LONDON, Sept 20 (Reuters) - British insurer Legal & General
will offer annuities to Prudential pension
savers in a deal it expects will increase its 2020 annuity sales
by 15%, L&G said on Friday.
Legal & General is one of the biggest players in annuities
in Britain which offer pensioners a fixed income for life.
Prudential pulled out of the annuity market in early 2017.
Prudential pension policyholders who had been promised a
guaranteed annuity rate will from Nov. 1 be "introduced" to
Legal & General, who will take over the obligation of providing
their annuities, L&G said.
This follows similar deals between L&G and Aegon,
Swiss Re unit ReAssure and Sun Life Financial of
Canada.
The market for individual annuities has been in decline
since the British government gave pensioners more choice about
how to use their pension pots in 2015.
But L&G said its individual annuity sales had risen by 47%
in the first half of 2019, to 497 million pounds ($623.98
million).
Britain's markets watchdog has previously flagged concern
about mis-selling of annuities, particularly to people with a
reduced life expectancy.
L&G will "compare to whole market to see if the rate can be
improved on, assisting customers to obtain a better rate if one
is available", it said.
L&G is also a big player in bulk annuities, which involve
taking on the risk of company defined benefit, or final salary
pension schemes.
It agreed a 930 million pound bulk annuity deal with Tate &
Lyle this week.
($1 = 0.7965 pounds)
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn; editng by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)