Truist agrees to sell rest of insurance subsidiary; unit valued at $15.5 billion [News & Record, Greensboro, N.C.]
Feb. 20—Truist Financial Corp. agreed on Tuesday to sell the remaining 80% of its profitable insurance subsidiary to an investor group led by private equity firms
The groups valued all of
Truist completed on
The all-cash sale is expected to close in the second quarter, the groups said. Truist's board voted unanimously to approve the deal.
To put the sale of
Insurance, as has been the case with Truist and legacy BB&T for several years, was the bank's top fee-revenue producer for fiscal 2023 at
Truist appears to have gotten a significantly higher sale price than had been projected.
The bank said in
The sale has been expected by analysts and investors since Truist disclosed in October it was reviewing its remaining ownership of
The buying investors also include
Truist projects the reinvestment in of
Truist said it intends to "evaluate a variety of capital deployment options, including a potential balance sheet repositioning with a goal of replacing (the subsidiary's) earnings. Any future actions would be subject to market conditions and other factors."
Management comments
The buyers said that by adding their "deep industry and operational expertise, (the subsidiary) will be well-positioned to grow in the rapidly evolving insurance brokerage market."
The subsidiary "will also have additional resources to invest in cutting-edge technology and develop new products and services, offering even greater value to clients."
CD&R partner
"Additionally, the cash received from the sale would be highly beneficial from a capital perspective as large unrealized losses in Truist's available-for-sale securities portfolio have weighed on the stock."
Other recent deals
The potential sale of the rest of
Truist reported it eliminated 1,038 jobs during the fourth quarter, marking an overall 5.7% workforce reduction during fiscal 2023. The bank reported having 50,905 employees as of
The bank disclosed plans for an overall
Rogers told analysts and investors that Truist is "aggressively cutting costs ... many achieved through near-term personnel-related reductions" over the next three quarters.
Earlier in February, Truist's pruning of business units continued with the agreement to sell its
Sterling, based in
Meanwhile,
On
Mayo said in response to the
Mayo said he still questions "why more savings don't reach the bottom line, though inflation, regulatory costs, and other normal course of business appear anything but normal in the current environment."
"Regardless, keeping expense flat for 2024 at the much more elevated level — expenses targeted up 7% in 2023, the most of any large bank — likely fall short of what is needed.
"The hope is that management may be trying to under-promise."
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