Investing
Allstate to sell its employer voluntary benefits business to StanCorp Financial in $2 billion deal By Reuters
(Reuters) -Insurer Allstate (NYSE:) has agreed to sell its subsidiaries that provide employer voluntary benefits to StanCorp Financial Group (The Standard) in a $2 billion cash deal, the company said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday.
The deal comes at a time when the economy is seeing slowing demand that has prompted companies to exit ventures not in sync with their business objectives.
The sale is the first step in insurer’s strategic decision to enable its health & benefits businesses – employer voluntary benefits, individual and group health – to realize their full growth potential by merging them with its ventures that have additional capabilities, the company said.
“The sale is expected to generate a gain of about $600 million and increase deployable capital by $1.6 billion,” Chief Financial Officer Jess Merten said.
The businesses being sold had revenues of $535 million and adjusted net income of $45 million for the first half of 2024.
Late in July, Allstate posted a second-quarter profit, compared with a year-earlier loss.
J.P. Morgan and Ardea Partners acted as financial advisors to Allstate while Citi acted as exclusive financial advisor to The Standard.
Read the full article here
-
Side Hustles6 days ago
San Francisco Pizzeria Found Success With Unique Menu
-
Investing7 days ago
She Started a Business That’s Earning Over $10M This Year
-
Passive Income7 days ago
Campbell’s Soup Is Trying to Change Its Name. Here’s Why.
-
Side Hustles7 days ago
How to Use Webinars to Boost Credibility and Your Bottom Line
-
Passive Income5 days ago
Correct Your Spelling Errors on PDFs With This All-in-One PDF Tool
-
Side Hustles5 days ago
There’s a Burnout Crisis in American Workplaces — and This Is the Solution
-
Side Hustles6 days ago
Who Are the Billionaires Backing Trump or Harris?
-
Investing7 days ago
Cyberattacks on US utilities surged 70% this year, says Check Point By Reuters