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
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CIGNA
Corporation
|
||||||||||||||||
Consolidated
Statements of Income
|
||||||||||||||||
Three
Months Ended
|
Six
Months Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In millions,
except per share amounts)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Revenues
|
||||||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
$ |
3,757
|
$ |
3,369
|
$ |
7,465
|
$ |
6,637
|
||||||||
Net
investment income
|
279
|
299
|
559
|
628
|
||||||||||||
Other
revenues
|
356
|
424
|
721
|
790
|
||||||||||||
Realized
investment gains (losses)
|
(11 | ) |
6
|
10
|
150
|
|||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
4,381
|
4,098
|
8,755
|
8,205
|
||||||||||||
Benefits
and Expenses
|
||||||||||||||||
Health
Care medical claims expense
|
1,729
|
1,493
|
3,448
|
2,941
|
||||||||||||
Other
benefit expenses
|
834
|
825
|
1,670
|
1,613
|
||||||||||||
Other
operating expenses
|
1,490
|
1,372
|
2,896
|
2,715
|
||||||||||||
Total
benefits and expenses
|
4,053
|
3,690
|
8,014
|
7,269
|
||||||||||||
Income
from Continuing Operations
|
||||||||||||||||
before
Income Taxes
|
328
|
408
|
741
|
936
|
||||||||||||
Income
taxes (benefits):
|
||||||||||||||||
Current
|
163
|
65
|
295
|
319
|
||||||||||||
Deferred
|
(52 | ) |
70
|
(48 | ) | (8 | ) | |||||||||
Total
taxes
|
111
|
135
|
247
|
311
|
||||||||||||
Income
from Continuing Operations
|
217
|
273
|
494
|
625
|
||||||||||||
Loss
from Discontinued Operations, Net of Taxes
|
(19 | ) |
-
|
(7 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Net
Income
|
$ |
198
|
$ |
273
|
$ |
487
|
$ |
625
|
||||||||
Earnings
Per Share - Basic:
|
||||||||||||||||
Income
from continuing operations
|
$ |
0.76
|
$ |
0.79
|
$ |
1.72
|
$ |
1.77
|
||||||||
Loss
from discontinued operations
|
(0.06 | ) |
-
|
(0.03 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Net
income
|
$ |
0.70
|
$ |
0.79
|
$ |
1.69
|
$ |
1.77
|
||||||||
Earnings
Per Share - Diluted:
|
||||||||||||||||
Income
from continuing operations
|
$ |
0.75
|
$ |
0.78
|
$ |
1.68
|
$ |
1.74
|
||||||||
Loss
from discontinued operations
|
(0.07 | ) |
-
|
(0.02 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Net
income
|
$ |
0.68
|
$ |
0.78
|
$ |
1.66
|
$ |
1.74
|
||||||||
Dividends
Declared Per Share
|
$ |
0.010
|
$ |
0.008
|
$ |
0.018
|
$ |
0.017
|
||||||||
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 June 30,
|
As of December 31, | ||||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||||||||||
Assets
|
||||||||||||||||
Investments:
|
||||||||||||||||
Fixed
maturities, at fair value (amortized cost, $11,547;
$11,202)
|
$ |
12,017
|
$ |
11,955
|
||||||||||||
Equity
securities, at fair value (cost, $113; $112)
|
128
|
131
|
||||||||||||||
Mortgage
loans
|
3,656
|
3,988
|
||||||||||||||
Policy
loans
|
1,451
|
1,405
|
||||||||||||||
Real
estate
|
48
|
117
|
||||||||||||||
Other
long-term investments
|
502
|
418
|
||||||||||||||
Short-term
investments
|
20
|
89
|
||||||||||||||
Total
investments
|
17,822
|
18,103
|
||||||||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
1,104
|
1,392
|
||||||||||||||
Accrued
investment income
|
206
|
223
|
||||||||||||||
Premiums,
accounts and notes receivable
|
1,552
|
1,459
|
||||||||||||||
Reinsurance
recoverables
|
7,633
|
8,045
|
||||||||||||||
Deferred
policy acquisition costs
|
761
|
707
|
||||||||||||||
Property
and equipment
|
568
|
632
|
||||||||||||||
Deferred
income taxes, net
|
1,001
|
926
|
||||||||||||||
Goodwill
|
1,741
|
1,736
|
||||||||||||||
Other
assets, including other intangibles
|
744
|
611
|
||||||||||||||
Separate
account assets
|
8,394
|
8,565
|
||||||||||||||
Total
assets
|
$ |
41,526
|
$ |
42,399
|
||||||||||||
Liabilities
|
||||||||||||||||
Contractholder
deposit funds
|
$ |
8,929
|
$ |
9,164
|
||||||||||||
Future
policy benefits
|
8,035
|
8,245
|
||||||||||||||
Unpaid
claims and claim expenses
|
4,190
|
4,271
|
||||||||||||||
Health
Care medical claims payable
|
1,028
|
960
|
||||||||||||||
Unearned
premiums and fees
|
548
|
499
|
||||||||||||||
Total
insurance and contractholder liabilities
|
22,730
|
23,139
|
||||||||||||||
Accounts
payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities
|
4,586
|
4,602
|
||||||||||||||
Short-term
debt
|
-
|
382
|
||||||||||||||
Long-term
debt
|
1,792
|
1,294
|
||||||||||||||
Nonrecourse
obligations
|
15
|
87
|
||||||||||||||
Separate
account liabilities
|
8,394
|
8,565
|
||||||||||||||
Total
liabilities
|
37,517
|
38,069
|
||||||||||||||
Contingencies
— Note 15
|
||||||||||||||||
Shareholders’
Equity
|
||||||||||||||||
Common
stock (par value per share, $0.25; shares issued, 351;
160)
|
88
|
40
|
||||||||||||||
Additional
paid-in capital
|
2,460
|
2,451
|
||||||||||||||
Net
unrealized appreciation, fixed maturities
|
$ |
63
|
$ |
187
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized appreciation, equity securities
|
10
|
22
|
||||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, derivatives
|
(25 | ) | (15 | ) | ||||||||||||
Net
translation of foreign currencies
|
38
|
33
|
||||||||||||||
Postretirement
benefits liability adjustment
|
(343 | ) | (396 | ) | ||||||||||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive loss
|
(257 | ) | (169 | ) | ||||||||||||
Retained
earnings
|
6,513
|
6,177
|
||||||||||||||
Less
treasury stock, at cost
|
(4,795 | ) | (4,169 | ) | ||||||||||||
Total
shareholders’ equity
|
4,009
|
4,330
|
||||||||||||||
Total
liabilities and shareholders’ equity
|
$ |
41,526
|
$ |
42,399
|
||||||||||||
Shareholders’
Equity Per Share
|
$ |
14.14
|
$ |
14.63
|
||||||||||||
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,
except per share amounts)
|
||||||||||||||||
Three
Months Ended June 30,
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||||
Compre-
|
Share-
|
Compre-
|
Share-
|
|||||||||||||
hensive
|
holders’
|
hensive
|
holders’
|
|||||||||||||
Income
|
Equity
|
Income
|
Equity
|
|||||||||||||
Common
Stock, April 1
|
$ |
40
|
$ |
40
|
||||||||||||
Effect
of issuance of stock for stock split
|
48
|
-
|
||||||||||||||
Common
Stock, June 30
|
88
|
40
|
||||||||||||||
Additional
Paid-In Capital, April 1
|
2,485
|
2,419
|
||||||||||||||
Effect
of issuance of stock for employee benefit plans
|
23
|
9
|
||||||||||||||
Effect
of issuance of stock for stock split
|
(48 | ) |
-
|
|||||||||||||
Additional
Paid-In Capital, June 30
|
2,460
|
2,428
|
||||||||||||||
Accumulated
Other Comprehensive Loss, April 1
|
(171 | ) | (602 | ) | ||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, fixed maturities
|
$ | (118 | ) | (118 | ) | $ | (67 | ) | (67 | ) | ||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, equity securities
|
-
|
-
|
(1 | ) | (1 | ) | ||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation on securities
|
(118 | ) | (68 | ) | ||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, derivatives
|
(9 | ) | (9 | ) | (8 | ) | (8 | ) | ||||||||
Net
translation of foreign currencies
|
5
|
5
|
5
|
5
|
||||||||||||
Postretirement
benefits liability adjustment
|
36
|
36
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Minimum
pension liability
|
-
|
-
|
(9 | ) | (9 | ) | ||||||||||
Other
comprehensive loss
|
(86 | ) | (80 | ) | ||||||||||||
Accumulated
Other Comprehensive Loss, June 30
|
(257 | ) | (682 | ) | ||||||||||||
Retained
Earnings, April 1
|
6,375
|
5,425
|
||||||||||||||
Net
income
|
198
|
198
|
273
|
273
|
||||||||||||
Effects
of issuance of stock for employee benefit plans
|
(57 | ) | (9 | ) | ||||||||||||
Common
dividends declared
|
(3 | ) | (3 | ) | ||||||||||||
Retained
Earnings, June 30
|
6,513
|
5,686
|
||||||||||||||
Treasury
Stock, April 1
|
(4,577 | ) | (1,930 | ) | ||||||||||||
Repurchase
of common stock
|
(346 | ) | (876 | ) | ||||||||||||
Other,
primarily issuance of treasury stock for employee
|
||||||||||||||||
benefit
plans
|
128
|
28
|
||||||||||||||
Treasury
Stock, June 30
|
(4,795 | ) | (2,778 | ) | ||||||||||||
Total
Comprehensive Income and Shareholders’ Equity
|
$ |
112
|
$ |
4,009
|
$ |
193
|
$ |
4,694
|
||||||||
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
|
||||||||||||||||
Six
Months Ended June 30,
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||||
Compre-
|
Share-
|
Compre-
|
Share-
|
|||||||||||||
hensive
|
holders’
|
hensive
|
holders’
|
|||||||||||||
Income
|
Equity
|
Income
|
Equity
|
|||||||||||||
Common
Stock, January 1
|
$ |
40
|
$ |
40
|
||||||||||||
Effect
of issuance of stock for stock split
|
48
|
-
|
||||||||||||||
Common
Stock, June 30
|
88
|
40
|
||||||||||||||
Additional
Paid-In Capital, January 1
|
2,451
|
2,385
|
||||||||||||||
Effect
of issuance of stock for employee benefit plans
|
57
|
43
|
||||||||||||||
Effect
of issuance of stock for stock split
|
(48 | ) |
-
|
|||||||||||||
Additional
Paid-In Capital, June 30
|
2,460
|
2,428
|
||||||||||||||
Accumulated
Other Comprehensive Loss, January 1
|
||||||||||||||||
prior
to implementation effect
|
(169 | ) | (509 | ) | ||||||||||||
Implementation
effect of SFAS No.155 (see Note 2)
|
(12 | ) |
-
|
|||||||||||||
Accumulated
Other Comprehensive Loss,
|
||||||||||||||||
January
1 as adjusted
|
(181 | ) | (509 | ) | ||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, fixed maturities
|
$ | (124 | ) | (124 | ) | $ | (162 | ) | (162 | ) | ||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, equity securities
|
-
|
-
|
(5 | ) | (5 | ) | ||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation on securities
|
(124 | ) | (167 | ) | ||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, derivatives
|
(10 | ) | (10 | ) | (9 | ) | (9 | ) | ||||||||
Net
translation of foreign currencies
|
5
|
5
|
12
|
12
|
||||||||||||
Postretirement
benefits liability adjustment
|
53
|
53
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Minimum
pension liability
|
-
|
-
|
(9 | ) | (9 | ) | ||||||||||
Other
comprehensive loss
|
(76 | ) | (173 | ) | ||||||||||||
Accumulated
Other Comprehensive Loss, June 30
|
(257 | ) | (682 | ) | ||||||||||||
Retained
Earnings, January 1 prior to
|
||||||||||||||||
implementation
effects
|
6,177
|
5,162
|
||||||||||||||
Implementation
effect of SFAS No. 155 (see Note 2)
|
12
|
-
|
||||||||||||||
Implementation
effect of FIN 48 (see Note 2)
|
(29 | ) |
-
|
|||||||||||||
Retained
Earnings, January 1 as adjusted
|
6,160
|
5,162
|
||||||||||||||
Net
income
|
487
|
487
|
625
|
625
|
||||||||||||
Effects
of issuance of stock for employee benefit plans
|
(129 | ) | (95 | ) | ||||||||||||
Common
dividends declared
|
(5 | ) | (6 | ) | ||||||||||||
Retained
Earnings, June 30
|
6,513
|
5,686
|
||||||||||||||
Treasury
Stock, January 1
|
(4,169 | ) | (1,718 | ) | ||||||||||||
Repurchase
of common stock
|
(922 | ) | (1,295 | ) | ||||||||||||
Other,
primarily issuance of treasury stock for employee
|
||||||||||||||||
benefit
plans
|
296
|
235
|
||||||||||||||
Treasury
Stock, June 30
|
(4,795 | ) | (2,778 | ) | ||||||||||||
Total
Comprehensive Income and Shareholders’ Equity
|
$ |
411
|
$ |
4,009
|
$ |
452
|
$ |
4,694
|
||||||||
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,
|
|||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Cash
Flows from Operating Activities
|
||||||||
Net
income
|
$ |
487
|
$ |
625
|
||||
Adjustments
to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating
activities:
|
||||||||
Loss
from discontinued operations
|
7
|
-
|
||||||
Insurance
liabilities
|
77
|
(160 | ) | |||||
Reinsurance
recoverables
|
50
|
47
|
||||||
Deferred
policy acquisition costs
|
(56 | ) | (38 | ) | ||||
Premiums,
accounts and notes receivable
|
(73 | ) |
159
|
|||||
Other
assets
|
(154 | ) | (6 | ) | ||||
Accounts
payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities
|
(31 | ) | (393 | ) | ||||
Current
income taxes
|
80
|
134
|
||||||
Deferred
income taxes
|
(48 | ) | (8 | ) | ||||
Realized
investment gains
|
(10 | ) | (150 | ) | ||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
98
|
107
|
||||||
Gains
on sales of businesses (excluding discontinued operations)
|
(22 | ) | (33 | ) | ||||
Mortgage
loans originated and held for sale
|
(5 | ) | (312 | ) | ||||
Proceeds
from sales of mortgage loans held for sale
|
-
|
99
|
||||||
Other,
net
|
18
|
10
|
||||||
Net
cash provided by operating activities
|
418
|
81
|
||||||
Cash
Flows from Investing Activities
|
||||||||
Proceeds
from investments sold:
|
||||||||
Fixed
maturities
|
362
|
1,745
|
||||||
Equity
securities
|
23
|
17
|
||||||
Mortgage
loans
|
452
|
292
|
||||||
Other
(primarily short-term investments)
|
107
|
893
|
||||||
Investment
maturities and repayments:
|
||||||||
Fixed
maturities
|
432
|
505
|
||||||
Mortgage
loans
|
91
|
147
|
||||||
Investments
purchased:
|
||||||||
Fixed
maturities
|
(1,092 | ) | (1,592 | ) | ||||
Equity
securities
|
(11 | ) | (40 | ) | ||||
Mortgage
loans
|
(206 | ) | (545 | ) | ||||
Other
(primarily short-term investments)
|
(258 | ) | (485 | ) | ||||
Property
and equipment sales
|
70
|
-
|
||||||
Property
and equipment purchases
|
(105 | ) | (67 | ) | ||||
Cash
provided by investing activities of discontinued
operations
|
42
|
-
|
||||||
Other
acquisitions/dispositions, net cash used
|
(5 | ) |
-
|
|||||
Conversion
of single premium annuity business
|
-
|
(45 | ) | |||||
Other,
net
|
(6 | ) |
-
|
|||||
Net
cash provided by (used in) investing activities
|
(104 | ) |
825
|
|||||
Cash
Flows from Financing Activities
|
||||||||
Deposits
and interest credited to contractholder deposit funds
|
274
|
293
|
||||||
Withdrawals
and benefit payments from contractholder deposit funds
|
(277 | ) | (318 | ) | ||||
Change
in cash overdraft position
|
7
|
(4 | ) | |||||
Net
proceeds on issuance of long-term debt
|
498
|
-
|
||||||
Repayment
of long-term debt
|
(378 | ) | (100 | ) | ||||
Repurchase
of common stock
|
(940 | ) | (1,273 | ) | ||||
Issuance
of common stock
|
218
|
180
|
||||||
Common
dividends paid
|
(5 | ) | (6 | ) | ||||
Net
cash used in financing activities
|
(603 | ) | (1,228 | ) | ||||
Effect
of foreign currency rate changes on cash and cash
equivalents
|
1
|
1
|
||||||
Net
decrease in cash and cash equivalents
|
(288 | ) | (321 | ) | ||||
Cash
and cash equivalents, beginning of period
|
1,392
|
1,709
|
||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents, end of period
|
$ |
1,104
|
$ |
1,388
|
||||
Supplemental
Disclosure of Cash Information:
|
||||||||
Income
taxes paid, net of refunds
|
$ |
174
|
$ |
164
|
||||
Interest
paid
|
$ |
60
|
$ |
52
|
||||
The
accompanying Notes to the Financial Statements are an
integral part of these statements.
|
·
|
an
impairment loss recorded in the second quarter of 2007 associated
with the
probable sale of the Chilean insurance operations as disclosed in
Note 3; and
|
·
|
realized
gains on the disposition of certain directly-owned real estate investments
during the second quarter and six months of 2007 as disclosed in
Note 9.
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Income
before income taxes
|
$ |
7
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
25
|
$ |
-
|
||||||||
Income
taxes
|
(3 | ) |
-
|
(9 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Income
from operations
|
4
|
-
|
16
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Impairment
loss, net of tax
|
(23 | ) |
-
|
(23 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Loss
from discontinued
|
||||||||||||||||
operations,
net of tax
|
$ | (19 | ) | $ |
-
|
$ | (7 | ) | $ |
-
|
(Dollars
in millions, except
|
Effect
of
|
|||||||||||
per
share amounts)
|
Basic
|
Dilution
|
Diluted
|
|||||||||
Three
Months Ended June 30,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
||||||||||||
Income
from continuing
|
||||||||||||
operations
|
$ |
217
|
-
|
$ |
217
|
|||||||
Shares
(in thousands):
|
||||||||||||
Weighted
average
|
284,614
|
-
|
284,614
|
|||||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants
|
5,387
|
5,387
|
||||||||||
Total
shares
|
284,614
|
5,387
|
290,001
|
|||||||||
EPS
|
$ |
0.76
|
$ | (0.01 | ) | $ |
0.75
|
|||||
2006
|
||||||||||||
Income
from continuing
|
||||||||||||
operations
|
$ |
273
|
-
|
$ |
273
|
|||||||
Shares
(in thousands):
|
||||||||||||
Weighted
average
|
346,234
|
-
|
346,234
|
|||||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants
|
4,701
|
4,701
|
||||||||||
Total
shares
|
346,234
|
4,701
|
350,935
|
|||||||||
EPS
|
$ |
0.79
|
$ | (0.01 | ) | $ |
0.78
|
|||||
Six
Months Ended June 30,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
||||||||||||
Income
from continuing
|
||||||||||||
operations
|
$ |
494
|
-
|
$ |
494
|
|||||||
Shares
(in thousands):
|
||||||||||||
Weighted
average
|
287,476
|
-
|
287,476
|
|||||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants
|
5,685
|
5,685
|
||||||||||
Total
shares
|
287,476
|
5,685
|
293,161
|
|||||||||
EPS
|
$ |
1.72
|
$ | (0.04 | ) | $ |
1.68
|
|||||
2006
|
||||||||||||
Income
from continuing
|
||||||||||||
operations
|
$ |
625
|
-
|
$ |
625
|
|||||||
Shares
(in thousands):
|
||||||||||||
Weighted
average
|
352,998
|
-
|
352,998
|
|||||||||
Options
and restricted stock grants
|
6,201
|
6,201
|
||||||||||
Total
shares
|
352,998
|
6,201
|
359,199
|
|||||||||
EPS
|
$ |
1.77
|
$ | (0.03 | ) | $ |
1.74
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Antidilutive
options
|
1.6
|
5.9
|
1.6
|
4.0
|
June
30,
|
December
31,
|
|||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||
Incurred
but not yet reported
|
$ |
854
|
$ |
820
|
||||
Reported
claims in process
|
118
|
95
|
||||||
Other
medical expense payable
|
56
|
45
|
||||||
Medical
claims payable
|
$ |
1,028
|
$ |
960
|
For
the period ended
|
||||||||
(In millions)
|
June
30, 2007
|
December
31, 2006
|
||||||
Balance
at January 1,
|
$ |
960
|
$ |
1,165
|
||||
Less: Reinsurance
and other
|
||||||||
amounts
recoverable
|
250
|
342
|
||||||
Balance
at January 1, net
|
710
|
823
|
||||||
Incurred
claims related to:
|
||||||||
Current
year
|
3,527
|
6,284
|
||||||
Prior
years
|
(79 | ) | (173 | ) | ||||
Total
incurred
|
3,448
|
6,111
|
||||||
Paid
claims related to:
|
||||||||
Current
year
|
2,807
|
5,615
|
||||||
Prior
years
|
563
|
609
|
||||||
Total
paid
|
3,370
|
6,224
|
||||||
Ending
Balance, net
|
788
|
710
|
||||||
Add: Reinsurance
and other
|
||||||||
amounts
recoverable
|
240
|
250
|
||||||
Ending
Balance
|
$ |
1,028
|
$ |
960
|
||||
·
|
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 0-17% depending on the net amount at risk for
each
policy and whether surrender charges
apply.
|
·
|
The
mean investment performance assumption is 5% considering CIGNA's
program
to reduce equity market exposures using futures
contracts.
|
In addition, the results of futures contracts are reflected in the liability calculation as a component of investment returns. |
·
|
The
volatility assumption is 15-30%, varying by equity fund type; 3-8%,
varying by bond fund type; and 1% for money market
funds.
|
·
|
The
discount rate is 5.75%.
|
·
|
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.
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
||||||||||||||||
Individual
life insurance
|
||||||||||||||||
and
annuity business sold
|
$ |
57
|
$ |
64
|
$ |
114
|
$ |
128
|
||||||||
Other
|
61
|
53
|
115
|
98
|
||||||||||||
Total
|
$ |
118
|
$ |
117
|
$ |
229
|
$ |
226
|
||||||||
Reinsurance
recoveries
|
||||||||||||||||
Individual
life insurance
|
||||||||||||||||
and
annuity business sold
|
$ |
66
|
$ |
78
|
$ |
158
|
$ |
153
|
||||||||
Other
|
22
|
10
|
56
|
45
|
||||||||||||
Total
|
$ |
88
|
$ |
88
|
$ |
214
|
$ |
198
|
||||||||
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Service
cost
|
$ |
18
|
$ |
16
|
$ |
37
|
$ |
35
|
||||||||
Interest
cost
|
57
|
56
|
115
|
111
|
||||||||||||
Expected
return on plan assets
|
(52 | ) | (52 | ) | (104 | ) | (104 | ) | ||||||||
Amortization
of:
|
||||||||||||||||
Net
loss from past experience
|
28
|
35
|
59
|
76
|
||||||||||||
Prior
service cost
|
(1 | ) |
-
|
(1 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Net
pension cost
|
$ |
50
|
$ |
55
|
$ |
106
|
$ |
118
|
||||||||
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Service
cost
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
1
|
$ |
1
|
||||||||
Interest
cost
|
6
|
6
|
12
|
12
|
||||||||||||
Expected
return on plan assets
|
(1 | ) | (1 | ) | (1 | ) | (1 | ) | ||||||||
Amortization
of:
|
||||||||||||||||
Net
gain from past experience
|
(2 | ) |
-
|
(3 | ) | (1 | ) | |||||||||
Prior
service cost
|
(4 | ) | (4 | ) | (8 | ) | (8 | ) | ||||||||
Net
other postretirement
|
||||||||||||||||
benefit
cost (benefit)
|
$ | (1 | ) | $ |
1
|
$ |
1
|
$ |
3
|
|||||||
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Fixed
maturities
|
$ | (12 | ) | $ | (18 | ) | $ | (8 | ) | $ | (14 | ) | ||||
Equity
securities
|
1
|
(8 | ) |
11
|
(5 | ) | ||||||||||
Mortgage
loans
|
(1 | ) |
-
|
(1 | ) | (6 | ) | |||||||||
Real
estate
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Other
investments,
|
||||||||||||||||
including
derivatives
|
1
|
32
|
8
|
175
|
||||||||||||
Realized
investment gains (losses)
|
||||||||||||||||
from
continuing operations,
|
||||||||||||||||
before
income taxes (benefits)
|
(11 | ) |
6
|
10
|
150
|
|||||||||||
Less
income taxes (benefits)
|
(5 | ) |
3
|
3
|
53
|
|||||||||||
Realized
investment gains (losses)
|
||||||||||||||||
from
continuing operations
|
(6 | ) |
3
|
7
|
97
|
|||||||||||
Realized
investment gains
|
||||||||||||||||
from discontinued operations
|
||||||||||||||||
before
income taxes
|
7
|
-
|
25
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Less
income taxes
|
3
|
-
|
9
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Realized
investment gains
|
||||||||||||||||
from
discontinued operations
|
4
|
-
|
16
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Net
realized investment
|
||||||||||||||||
gains
(losses)
|
$ | (2 | ) | $ |
3
|
$ |
23
|
$ |
97
|
·
|
lower
gains in other long-term investments from sales of equity interests
in
real estate limited liability entities;
and
|
·
|
lower
impairments on fixed maturities.
|
·
|
gains
in other investments from sales of equity interests in real estate
limited
liability entities; and
|
·
|
losses
on fixed maturities largely due to the impact of rising interest
rates on
investments where CIGNA cannot demonstrate the intent and ability
to hold
until recovery.
|
As
of
|
As
of
|
|||||||
(In
millions)
|
June
30, 2007
|
December
31, 2006
|
||||||
Included
in fixed maturities:
|
||||||||
Trading
securities
|
$ |
25
|
$ |
27
|
||||
Hybrid
securities
|
10
|
10
|
||||||
Total
|
$ |
35
|
$ |
37
|
||||
Included
in equity securities:
|
||||||||
Hybrid
securities
|
$ |
100
|
$ |
105
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Proceeds
from sales
|
$ |
186
|
$ |
1,222
|
$ |
385
|
$ |
1,762
|
||||||||
Gross
gains from sales
|
$ |
4
|
$ |
11
|
$ |
19
|
$ |
27
|
||||||||
Gross
losses from sales
|
$ | (2 | ) | $ | (21 | ) | $ | (3 | ) | $ | (33 | ) | ||||
·
|
length
of time and severity of decline;
|
·
|
financial
health and specific near term prospects of the
issuer;
|
·
|
changes
in the regulatory, economic or general market environment of the
issuer’s
industry or geographic region; and
|
·
|
ability
and intent to hold until recovery.
|
Amortized
|
Unrealized
|
|||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
Fair
Value
|
Cost
|
Depreciation
|
|||||||||
Fixed
Maturities:
|
||||||||||||
One
year or less:
|
||||||||||||
Investment
grade
|
$ |
3,164
|
$ |
3,236
|
$ | (72 | ) | |||||
Below
investment grade
|
$ |
197
|
$ |
202
|
$ | (5 | ) | |||||
More
than one year:
|
||||||||||||
Investment
grade
|
$ |
1,499
|
$ |
1,559
|
$ | (60 | ) | |||||
Below
investment grade
|
$ |
70
|
$ |
72
|
$ | (2 | ) |
·
|
$223
million to limited liability entities that hold either real estate
or
loans to real estate entities; and
|
·
|
$231
million to entities that hold
securities.
|
June
30,
|
December
31,
|
|||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||
Short-term:
|
||||||||
Current
maturities of long-term debt
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
376
|
||||
Short-term
note payable
|
-
|
6
|
||||||
Total
short-term debt
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
382
|
||||
Long-term:
|
||||||||
Uncollateralized
debt:
|
||||||||
7%
Notes due 2011
|
$ |
222
|
$ |
222
|
||||
6.375%
Notes due 2011
|
226
|
226
|
||||||
5.375%
Notes due 2017
|
250
|
-
|
||||||
6.37%
Note due 2021
|
78
|
78
|
||||||
7.65%
Notes due 2023
|
100
|
100
|
||||||
8.3%
Notes due 2023
|
17
|
17
|
||||||
7.875%
Debentures due 2027
|
300
|
300
|
||||||
8.3%
Step Down Notes due 2033
|
83
|
83
|
||||||
6.15% Notes
due 2036
|
500
|
250
|
||||||
Other
|
16
|
18
|
||||||
Total
long-term debt
|
$ |
1,792
|
$ |
1,294
|
||||
·
|
$250
million of Notes bearing interest at the rate of 5.375% per year,
which is
payable on March 15 and September 15 of each year, beginning September
15,
2007. The Notes will mature on March 15, 2017;
and
|
·
|
$250
million of Notes bearing interest at the rate of 6.150% per year,
which is
payable on May 15 and November 15 of each year, beginning May 15,
2007. The Notes will mature on November 15,
2036.
|
·
|
100%
of the principal amount of the Notes to be redeemed;
or
|
·
|
the
present value of the remaining principal and interest payments
on the
Notes being redeemed discounted at the applicable Treasury Rate
plus 15
basis points with respect to the 5.375% Notes and 25 basis points
with
respect to the 6.150% Notes.
|
Tax
|
||||||||||||
(Expense)
|
After-
|
|||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
Pre-tax
|
Benefit
|
tax
|
|||||||||
Three
Months Ended June 30,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities:
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation on securities
|
||||||||||||
arising
during the year
|
$ | (193 | ) | $ |
68
|
$ | (125 | ) | ||||
Plus:
reclassification adjustment for losses
|
||||||||||||
included
in net income
|
11
|
(4 | ) |
7
|
||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities
|
$ | (182 | ) | $ |
64
|
$ | (118 | ) | ||||
Net
unrealized depreciation,
|
||||||||||||
derivatives
|
$ | (14 | ) | $ |
5
|
$ | (9 | ) | ||||
Net
translation of foreign
|
||||||||||||
currencies
|
$ |
8
|
$ | (3 | ) | $ |
5
|
|||||
Postretirement
benefits liability
|
||||||||||||
adjustment:
|
||||||||||||
Net
change due to valuation update
|
$ |
35
|
$ | (12 | ) | $ |
23
|
|||||
Plus: reclassification
adjustment for
|
||||||||||||
amortization
of net losses from past
|
||||||||||||
experience
and prior service costs
|
21
|
(8 | ) |
13
|
||||||||
Net
postretirement benefits liability
|
||||||||||||
adjustment
|
$ |
56
|
$ | (20 | ) | $ |
36
|
|||||
2006
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities:
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation on securities
|
||||||||||||
arising
during the year
|
$ | (130 | ) | $ |
45
|
$ | (85 | ) | ||||
Plus:
reclassification adjustment for losses
|
||||||||||||
included
in net income
|
26
|
(9 | ) |
17
|
||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities
|
$ | (104 | ) | $ |
36
|
$ | (68 | ) | ||||
Net
unrealized depreciation,
|
||||||||||||
derivatives
|
$ | (13 | ) | $ |
5
|
$ | (8 | ) | ||||
Net
translation of foreign
|
||||||||||||
currencies
|
$ |
7
|
$ | (2 | ) | $ |
5
|
|||||
Minimum
pension liability
|
||||||||||||
adjustment
|
$ | (13 | ) | $ |
4
|
$ | (9 | ) | ||||
Tax
|
||||||||||||
(Expense)
|
After-
|
|||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
Pre-tax
|
Benefit
|
tax
|
|||||||||
Six
Months Ended June 30,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities:
|
||||||||||||
Implementation
effect of
|
||||||||||||
SFAS
No. 155
|
$ | (18 | ) | $ |
6
|
$ | (12 | ) | ||||
Net
unrealized depreciation on
|
||||||||||||
securities
arising during the year
|
(189 | ) |
67
|
(122 | ) | |||||||
Less:
reclassification adjustment for
|
||||||||||||
gains
included in net income
|
(3 | ) |
1
|
(2 | ) | |||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities
|
$ | (210 | ) | $ |
74
|
$ | (136 | ) | ||||
Net
unrealized depreciation,
|
||||||||||||
derivatives
|
$ | (15 | ) | $ |
5
|
$ | (10 | ) | ||||
Net
translation of foreign
|
||||||||||||
currencies
|
$ |
7
|
$ | (2 | ) | $ |
5
|
|||||
Postretirement
benefits liability
|
||||||||||||
adjustment:
|
||||||||||||
Net
change due to valuation update
|
$ |
35
|
$ | (12 | ) | $ |
23
|
|||||
Plus: reclassification
adjustment for
|
||||||||||||
amortization
of net losses from past
|
||||||||||||
experience
and prior service costs
|
47
|
(17 | ) | $ |
30
|
|||||||
Net
postretirement benefits liability
|
||||||||||||
adjustment
|
$ |
82
|
$ | (29 | ) | $ |
53
|
|||||
2006
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities:
|
||||||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation on
|
||||||||||||
securities
arising during the year
|
$ | (275 | ) | $ |
96
|
$ | (179 | ) | ||||
Less:
reclassification adjustment for
|
||||||||||||
gains
included in net income
|
19
|
(7 | ) |
12
|
||||||||
Net
unrealized depreciation, securities
|
$ | (256 | ) | $ |
89
|
$ | (167 | ) | ||||
Net
unrealized depreciation,
|
||||||||||||
derivatives
|
$ | (15 | ) | $ |
6
|
$ | (9 | ) | ||||
Net
translation of foreign
|
||||||||||||
currencies
|
$ |
18
|
$ | (6 | ) | $ |
12
|
|||||
Minimum
pension liability
|
||||||||||||
adjustment
|
$ | (13 | ) | $ |
4
|
$ | (9 | ) |
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Compensation
cost
|
$ |
7
|
$ |
11
|
$ |
20
|
$ |
23
|
||||||||
Tax
benefits
|
$ |
2
|
$ |
4
|
$ |
7
|
$ |
8
|
||||||||
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(Options
in thousands)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Options
granted
|
10
|
21
|
1,632
|
1,593
|
||||||||||||
Weighted
average fair
|
||||||||||||||||
value
of options granted
|
$ |
18.36
|
$ |
12.35
|
$ |
16.03
|
$ |
14.63
|
As
of June 30,
|
||
2007
|
2006
|
|
Dividend
yield
|
0.1%
|
0.1%
|
Expected
volatility
|
35.0%
|
35.0%
|
Risk-free
interest rate
|
4.7%
|
4.6%
|
Expected
option life
|
4
years
|
4.5
years
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(Grants
in thousands)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Restricted
stock granted
|
17
|
12
|
665
|
592
|
||||||||||||
Weighted
average fair value
|
$ |
53.74
|
$ |
37.30
|
$ |
47.00
|
$ |
40.76
|
||||||||
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees and other revenues
|
||||||||||||||||
Health
Care
|
$ |
3,039
|
$ |
2,775
|
$ |
6,045
|
$ |
5,473
|
||||||||
Disability
and Life
|
615
|
569
|
1,225
|
1,125
|
||||||||||||
International
|
437
|
373
|
852
|
730
|
||||||||||||
Run-off
Reinsurance
|
(14 | ) |
34
|
(7 | ) |
9
|
||||||||||
Other
Operations
|
49
|
55
|
96
|
115
|
||||||||||||
Corporate
|
(13 | ) | (13 | ) | (25 | ) | (25 | ) | ||||||||
Total
|
$ |
4,113
|
$ |
3,793
|
$ |
8,186
|
$ |
7,427
|
||||||||
Income
(loss) from continuing operations
|
||||||||||||||||
Health
Care
|
$ |
168
|
$ |
159
|
$ |
336
|
$ |
315
|
||||||||
Disability
and Life
|
68
|
64
|
128
|
122
|
||||||||||||
International
|
44
|
36
|
82
|
73
|
||||||||||||
Run-off
Reinsurance
|
(61 | ) | (16 | ) | (60 | ) | (16 | ) | ||||||||
Other
Operations
|
27
|
26
|
50
|
51
|
||||||||||||
Corporate
|
(23 | ) |
1
|
(49 | ) | (17 | ) | |||||||||
Segment
earnings
|
223
|
270
|
487
|
528
|
||||||||||||
Realized
investment gains
|
||||||||||||||||
(losses),
net of taxes
|
(6 | ) |
3
|
7
|
97
|
|||||||||||
Income
from
|
||||||||||||||||
continuing
operations
|
$ |
217
|
$ |
273
|
$ |
494
|
$ |
625
|
·
|
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 or an affiliate of the buyer has the
right
to redirect the management of the related assets to provide for benefit
payments. As of June 30, 2007, employers maintained assets that
exceeded the benefit obligations. Benefit obligations under these
arrangements were $2.0 billion as of June 30, 2007. As of June
30, 2007, approximately 75% 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,
2007.
|
·
|
CIGNA
guarantees that separate account assets, primarily fixed income
investments, will be sufficient to pay retiree benefits for participants
under a certain group annuity contract. These guarantees are
fully reinsured by an affiliate of the buyer of the retirement benefits
business. These guaranteed benefit obligations were $17 million
as of June 30, 2007. CIGNA had no additional liabilities for these
guarantees as of June 30, 2007.
|
·
|
These
liabilities represent estimates of the present value of net amounts
expected to be paid, less the present value of net future premiums
expected to be received. Included in net amounts expected to be
paid is the excess of the expected value of the income benefits over
the
values of the annuitant’s accounts at the time of
annuitization. The assets associated with these contracts
represent receivables in connection with reinsurance that CIGNA has
purchased from third parties (see
below).
|
·
|
The
market return assumption is 8-11% varying by equity fund type; 6-7%
varying by bond fund type; and 5-6% for money market
funds.
|
·
|
The
volatility assumption is 14-23%, varying by equity fund type; 5-7%,
varying by bond fund type; and 2-3% for money market
funds.
|
·
|
The
discount rate is 5.75%.
|
·
|
The
projected interest rate used to calculate the reinsured income benefits
at
the time of annuitization varies by economic scenario, reflects interest
rates as of the valuation date, and has a long-term mean rate of
5-6% and
a standard deviation of 12-13%.
|
·
|
The
mortality assumption is 70% of the 1994 Group Annuity Mortality table,
with 1% annual improvement beginning January 1,
2000.
|
·
|
The
lapse rate assumption varies by contract from 1% to 17% and depends
on the
time since contract issue, the relative value of the guarantee
and the
differing experience by issuing company of the underlying variable
annuity
contracts.
|
·
|
The
annuity election rate assumption varies by contract and depends
on the
annuitant’s age, the relative value of the guarantee, and the differing
experience by issuing company of the underlying variable annuity
contracts. Immediately after the expiration of the waiting
period, the assumed probability that an individual will annuitize
their
variable annuity contract ranges from 0% to 80%. For the next
opportunity to elect the benefit, the assumed probability of election
ranges from 0% to 45%. For each subsequent opportunity to elect
the benefit, the assumed probability of election ranges from 0
to
25%.
|
·
|
No
annuitants surrendered their accounts;
and
|
·
|
All
annuitants lived to elect their benefit;
and
|
·
|
All
annuitants elected to receive their benefit on the next available
date
(2007 through 2014); and
|
·
|
All
underlying mutual fund investment values remained at the June 30,
2007
value of $3.1 billion, with no future
returns.
|
·
|
additional
mandated benefits or services that increase
costs;
|
·
|
legislation
that would grant plan participants broader rights to sue their health
plans;
|
·
|
changes
in public policy and in the political environment, which could affect
state and federal law, including legislative and regulatory proposals
related to health care issues, which could increase cost and affect
the
market for CIGNA's health care products and services, and pension
legislation, which could increase pension
cost;
|
·
|
changes
in ERISA regulations resulting in increased application of varying
state
laws to benefit plan administration, thus increasing administrative
burdens and costs;
|
·
|
additional
restrictions on the use of prescription drug formularies and rulings
from
pending purported class action litigation, which could result in
adjustments to or the elimination of the average wholesale price
or “AWP”
of pharmaceutical products as a benchmark in establishing certain
rates,
charges, discounts, guarantees and fees for various prescription
drugs;
|
·
|
additional
privacy legislation and regulations that interfere with the proper
use of
medical information for research, coordination of medical care and
disease
and disability management;
|
·
|
additional
variations among state laws mandating the time periods and administrative
processes for payment of health care provider
claims;
|
·
|
legislation
that would exempt independent physicians from antitrust laws;
and
|
·
|
changes
in federal laws, such as amendments that could affect the taxation
of
employer provided benefits.
|
INDEX
|
|
·
|
cost
trends and inflation levels for medical and related
services;
|
·
|
patterns
of utilization of medical and other
services;
|
·
|
employment
levels;
|
·
|
the
tort liability system;
|
·
|
developments
in the political environment;
|
·
|
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.
|
·
|
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;
|
·
|
the
volume of customers served and the mix of products and services
purchased
by those customers;
|
·
|
the
absolute level of and trends in benefit
costs;
|
·
|
the
ability to execute on key technology initiatives, particularly
those
related to enhancing and developing consumer-directed health plan
products
and the related service model, and successfully managing outsourcing
arrangements with vendors, including International Business Machines
Corporation (IBM) (see “Contractual Obligations” on page 50 in CIGNA's
2006 Annual Report to Shareholders.);
and
|
·
|
the
relationship between administrative costs and
revenue.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
$ |
3,757
|
$ |
3,369
|
$ |
7,465
|
$ |
6,637
|
||||||||
Net
investment income
|
279
|
299
|
559
|
628
|
||||||||||||
Other
revenues
|
356
|
424
|
721
|
790
|
||||||||||||
Realized
investment
|
||||||||||||||||
gains
(losses)
|
(11 | ) |
6
|
10
|
150
|
|||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
4,381
|
4,098
|
8,755
|
8,205
|
||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses
|
4,053
|
3,690
|
8,014
|
7,269
|
||||||||||||
Income
from continuing
|
||||||||||||||||
operations
before taxes
|
328
|
408
|
741
|
936
|
||||||||||||
Income
taxes
|
111
|
135
|
247
|
311
|
||||||||||||
Income from
continuing
|
||||||||||||||||
operations
|
217
|
273
|
494
|
625
|
||||||||||||
Loss
from discontinued
|
||||||||||||||||
operations,
net of taxes
|
(19 | ) |
-
|
(7 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Net
income
|
$ |
198
|
$ |
273
|
$ |
487
|
$ |
625
|
||||||||
Realized
investment gains
|
||||||||||||||||
(losses),
net of taxes
|
$ | (6 | ) | $ |
3
|
$ |
7
|
$ |
97
|
·
|
lower
realized gains from the sales of investments (see Note
9 to the Financial
Statements);
|
·
|
lower
net investment income primarily due to lower yields and the impact
of
share repurchase activity (see page 43);
and
|
·
|
higher
earnings in the Health Care segment (see page
33).
|
·
|
higher
premiums and fees in the Health Care segment (see page 34) due to medical membership growth,
rate
increases and higher Medicare Part D
premiums; and
|
·
|
·
|
higher
medical claims expense in the Health Care segment reflecting membership
growth and the impact of medical cost trend (see page 35);
and
|
·
|
higher
benefits expense in the International segment due to overall business
growth, as well as higher loss ratios in the expatriate employee
benefits
business.
|
·
|
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;
|
·
|
Health
Care medical claims payable;
|
·
|
accounts
payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities, and other assets
-
guaranteed minimum income benefits;
|
·
|
reinsurance
recoverables for Run-off
Reinsurance;
|
·
|
accounts
payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities – pension liabilities;
and
|
·
|
investments
– recognition of losses from other-than-temporary impairments of public
and private placement fixed
maturities.
|
·
|
Mortality
- $3 million
|
·
|
Market
Returns - $15 million
|
·
|
Volatility
- $10 million
|
·
|
Lapse
- $3 million
|
·
|
Interest
Rates:
|
o
|
Discount
Rate - $5 million
|
o
|
Long-Term
Claim Interest Rate - $25
million
|
·
|
Credit
Risk - $10 million
|
·
|
Annuity
Election Rates - $5 million
|
·
|
additional
mandated benefits or services that increase
costs;
|
·
|
legislation
that would grant plan participants broader rights to sue their health
plans;
|
·
|
changes
in public policy and in the political environment, which could affect
state and federal law, including legislative and regulatory proposals
related to health care issues, which could increase cost and affect
the
market for CIGNA's health care products and services; and pension
legislation, which could increase pension
cost;
|
·
|
changes
in ERISA regulations resulting in increased administrative burdens
and
costs;
|
·
|
additional
restrictions on the use of prescription drug formularies and rulings
from
pending purported class action litigation, which could result in
adjustments to or the elimination of the average wholesale price
or “AWP”
of pharmaceutical products as a benchmark in establishing certain
rates,
charges, discounts, guarantees and fees for various prescription
drugs;
|
·
|
additional
privacy legislation and regulations that interfere with the proper
use of
medical information for research, coordination of medical care and
disease
and disability management;
|
·
|
additional
variations among state laws mandating the time periods and
administrative processes for payment of health care provider claims
;
|
·
|
legislation
that would exempt independent physicians from antitrust laws;
and
|
·
|
changes
in federal tax laws, such as amendments that could affect the taxation
of
employer provided benefits.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
$ |
2,698
|
$ |
2,423
|
$ |
5,373
|
$ |
4,779
|
||||||||
Net
investment income
|
52
|
67
|
106
|
138
|
||||||||||||
Other
revenues
|
341
|
352
|
672
|
694
|
||||||||||||
Segment
revenues
|
3,091
|
2,842
|
6,151
|
5,611
|
||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses
|
2,831
|
2,597
|
5,631
|
5,127
|
||||||||||||
Income
before taxes
|
260
|
245
|
520
|
484
|
||||||||||||
Income
taxes
|
92
|
86
|
184
|
169
|
||||||||||||
Segment
earnings
|
$ |
168
|
$ |
159
|
$ |
336
|
$ |
315
|
||||||||
Realized
investment gains,
|
||||||||||||||||
net
of taxes
|
$ |
2
|
$ |
12
|
$ |
10
|
$ |
72
|
·
|
higher
than expected completion factors reflecting better than expected
time to
process claims driven by higher auto-adjudication rates and more
timely
submission of provider claims; and
|
·
|
lower
than expected medical cost trends driven by lower inpatient, outpatient
and pharmacy service utilization and lower than expected unit cost
trends
due to provider contracting initiatives and the mix of services
provided.
|
·
|
strong
renewal pricing execution in the guaranteed cost business reflecting
premium increases, which were greater than medical cost increases;
and
|
·
|
higher
contributions from the specialty
businesses.
|
·
|
medical
membership growth including the voluntary and limited benefits
business;
|
·
|
rate
increases in the guaranteed cost business;
and
|
·
|
higher
Medicare Part D premiums.
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Medical:
|
||||||||||||||||
Commercial
HMO1
|
$ |
589
|
$ |
675
|
$ |
1,220
|
$ |
1,344
|
||||||||
Open
access/Other Guaranteed Cost2
|
407
|
212
|
779
|
402
|
||||||||||||
Voluntary/limited
benefits
|
40
|
-
|
78
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Experience-rated
medical3
|
484
|
454
|
912
|
891
|
||||||||||||
Dental
|
189
|
195
|
381
|
388
|
||||||||||||
Medicare
|
87
|
79
|
175
|
160
|
||||||||||||
Medicare
Part D
|
85
|
58
|
179
|
110
|
||||||||||||
Other
Medical4
|
258
|
234
|
520
|
459
|
||||||||||||
Total
medical
|
2,139
|
1,907
|
4,244
|
3,754
|
||||||||||||
Life
and other non-medical
|
70
|
88
|
139
|
166
|
||||||||||||
Total
premiums
|
2,209
|
1,995
|
4,383
|
3,920
|
||||||||||||
Fees5
|
489
|
428
|
990
|
859
|
||||||||||||
Total
premiums and fees
|
$ |
2,698
|
$ |
2,423
|
$ |
5,373
|
$ |
4,779
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Medical
claims expense
|
$ |
1,729
|
$ |
1,493
|
$ |
3,448
|
$ |
2,941
|
||||||||
Other
benefit expenses
|
63
|
82
|
127
|
160
|
||||||||||||
Other
operating expenses
|
1,039
|
1,022
|
2,056
|
2,026
|
||||||||||||
Total
benefits and expenses
|
$ |
2,831
|
$ |
2,597
|
$ |
5,631
|
$ |
5,127
|
(In
thousands)
|
2007
|
|
2006
|
|||||
Guaranteed
cost:
|
||||||||
Commercial
HMO
|
624
|
799
|
||||||
Medicare
and Medicaid
|
32
|
32
|
||||||
Open
access/other guaranteed cost1
|
483
|
285
|
||||||
Total
guaranteed cost excluding
|
||||||||
voluntary/limited
benefits
|
1,139
|
1,116
|
||||||
Voluntary/limited
benefits
|
176
|
-
|
||||||
Total
guaranteed cost
|
1,315
|
1,116
|
||||||
Experience-rated2
|
871
|
906
|
||||||
Service3
|
7,614
|
6,997
|
||||||
Total
medical membership
|
9,800
|
9,019
|
·
|
offering
products that meet emerging market and consumer
trends;
|
·
|
strengthening
underwriting and pricing
effectiveness;
|
·
|
improving
medical membership results;
|
·
|
improving
medical cost trends;
|
·
|
continuing
to deliver quality member and provider service;
and
|
·
|
lowering
administrative expenses.
|
·
|
providing
a diverse product portfolio that meets current market needs as well
as
emerging consumer-directed trends;
|
·
|
developing
and implementing the systems, information technology and infrastructure
to
ensure that member service delivery keeps pace with the emerging
consumer-directed market trends;
|
·
|
ensuring
competitive provider networks; and
|
·
|
maintaining
a strong clinical quality in medical, specialty health care and disability
management.
|
·
|
strengthen
CIGNA's national provider network;
|
·
|
enhance
CIGNA's ability to provide superior medical and disease management
programs;
|
·
|
provide
administrative ease for multi-state employers;
and
|
·
|
grow
membership in key geographic areas, as well as provide a basis for
lowering medical costs.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
$ |
580
|
$ |
526
|
$ |
1,157
|
$ |
1,034
|
||||||||
Net
investment income
|
68
|
66
|
137
|
130
|
||||||||||||
Other
revenues
|
35
|
43
|
68
|
91
|
||||||||||||
Segment
revenues
|
683
|
635
|
1,362
|
1,255
|
||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses
|
587
|
547
|
1,183
|
1,087
|
||||||||||||
Income
before taxes
|
96
|
88
|
179
|
168
|
||||||||||||
Income
taxes
|
28
|
24
|
51
|
46
|
||||||||||||
Segment
earnings
|
$ |
68
|
$ |
64
|
$ |
128
|
$ |
122
|
||||||||
Realized
investment gains
|
||||||||||||||||
(losses),
net of taxes
|
$ | (3 | ) | $ | (3 | ) | $ | (1 | ) | $ |
4
|
·
|
disability insurance;
|
·
|
disability
and workers’ compensation case
management;
|
·
|
life
insurance; and
|
·
|
accident
and specialty association
insurance.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
$ |
436
|
$ |
372
|
$ |
850
|
$ |
729
|
||||||||
Net
investment income
|
18
|
21
|
38
|
37
|
||||||||||||
Other
revenues
|
1
|
1
|
2
|
1
|
||||||||||||
Segment
revenues
|
455
|
394
|
890
|
767
|
||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses
|
386
|
338
|
762
|
655
|
||||||||||||
Income
before taxes
|
69
|
56
|
128
|
112
|
||||||||||||
Income
taxes
|
25
|
20
|
46
|
39
|
||||||||||||
Segment
earnings
|
$ |
44
|
$ |
36
|
$ |
82
|
$ |
73
|
||||||||
Realized
investment losses,
|
||||||||||||||||
net
of taxes
|
$ |
-
|
$ | (1 | ) | $ |
-
|
$ | (1 | ) |
·
|
life,
accident and supplemental health insurance products;
and
|
·
|
international
health care products and services including those offered to expatriate
employees of multinational
corporations.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
$ |
14
|
$ |
18
|
$ |
29
|
$ |
33
|
||||||||
Net
investment income
|
21
|
23
|
45
|
47
|
||||||||||||
Other
revenues
|
(28 | ) |
16
|
(36 | ) | (24 | ) | |||||||||
Segment
revenues
|
7
|
57
|
38
|
56
|
||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses
|
102
|
78
|
140
|
75
|
||||||||||||
Loss
before tax benefits
|
(95 | ) | (21 | ) | (102 | ) | (19 | ) | ||||||||
Income
tax benefits
|
(34 | ) | (5 | ) | (42 | ) | (3 | ) | ||||||||
Segment
loss
|
$ | (61 | ) | $ | (16 | ) | $ | (60 | ) | $ | (16 | ) | ||||
Realized
investment gains
|
||||||||||||||||
(losses),
net of taxes
|
$ | (1 | ) | $ | (4 | ) | $ |
1
|
$ |
10
|
||||||
Special
item (after-tax)
|
||||||||||||||||
included
in segment loss:
|
||||||||||||||||
Charge
related to guaranteed
|
||||||||||||||||
minimum
income benefit contracts
|
||||||||||||||||
(see
page 28)
|
$ | (56 | ) | $ |
-
|
$ | (56 | ) | $ |
-
|
·
|
the
favorable impact of a series of commutations and settlements with
ceding
companies related to the personal accident and workers’ compensation
businesses for amounts less than the net recorded amounts;
and
|
·
|
lower
reserve increases for credit
risk.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Premiums
and fees
|
$ |
29
|
$ |
30
|
$ |
56
|
$ |
62
|
||||||||
Net
investment income
|
112
|
111
|
219
|
253
|
||||||||||||
Other
revenues
|
20
|
25
|
40
|
53
|
||||||||||||
Segment
revenues
|
161
|
166
|
315
|
368
|
||||||||||||
Benefits
and expenses
|
120
|
127
|
240
|
294
|
||||||||||||
Income
before taxes
|
41
|
39
|
75
|
74
|
||||||||||||
Income
taxes
|
14
|
13
|
25
|
23
|
||||||||||||
Segment
earnings
|
$ |
27
|
$ |
26
|
$ |
50
|
$ |
51
|
||||||||
Realized
investment gains
|
||||||||||||||||
(losses),
net of taxes
|
$ | (4 | ) | $ | (1 | ) | $ | (3 | ) | $ |
12
|
·
|
deferred
gains recognized from the 1998 sale of the individual life insurance
and
annuity business;
|
·
|
corporate
life insurance (including policies on which loans are
outstanding);
|
·
|
deferred
gains recognized from the 2004 sale of the retirement benefits business;
and
|
·
|
settlement
annuity business.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Segment
income (loss)
|
$ | (23 | ) | $ |
1
|
$ | (49 | ) | $ | (17 | ) |
·
|
an
impairment loss associated with the probable sale of the Chilean
insurance
operations as disclosed on page 30;
and
|
·
|
realized
gains on the disposition of certain directly-owned real estate
investments
during the second quarter and six months of 2007 as disclosed in
Note 9.
|
FINANCIAL
SUMMARY
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Income
before income taxes
|
$ |
7
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
25
|
$ |
-
|
||||||||
Income
taxes
|
(3 | ) |
-
|
(9 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Income
from discontinued
|
||||||||||||||||
operations,
net of taxes
|
4
|
-
|
16
|
-
|
||||||||||||
Impairment
loss, net of tax
|
(23 | ) |
-
|
(23 | ) |
-
|
||||||||||
Loss
from discontinued
|
||||||||||||||||
operations,
net of taxes
|
$ | (19 | ) | $ |
-
|
$ | (7 | ) | $ |
-
|
·
|
maintaining
appropriate levels of cash, cash equivalents and
short-term investments;
|
·
|
using
cash flows from operating activities;
and
|
·
|
matching
investment maturities to the estimated duration of the related insurance
and contractholder liabilities.
|
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||
Operating
activities
|
$ |
418
|
$ |
81
|
||||
Investing
activities
|
$ | (104 | ) | $ |
825
|
|||
Financing
activities
|
$ | (603 | ) | $ | (1,228 | ) |
·
|
Cash
flow from operating activities was affected by the following significant
items in 2007 and 2006:
|
·
|
net
cash outflows of $5 million in 2007 compared with $213 million
in 2006 to
originate mortgage loans held for
sale;
|
·
|
cash
outflows of $35 million in 2007, compared with $24 million in 2006,
associated with futures contracts entered into as part of a program
to
manage equity market risks in the run-off reinsurance segment;
and
|
·
|
cash
outflows of $44 million in 2006 to settle liabilities associated
with the
single premium annuity
business.
|
·
|
Cash
used in investing activities primarily consisted of net purchases
of
investments of $58 million and net purchases of property and equipment
of
$35 million.
|
·
|
Cash
used in financing activities primarily consisted of dividends on
and
repurchase of common stock of $945 million and repayment of debt
of $378
million, partially offset by the proceeds on the issuance of debt
of $498
million and the proceeds from the issuance of common stock under
CIGNA's
stock plans of $218 million.
|
·
|
Cash
provided by investing activities primarily consisted of net proceeds
of
investments ($937 million), partially offset by net purchases of
property
and equipment ($67 million) and net cash transferred in connection
with
the conversion of the single premium annuity business to indemnity
coinsurance ($45 million).
|
·
|
Cash
used in financing activities primarily consisted of dividends on
and
repurchases of common stock of $1.3 billion, repayment of long-term
debt
($100 million) and net withdrawals of contractholder deposit
funds of $25 million, partially offset by proceeds from issuances
of
common stock under CIGNA's stock plans of $180
million.
|
Three
Months
|
Six
Months
|
|||||||||||||||
Ended
|
Ended
|
|||||||||||||||
June
30,
|
June
30,
|
|||||||||||||||
(In
millions)
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Interest
expense
|
$ |
32
|
$ |
24
|
$ |
61
|
$ |
49
|
·
|
provide
capital necessary to support growth and maintain or improve the financial
strength ratings of subsidiaries;
|
·
|
consider
acquisitions that are strategically and economically advantageous;
and
|
·
|
return
capital to investors through share
repurchase.
|
·
|
$250
million of Notes bearing interest at the rate of 5.375% per year,
which is
payable on March 15 and September 15 of each year, beginning September
15,
2007. The Notes will mature on March 15, 2017;
and
|
·
|
$250
million of Notes bearing interest at the rate of 6.150% per year,
which is
payable on May 15 and November 15 of each year, beginning May 15,
2007. The Notes will mature on November 15,
2036.
|
·
|
100%
of the principal amount of the Notes to be redeemed;
or
|
·
|
the
present value of the remaining principal and interest payments
on the
Notes being redeemed discounted at the applicable Treasury Rate
plus 15
basis points with respect to the 5.375% Notes and 25 basis points
with
respect to the 6.150% Notes.
|
·
|
debt
service requirements and dividend payments to CIGNA shareholders;
and
|
·
|
pension
plan funding requirements.
|
·
|
management
uses cash for investment
opportunities;
|
·
|
a
substantial insurance or contractholder liability becomes due before
related investment assets mature;
|
·
|
a
substantial increase in funding is required for CIGNA's program to
reduce
the equity market risks associated with the guaranteed minimum death
benefit contracts; or
|
·
|
regulatory
restrictions prevent the insurance and HMO subsidiaries from distributing
cash to the parent company.
|
CG
Life Insurance
Ratings
|
CIGNA
Corporation
Debt
Ratings
|
||
Senior
Debt
|
Commercial
Paper
|
||
A.M.
Best
|
A
|
—
|
—
|
Moody’s
|
A2
|
Baa2
|
P2
|
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 or an affiliate of the buyer has the
right
to redirect the management of the related assets to provide for benefit
payments. As of June 30, 2007, employers maintained assets that
exceeded the benefit obligations. Benefit obligations under these
arrangements were $2.0 billion as of June 30, 2007. As of June
30, 2007, approximately 75% 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,
2007.
|
·
|
CIGNA
guarantees that separate account assets, primarily fixed income
investments, will be sufficient to pay retiree benefits for participants
under a certain group annuity contract. These guarantees are
fully reinsured by an affiliate of the buyer of the retirement benefits
business. These guaranteed benefit obligations were $17 million
as of June 30, 2007. CIGNA had no additional liabilities for these
guarantees as of June 30, 2007.
|
·
|
No
annuitants surrendered their accounts;
and
|
·
|
All
annuitants lived to elect their benefit;
and
|
·
|
All
annuitants elected to receive their benefit on the next available
date
(2007 through 2014); and
|
·
|
All
underlying mutual fund investment values remained at the June 30,
2007
value of $3.1 billion, with no future
returns.
|
Less
|
||||||||||||||||||||
(In
millions, on an
|
than
1
|
1-3
|
4-5
|
After
5
|
||||||||||||||||
undiscounted
basis)
|
Total
|
year
|
years
|
years
|
years
|
|||||||||||||||
On-Balance
Sheet:
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Other
long-term
|
||||||||||||||||||||
liabilities
|
$ |
772
|
$ |
328
|
$ |
268
|
$ |
62
|
$ |
114
|
As
of
|
As
of
|
|||||||
(In
millions)
|
June
30, 2007
|
December
31, 2006
|
||||||
Fixed
maturities
|
$ |
141
|
$ |
31
|
||||
Mortgage
loans
|
$ |
106
|
$ |
154
|
(In
millions)
|
Gross
|
Reserve
|
Net
|
|||||||||
June
30, 2007
|
||||||||||||
Problem
bonds
|
$ |
66
|
$ | (48 | ) | $ |
18
|
|||||
Potential
problem bonds
|
$ |
28
|
$ | (1 | ) | $ |
27
|
|||||
Potential
problem mortgage loans
|
$ |
22
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
22
|
||||||
Foreclosed
real estate
|
$ |
16
|
$ | (3 | ) | $ |
13
|
|||||
December
31, 2006
|
||||||||||||
Problem
bonds
|
$ |
71
|
$ | (50 | ) | $ |
21
|
|||||
Potential
problem bonds
|
$ |
15
|
$ | (1 | ) | $ |
14
|
|||||
Potential
problem mortgage loans
|
$ |
22
|
$ |
-
|
$ |
22
|
||||||
Foreclosed
real estate
|
$ |
16
|
$ | (3 | ) | $ |
13
|
·
|
·
|
pension
liabilities since equity securities comprise a significant portion
of the
assets of CIGNA’s employee pension
plans.
|
1.
|
increased
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
new
legislative and regulatory requirements imposed on CIGNA’s employee
benefits businesses (see employee benefits regulation on page 30 for more
information);
|
3.
|
challenges
and risks associated with implementing operational improvement initiatives
and strategic actions in the health care operations, including those
related to: (i) offering products that meet emerging market needs,
(ii)
strengthening underwriting and pricing effectiveness, (iii) strengthening
medical cost and medical membership results, (iv) delivering quality
member and provider service using effective technology solutions,
and (v) lowering administrative
costs;
|
4.
|
risks
associated with pending and potential state and federal class action
lawsuits, purported securities class action lawsuits, disputes regarding
reinsurance arrangements, other litigation and regulatory actions
challenging CIGNA’s businesses and the outcome of pending government
proceedings and federal tax audits;
|
5.
|
heightened
competition, particularly price competition, which could reduce product
margins and constrain growth in CIGNA’s businesses, primarily the health
care
business;
|
6.
|
significant
changes in interest rates;
|
7.
|
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;
|
8.
|
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;
|
9.
|
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 contracts and in matching such
contracts to the underlying equity
risk);
|
10.
|
adjustments
to the reserve assumptions (including lapse, partial surrender, mortality,
interest rates and volatility) used in estimating CIGNA's liabilities
for
reinsurance contracts covering guaranteed minimum death benefits
under
certain variable annuities;
|
11.
|
adjustments
to the assumptions (including annuity election rates and reinsurance
recoverables) used in estimating CIGNA’s assets and liabilities for
reinsurance contracts covering guaranteed minimum income benefits
under
certain variable annuities;
|
12.
|
significant
stock market declines, which could, among other things, result in
increased pension expenses of CIGNA’s pension plans in future periods and
the recognition of additional pension
obligations;
|
13.
|
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;
|
14.
|
significant
deterioration in economic conditions, which could have an adverse
effect
on CIGNA’s operations and
investments;
|
15.
|
changes
in public policy and in the political environment, which could affect
state and federal law, including legislative and regulatory proposals
related to health care issues, which could increase cost and affect
the
market for CIGNA's health care products and services; and amendments
to
income tax laws, which could affect the taxation of employer provided
benefits, and pension legislation, which could increase pension
cost;
|
16.
|
potential
public health epidemics and bio-terrorist activity, which could,
among
other things, cause CIGNA’s covered medical and disability
expenses, pharmacy costs and mortality experience to rise
significantly, and cause operational disruption, depending on the
severity
of the event and number of individuals
affected;
|
17.
|
risks
associated with security or interruption of information systems,
which could, among other things, cause operational disruption;
and
|
18.
|
challenges
and risks associated with the successful management of CIGNA’s outsourcing
projects or key vendors, including the agreement with IBM for provision
of
technology infrastructure and related
services.
|
Issuer
Purchases of Equity Securities
|
|||||||||||||||
Period
|
Total
# of
shares
purchased(1)
|
Average
price
paid
per
share
|
Total
# of shares purchased
as part of publicly
announced program
(2)
|
Approximate
dollar value of
shares that may
yet be purchased as
part of publicly announced
program (3)
|
|||||||||||
Apr
1-30, 2007
|
2,091,477
|
$49.88
|
2,070,300
|
$306,454,223
|
|||||||||||
May
1-31, 2007
|
2,400,600
|
$54.73
|
2,400,600
|
$175,074,876
|
|||||||||||
June
1-30, 2007
|
2,050,519
|
$54.65
|
2,050,400
|
$63,013,479
|
|||||||||||
Total
|
6,542,596
|
$53.15
|
6,251,300
|
N/A
|
(1)
|
Includes
shares tendered by employees as payment of taxes withheld on the
exercise
of stock options and the vesting of restricted stock granted under
the
Company’s equity compensation plans. Employees tendered 21,177
shares in April and 119 shares in June. CIGNA's three-for-one
stock split, in the form of a stock dividend, was effective on June
4,
2007. Shares tendered prior to that date have been adjusted in
this table to reflect the split.
|
(2)
|
CIGNA
has had a repurchase program for many years, and has had varying
levels of
repurchase authority and activity under this program. The
program has no expiration date. CIGNA suspends activity under this
program
from time to time, generally without public
announcement. Remaining authorization under the program was
approximately $63 million as of June 30, 2007 and $499 million as
of July
31, 2007. CIGNA has effected in the past, and may continue from
time to time to effect, open market purchases of CIGNA common stock
through 10b5-1 plans, which allow a company to repurchase its shares
at
times when it otherwise might be prevented from doing so under insider
trading laws or because of self-imposed trading blackout
periods. Shares acquired prior to the record date of the split,
have been adjusted to reflect the
split.
|
(3)
|
Approximate
dollar value of shares is as of the last date of the applicable
month.
|
Votes
For
|
Votes
Against
|
Abstained
|
|
1. Election
of nominees to Board of Directors for
terms
expiring in 2010:
|
|||
Robert
H. Campbell
|
80,377,971
|
1,820,190
|
699,839
|
Isaiah
Harris, Jr.
|
80,864,997
|
1,346,916
|
686,087
|
Jane
E. Henney, M.D.
|
81,080,784
|
1,144,336
|
672,880
|
Donna
F. Zarcone
|
81,084,593
|
1,123,107
|
690,300
|
2. Ratification
of Pricewaterhouse Coopers LLP as CIGNA's
independent registered public accounting firm
|
80,891,917
|
1,433,668
|
572,415
|
3. Approval
of the amended and restated CIGNA Executive
Incentive Plan
|
78,321,055
|
3,730,445
|
846,500
|
(a)
|
See
Exhibit
Index.
|
CIGNA
CORPORATION
|
|
By:
/s/ Michael W. Bell
|
|
Michael
W. Bell
|
|
Executive
Vice President and
|
|
Chief
Financial Officer
|
Number
|
Description
|
Method
of Filing
|
3.1
|
Restated
Certificate of Incorporation of the registrant as last amended July
22,
1998.
|
Filed
as Exhibit 3.1 to the registrant’s Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 2003 and incorporated herein by reference.
|
3.2
|
By-Laws
of the registrant as last amended and restated October 25,
2006.
|
Filed
as Exhibit 3 to the registrant’s Form 8-K filed on October 30, 2006 and
incorporated herein by reference.
|
10.1
|
CIGNA
Executive Incentive Plan as amended and restated as of January 1,
2007.
|
Filed
as Appendix A to the registrant’s definitive proxy statement filed March
22, 2007 and incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
|
|
10.3
|
Second
Amended and Restated Revolving Credit and Letter of Credit Agreement
dated
June 19, 2007.
|
Filed
as Exhibit 10.1 to the registrant’s Form 8-K filed on June 25, 2007 and
incorporated herein by reference.
|
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
|
|
|