |
$ |
5 |
· |
sales
growth in the life, accident and health insurance operations, primarily in
Korea; and |
· |
higher
premiums and fees for the expatriate employee benefit business principally
resulting from membership growth. |
FINANCIAL SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | |||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
47 |
$ |
63 |
$ |
116 |
$ |
135 |
|||||
Net
investment income |
55 |
367 |
371 |
733 |
|||||||||
Other
revenues |
47 |
— |
212 |
— |
|||||||||
Segment
revenues |
149 |
430 |
699 |
868 |
|||||||||
Benefits
and expenses |
111 |
357 |
627 |
732 |
|||||||||
Income
before taxes |
38 |
73 |
72 |
136 |
|||||||||
Income
taxes |
9 |
21 |
16 |
39 |
|||||||||
Segment
earnings |
$ |
29 |
$ |
52 |
$ |
56 |
$ |
97 |
|||||
Realized
investment gains,
net of taxes |
$ |
262 |
$ |
6 |
$ |
267 |
$ |
4 |
|||||
Special
item (after-tax)
included in segment
earnings: |
|||||||||||||
Effect
of new accounting
pronouncement (see Note
2 to the Financial
Statements) |
$ |
— |
$ |
— |
$ |
(11 |
) |
$ |
— |
· |
gain
recognition related to the sale of the retirement benefits
business; |
· |
expenses
associated with the run-off of this business;
and |
· |
results
of the retirement benefits business prior to the
sale. |
FINANCIAL SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
|||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
19 |
$ |
14 |
$ |
40 |
$ |
37 |
|||||
Net
investment income |
24 |
20 |
48 |
35 |
|||||||||
Other
revenues |
(28 |
) |
(311 |
) |
(58 |
) |
(255 |
) | |||||
Segment
revenues |
15 |
(277 |
) |
30 |
(183 |
) | |||||||
Benefits
and expenses |
34 |
181 |
58 |
298 |
|||||||||
Loss
before income tax
benefits |
(19 |
) |
(458 |
) |
(28 |
) |
(481 |
) | |||||
Income
taxes (benefits) |
(6 |
) |
(152 |
) |
(5 |
) |
(160 |
) | |||||
Segment
loss |
$ |
(13 |
) |
$ |
(306 |
) |
$ |
(23 |
) |
$ |
(321 |
) | |
Realized
investment gains
(losses), net of taxes |
$ |
(3 |
) |
$ |
10 |
$ |
(2 |
) |
$ |
9 |
|||
Special
item (after-tax)
included in segment loss: |
|||||||||||||
Reserve
charge on
guaranteed minimum
death benefit contracts |
$ |
— |
$ |
(286 |
) |
$ |
— |
$ |
(286 |
) |
· |
lower
losses in the personal accident business; and
|
· |
the
impact of charges in 2003 related to disputed
contracts. |
· |
$580
million, reflecting the reduction in assumed future equity market returns
as a result of implementing the program. CIGNA determines liabilities
under the reinsurance contracts using an assumption for expected future
performance of equity markets. A consequence of implementing the program
is, effectively, a reduction in the assumption for expected future
performance of equity markets, as the futures contracts essentially
eliminate the opportunity to achieve previously expected market
returns; |
· |
$100
million, reflecting deterioration in equity markets that occurred in the
third quarter of 2002 (prior to implementation of the program);
and |
· |
$40
million, driven by changes for the
following: |
· |
lower
assumed lapse rates based on expectations that lower surrenders will occur
due to increased death benefits resulting from stock market
declines; |
· |
higher
assumed mortality based on experience since
mid-2001; |
· |
higher
assumed market volatility, based on recent experience and expected higher
S&P 500 volatility; and |
· |
a
lower assumed discount rate to reflect anticipated funding of the reserve
increase at yields lower than the existing
assumption. |
· |
$169
million for the addition of an explicit assumption for both actual and
projected future partial surrenders. This estimate is based on annual
election rates that vary depending on the net amount at risk for each
policy (see Note 6 for more information); |
· |
$56
million primarily reflecting refinements to assumptions relating to the
timing of lapses, death benefits and premiums to better reflect CIGNA's
experience; |
· |
$39
million due to higher assumed mortality reflecting adverse experience
based on annuitant deaths during the period from late 2000 into 2003; and
|
· |
$22
million resulting from a decrease in assumed mean investment performance
reflecting experience and future expectations based on history for similar
investments and considering CIGNA's program to reduce equity market
exposures. |
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | |||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Premiums
and fees |
$ |
29 |
$ |
46 |
$ |
63 |
$ |
86 |
|||||
Net
investment income |
125 |
132 |
244 |
269 |
|||||||||
Other
revenues |
42 |
46 |
89 |
94 |
|||||||||
Segment
revenues |
196 |
224 |
396 |
449 |
|||||||||
Benefits
and expenses |
167 |
184 |
340 |
362 |
|||||||||
Income
before taxes |
29 |
40 |
56 |
87 |
|||||||||
Income
taxes |
11 |
14 |
20 |
31 |
|||||||||
Segment
earnings |
$ |
18 |
$ |
26 |
$ |
36 |
$ |
56 |
|||||
Realized
investment gains,
net of taxes |
$ |
10 |
$ |
1 |
$ |
12 |
$ |
— |
· |
deferred
gains recognized from the 1998 sale of the individual life insurance and
annuity business; |
· |
corporate
life insurance; |
· |
leveraged
corporate life insurance (corporate life insurance on which policy loans
are outstanding); |
· |
settlement
annuity business; and |
· |
certain
investment management services. |
· |
higher
severance and employee retention costs for investment operations
supporting the sold retirement benefits business;
and |
· |
lower
earnings in the individual life insurance and annuity business as a result
of an increase to litigation reserves and lower amortized gains.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, | |||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
Segment
loss (restated) |
$ |
(53 |
) |
$ |
(30 |
) |
$ |
(96 |
) |
$ |
(51 |
) | |
Special
item (after-tax)
included in segment
loss: |
|||||||||||||
Restructuring
charge |
$ |
— |
$ |
(9 |
) |
$ |
(20 |
) |
$ |
(9 |
) |
· |
stock
compensation expense; |
· |
the
inclusion of overhead costs previously allocated to the sold retirement
benefits business; and |
· |
costs
associated with retiring $76 million of long-term debt (see Contractual
obligations on page 53 for additional
information). |
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
(In millions) |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, 2003 | |||||||||
Revenues |
$— | |||||||||
Loss
before income tax benefits |
$(3) | |||||||||
Income
tax benefits |
(1) | |||||||||
Loss
from operations |
(2) | |||||||||
Gains
on sales, net of taxes of $25 |
50 | |||||||||
Income
from discontinued operations |
$48 |
· |
maintaining
appropriate levels of liquidity in its investment
portfolio; |
· |
using
cash flows from operating activities; and |
· |
matching
investment maturities to the estimated duration of the related insurance
and contractholder liabilities. |
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
2003 |
||||
Operating
activities |
$ |
1,263 |
$ |
640 |
|||
Investing
activities |
$ |
1,284 |
$ |
101 |
|||
Financing
activities |
$ |
(906 |
) |
$ |
(541 |
) |
· |
The
increase in cash flows from operating activities primarily reflects 2004
net proceeds from sales and maturities of securities supporting
experience-rated pension policyholder contracts of $954 million. The
classification of such proceeds as operating began in the fourth quarter
of 2003; accordingly there was no comparable amount for the first six
months of 2003. Such proceeds were used to fund most of the 2004
withdrawals from contractholder deposit funds discussed below under
financing. In addition, CIGNA reported lower losses in 2004 compared with
2003 of $196 million associated with futures and forward contracts entered
into as part of a program to manage equity market risks in the Run-off
Reinsurance segment. Partially offsetting these items were tax payments in
2004 of $107 million compared with tax refunds in 2003 of $327 million,
and payment of $70 million related to the provider class action litigation
(charges reported in prior years). |
· |
Cash
provided by investing activities primarily consisted of proceeds from the
sale of the retirement benefits business of $2.1 billion, partially offset
by net purchases of investments ($762 million), and net purchases of
property and equipment ($32 million). |
· |
Cash
used in financing activities consisted primarily of repurchase of and
payments of dividends on common stock ($322 million), net withdrawals from
contractholder deposit funds ($532 million) and repayment of debt ($76
million). |
· |
Cash
provided by investing activities consisted of proceeds on sale of a
business ($209 million), partially offset by net purchases of investments
($62 million) and net purchases of property and equipment ($46
million). |
· |
Cash
used in financing activities consisted primarily of payments of dividends
on common stock ($92 million), net withdrawals from contractholder deposit
funds ($319 million) and repayment of debt ($130
million). |
· |
provide
capital necessary to support growth and maintain or improve the financial
strength ratings of subsidiaries; |
· |
maintain
at least $500 million of uncommitted cash at the parent company level
through 2004; and |
· |
return
capital to investors through debt retirement and share
repurchase. |
· |
provide
any funding to subsidiaries needed to support growth and maintain or
improve their financial strength ratings; |
· |
provide
for the capital requirements of its
subsidiaries; |
· |
meet
debt service requirements and pay dividends to CIGNA
shareholders; |
· |
satisfy
pension plan funding requirements; and |
· |
fund
CIGNA's program to reduce the equity market risks associated with
guaranteed minimum death benefit
contracts. |
· |
management
uses cash for investment opportunities; |
· |
a
substantial insurance or contractholder liability becomes due before
related investment assets mature; or |
· |
regulatory
restrictions prevent the insurance and HMO subsidiaries from distributing
cash. |
CG
Life Insurance
Ratings |
CIGNA
Corporation
Debt
Ratings | ||
Senior
Debt |
Commercial
Paper | ||
A.M.
Best |
A- |
— |
— |
Moody’s |
A3 |
Baa3 |
P3 |
S&P |
A- |
BBB |
A2 |
Fitch |
A |
BBB |
F2 |
· |
CIGNA
guarantees that separate account assets will be sufficient to pay certain
retiree or life benefits. The sponsoring employers are primarily
responsible for ensuring that assets are sufficient to pay these benefits
and are required to maintain assets that exceed a certain percentage of
benefit obligations. This percentage varies depending on the asset class
within a sponsoring employer’s portfolio (for example, a bond fund would
require a lower percentage than a riskier equity fund) and thus will vary
as the composition of the portfolio changes. If employers do not maintain
the required levels of separate account assets, CIGNA has the right to
redirect the management of the related assets to provide for benefit
payments. As of June 30, 2004, employers maintained assets that exceeded
102% to 133% of benefit obligations. Benefit obligations under these
arrangements were $3.5 billion as of June 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003.
As of June 30, 2004, approximately 90% of these guarantees are reinsured
by an affiliate of the buyer of the retirement benefits business. There
were no additional liabilities required for these guarantees as of June
30, 2004, or December 31, 2003. |
· |
For
certain employer-sponsored savings and retirement plans, CIGNA guarantees
that participants will receive the value of their accounts at the time of
withdrawal. These guarantees could require payment by CIGNA in the event
that a significant number of plan participants withdraw their accounts
when the market value of the related separate account assets is less than
plan participant account values at the time of withdrawal. Participant
account values under these arrangements are invested primarily in fixed
income investments and were $2.0 billion as of June 30, 2004, and December
31, 2003. There were no additional liabilities required for these
guarantees as of June 30, 2004, or December 31, 2003.
|
· |
CIGNA
guarantees a minimum level of earnings (based on investment, mortality and
retirement experience) for a certain group annuity contract. If the actual
investment return is less than the minimum guaranteed level, CIGNA is
required to fund the difference. The guaranteed benefit obligation was
$303 million as of June 30, 2004, and $304 million as of December 31,
2003. CIGNA had additional liabilities for this guarantee of $16 million
as of June 30, 2004, and $15 million as of December 31,
2003. |
· |
No
annuitants surrendered their accounts; and |
· |
All
annuitants lived to elect their benefits;
and |
· |
All
annuitants elected to receive their benefit on the first available date
(beginning in 2004 through 2014); and |
· |
All
underlying mutual fund investment values remained at the June 30, 2004
value of $3.3 billion, with no future
returns. |
· |
CIGNA
retired approximately $76 million of long-term debt. The retired debt
comprised $15 million in 8.25% notes, maturing in 2007; $9 million in 7.4%
notes, maturing in 2007; $28 million in 7% notes, maturing in 2011; and
$24 million in 6.375% notes, maturing in 2011;
|
· |
other
long-term liabilities decreased by $232 million for derivatives
transferred to the buyer of the retirement benefits business;
and |
· |
commitments
made in 2004 for future net minimum rental payments under new
non-cancelable operating leases beginning in 2006 through 2016 were $83
million, net of future minimum rental payments assumed by the buyer of the
retirement benefits business. |
(In
millions) |
June
30,
2004 |
December
31,
2003 |
Problem
bonds |
$92 |
$132 |
Potential
problem bonds |
$48 |
$161 |
Problem
mortgage loans |
$35 |
$24 |
Potential
problem mortgage loans |
$170 |
$335 |
Foreclosed
real estate held and used |
$— |
$23 |
Three
Months
Ended
June
30, |
Six
Months
Ended
June
30, |
||||||||||||
(In
millions) |
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|
|
2004 |
|
|
2003 |
|||
CIGNA |
$ |
5 |
$ |
3 |
$ |
11 |
$ |
26 |
|||||
Other |
$ |
— |
$ |
12 |
$ |
1 |
$ |
48 |
· |
risks
and exposures associated with guaranteed minimum death benefit contracts
(see page 46) and guaranteed minimum income benefit contracts (see page
54); and |
· |
minimum
pension liabilities since equity securities comprise a key portion of the
assets of CIGNA’s employee pension plans. |
1. |
increases
in medical costs that are higher than anticipated in establishing premium
rates in CIGNA’s health care operations, including increased use and costs
of medical services; |
2. |
increased
medical, administrative, technology or other costs resulting from
legislative and regulatory challenges to, and new regulatory requirements
imposed on, CIGNA’s health care business (see Health care regulation on
page 37 for more information); |
3. |
challenges
and risks associated with implementing the improvement initiatives in the
health care operations, the organizational realignment and the reduction
of overall CIGNA and health care cost structure, including that
operational efficiencies and medical cost benefits do not emerge as
expected; |
4. |
risks
associated with the amount and timing of gain recognition on the sale of
CIGNA's retirement benefits business; |
5. |
risks
associated with pending and potential state and federal health care class
action lawsuits, purported securities class action lawsuits, disputes
regarding reinsurance arrangements, other litigation challenging CIGNA’s
businesses and the outcome of pending government
proceedings; |
6. |
heightened
competition, particularly price competition, which could reduce product
margins and constrain growth in CIGNA’s businesses, primarily the health
care business; |
7. |
significantly
greater than expected reductions in medical
membership; |
8. |
significant
changes in interest rates; |
9. |
downgrades
in the financial strength ratings of CIGNA’s insurance subsidiaries, which
could, among other things, adversely affect new sales and retention of
current business; |
10. |
limitations
on the ability of CIGNA's insurance subsidiaries to dividend capital to
the parent company as a result of downgrades in the subsidiaries’
financial strength ratings, changes in statutory reserve or capital
requirements or other financial
constraints; |
11. |
inability
of the program adopted by CIGNA to substantially reduce equity market
risks for reinsurance contracts that guarantee minimum death benefits
under certain variable annuities (including possible market difficulties
in entering into appropriate futures and forward contracts and in matching
such contracts to the underlying equity risk);
|
12. |
adjustments
to the reserve assumptions and other considerations (including lapse,
partial surrender, mortality, interest rates and volatility) used in
estimating CIGNA's liabilities for reinsurance contracts that guarantee
minimum death benefits under certain variable annuities;
|
13. |
adjustments
to the assumptions (including annuity election rates) used in estimating
CIGNA’s assets and liabilities for reinsurance contracts that guarantee
minimum income benefits under certain variable
annuities; |
14. |
significant
stock market declines, which could, among other things, result in
increased pension expenses in CIGNA’s pension plan in future periods and
the recognition of additional pension obligations;
|
15. |
unfavorable
claims experience related to workers’ compensation and personal accident
exposures of the run-off reinsurance business, including losses
attributable to the inability to recover claims from
retrocessionaires; |
16. |
significant
deterioration in economic conditions, which could have an adverse effect
on CIGNA’s operations and investments; and |
17. |
changes
in federal income tax laws. |
CIGNA
CORPORATION | ||
By:
|
/s/
Michael W. Bell | |
Michael
W. Bell | ||
Executive
Vice President and | ||
Chief
Financial Officer | ||
|
||
Date:
February 24, 2005 |
Number |
Description |
Method
of Filing |
12 |
Computation
of Ratios of Earnings |
Filed
herewith. |
to
Fixed Charges |
||
31.1 |
Certification
of Chief Executive Officer |
Filed
herewith. |
of
CIGNA Corporation pursuant to |
||
Rule
13a-14(a) or Rule 15d-14(a) |
||
of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 |
||
31.2 |
Certification
of Chief Financial Officer |
Filed
herewith. |
of
CIGNA Corporation pursuant to |
||
Rule
13a-14(a) or Rule 15d-14(a) |
||
of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 |
||
32.1 |
Certification
of Chief Executive Officer |
Furnished
herewith. |
of
CIGNA Corporation pursuant to Rule |
||
13a-14(b)
or Rule 15d-14(b) and 18 |
||
U.S.C.
Section 1350 |
||
32.2 |
Certification
of Chief Financial Officer |
Furnished
herewith. |
of
CIGNA Corporation pursuant to Rule |
||
13a-14(b)
or Rule 15d-14(b) and 18 |
||
U.S.C.
Section 1350 |