Equitable Holdings, Inc. (EQH) CEO Mark Pearson on Q2 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Equitable Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:EQH) Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call August 4, 2022 8:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Isil Muderrisoglu – Head, Investor Relations

Mark Pearson – President and Chief Executive Officer

Robin Raju – Chief Financial Officer

Nick Lane – President, Equitable Financial

Kate Burke – Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer, AllianceBernstein

Conference Call Participants

Tom Gallagher – Evercore ISI

Ryan Krueger – KBW

Alex Scott – Goldman Sachs

Elyse Greenspan – Wells Fargo

Jimmy Bhullar – JPMorgan

Andrew Kligerman – Credit Suisse

Suneet Kamath – Jefferies

Tracy Benguigui – Barclays

Mark Hughes – Truist Securities

Operator

Good morning. My name is Rob and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Equitable Holdings, Inc. Second Quarter 2022 Results Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Isil Muderrisoglu, Head of Investor Relations. You may begin your conference.

Isil Muderrisoglu

Thank you. Good morning and welcome to Equitable Holdings second quarter 2022 earnings call. Materials for today’s call can be found on our website at ir.equitableholdings.com.

Before we begin, I would like to note that some of the information we present today is forward-looking and subject to certain SEC rules and regulations regarding disclosure. Our results may materially differ from those expressed in or indicated by such forward-looking statements. So I’d like to refer you to the Safe Harbor language on Slide 2 of our presentation for additional information.

Joining me on today’s call is Mark Pearson, President and Chief Executive Officer of Equitable Holdings; Robin Raju, our Chief Financial Officer; Nick Lane, our President of Equitable Financial; and Kate Burke AllianceBernstein’s Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer.

During this call, we will be discussing certain financial measures that are not based on generally accepted accounting principles, also known as non-GAAP measures. Reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures and related definitions may be found on the Investor Relations portion of our website, in our earnings release, slide presentation and financial supplement.

I would now like to turn the call over to Mark and Robin for their prepared remarks.

Mark Pearson

Good morning. Thank you for joining. With a sharp decline in asset prices this year, we thought it is important today to highlight how our economic framework protects our balance sheet and ensures consistent cash returns to shareholders. Our operating subsidiaries Equitable and AB are not immune to these falling asset values, but are showing their resilience. We see strong demand across all Equitable lines and record sales in our Individual Retirement segment. AB reported a 2% fee rate improvement with growth in municipals, active equity and alternatives, offsetting outflows from fixed income.

Turning to Slide 3, in a quarter that has seen equity markets fall by a further 16%, an inverted yield curve and persistent inflation, our attention naturally turns to protecting the balance sheet. Our economic management and hedging programs are working as intended, and we closed the quarterly with an RBC ratio above target at 440%. Our investment portfolio is relatively conservative and is geared towards high-quality investment-grade issuers with an average credit rating of A3. We ended the quarter with strong HoldCo cash of $1.3 billion and returned $295 million of capital in the quarter.

Additionally, in July, we up streamed $930 million from our insurance subsidiary to the HoldCo. This will further support financial flexibility and provides confidence around our target 50% to 60% payout ratio. We continue to make progress towards mitigating the remaining $1 billion of redundant reserves associated with the Regulation 213 and remain on track to complete by year-end. Furthermore, as a result of our capital management program, and continued strong business performance, we maintain our $1.6 billion cash flow guidance for the year.

Non-GAAP operating earnings for the quarter were $526 million or $1.31 per share, 4% lower than first quarter 2022. This primarily reflects a reduction in fees from lower account values and lower assets under management. Additionally, our alternatives portfolio generated favorable returns in the quarter, but lower than a year ago.

Assets under management at the end of the quarter was $754 billion, reflecting the market draw-downs and positive net flows from our retirement and wealth management businesses, offsetting modest outflows from AB. Our top-selling RILA product, which provides downside protection for clients, continues to perform well in these markets, and the quarter saw record sales and new business values. We also completed the CarVal acquisition, and I am pleased to note CarVal raised a further $2 billion of assets under management since we announced the transaction. While we are not immune to falling markets, our business operations are performing well, and our capital management program continues to ensure we maintain healthy solvency ratios.

On Slide 4, we dig deeper into our capital management program and our solvency ratios. We have broken the last 3 years down into half year segments, showing movements in the S&P 500 in blue and movements in the 10-year treasury rate in green. This is a period which covers the COVID pandemic, the return of inflation, and much more aggressive central bank tightening cycle. The dramatic fall in both equity and bond values in the first half of 2022 is clearly shown with the S&P down more than 20% and the return on treasuries have had their worst performance in over 40 years. Recognizing that we have no innate ability to reliably predict markets, Equitable’s risk philosophy is designed to protect through volatile times.

This slide shows the results of how our product design, fair value hedging and economic reserving come together to ensure we deliver on our promises to both our clients and our shareholders. Over this 3-year period, our reported RBC ratio has never fallen below 400%. The surplus cash at HoldCo today is $1.3 billion, and we have been one of the very few companies that have consistently returned capital irrespective of the market conditions. Robin will go into some more detail here, but I would like to leave you with two important differentiators for Equitable. Firstly, our economic management is based on fair values. That is interest rates as they are as per the forward curve, not some arbitrary estimate; and policyholder reserves based on actual experience, again, not some arbitrary estimate. And secondly, hedging on our VA portfolio, we hedged first dollar exposure to equity markets, and we immunize the balance sheet against interest rate movements. This is unique to Equitable. This is how we protect our balance sheet, and this is how we protect cash generation for shareholders. Of course, in these times, we need both a robust balance sheet and a resilient business model.

Turning to Slide 5. Our businesses pair well with each other and drive synergies that are hard to replicate. With affiliated distribution, leading retirement and asset management subsidiaries, we participate in the whole value chain, benefiting both solutions we offer to clients and returns we provide for shareholders. We have meaningful synergy initiatives across our businesses. At the half year, we have deployed nearly 50% of the $10 billion general account capital commitment to generate additional yield and support growth in AB’s higher multiple private markets business. In our Retirement business, we reported $5 billion in total premiums, up 10% over the prior year. Our Individual, Group and Protection segments all posted higher premiums above last year. I particularly want to highlight that this was a record sales quarter for our Individual Retirement business, further demonstrating the continued need clients have for our products. Net inflows of $1.3 billion in our core Retirement products are up 52%, the highest since our IPO, helping drive record value of new business. We have realized $141 million of incremental investment income and we expect to complete our 2023 $180 million target ahead of time. Net productivity saves amount to $39 million, and again, we are on track for our 2023 target.

Turning to asset management, AllianceBernstein continues to perform well despite the current market conditions. AB’s net outflows in the quarter were modest compared to many peers, supported by positive flows of $1.3 billion within the institutional business, excluding low fee AXA redemptions. While AB is not immune from industry-wide outflows in taxable fixed income, we see organic growth in active equities, municipals, alternatives and multi-asset. Notably, AB continues to grow in actively managed strategies. Quarter two is the 11th consecutive quarter of organic growth within our active equity offerings, which, along with growth in private alternatives has contributed to a 2% fee rate improvement over prior year. We also benefit from strong long-term performance. 82% of equity funds and 63% of fixed income funds have outperformed peers over the last 5 years. This gives us confidence in our future outlook.

As previously mentioned, AB completed the acquisition of CarVal Investors last month. CarVal’s ability to raise an additional $2 billion of third-party AUM between transaction announcement in March and closed in July, further supports the opportunity for growth. AB now has $54 billion in their private markets platform. An important differentiator for Equitable is our affiliated distribution. We like this business. We continue to see strong flows within our broker-dealer with $2.7 billion in total sales, 85% of which is in fee-based advice accounts. On a year-over-year basis average assets under advice is up 3%, supporting earnings and cash flows. Our advisers, a critical component to the success of our Retirement business, representing approximately 50% of total premiums in the quarter. Overall productivity is up 9% over prior year.

I will now pass over to Robin to go over our results in more detail.

Robin Raju

Thanks Mark. Turning to Slide 6, I will highlight total company results for the quarter. Reported results were $1.31 per share, down 4% sequentially, primarily due to lower markets in the quarter. Adjusting for $5 million of notable items in the quarter, non-GAAP operating earnings were $531 million or $1.33 per share, down 10% on a comparable year-over-year per share basis. As expected, the year-over-year decrease in earnings per share less notable was primarily driven by lower fee revenue in both our retirement and asset management businesses. Additionally, prior year results included 2 months of earnings from the block that was reinsured to Venerable. Overall, results were within our expectations as market movements in the quarter impacted average AUM on a year-over-year basis.

Turning to GAAP results, we reported $1.7 billion in GAAP net income this quarter, which was primarily driven by the non-economic accounting treatment of our GAAP liabilities. As a reminder, the large gain reflects the variance between the movements in our GAAP liabilities versus the movements in our economic hedging program. This mismatch is unintuitive, and will be reduced post LDTI implementation next year, as GAAP accounting will move closer to fair value. I can also confirm that our expected transition adjustment remains positive as current market conditions combined with our industry low 2.25% GAAP interest rate assumption continues to support a favorable impact to our book value on LDTI.

Quarter-end AUM was down 13% as market movements were partially offset by positive net flows in our retirement and asset management businesses over the last 12 months. Looking ahead, we are mindful of potential headwinds that may impact fee-based earnings, but we continue to focus on the execution of our general account rebalancing program, which has achieved $141 million of the $180 million target and expense efficiencies of $39 million, as we remain on track to achieve our $80 million net savings target. This, combined with our strong results in asset management, which outpaced peers and record flows in our Individual Retirement business, position Equitable Holdings well to support client needs and deliver shareholder value during these times.

Turning to Slide 7, I would like to expand on Mark’s earlier comments on our strong capital position and the effectiveness of our hedge program, both a testament to our economic management in the business, but also the actions we have taken over the last 10 years to ensure our product portfolio is hedged through a simple program that avoids surprises for investors. Over the last decade, we fully moved to an economic reserving approach, which incorporates realistic assumptions. This means that reserves reflect both interest rates aligned with the prevailing forward curves and policyholder behavior assumptions that reflect in 20-plus years of experience. As a result, the interest rates and other assumptions assumed at the time of our original product pricing do not impact our reserves. Our base case assumes that policyholders will always maximize the value of their contracts.

Furthermore, this approach applies to all of our businesses, both our legacy VA and the new business we write today, leading to high confidence in the integrity of our reserves and the certainty of future cash flows. It not only ensures the new business generates strong risk-adjusted returns, but allows us to avoid taking risk that cannot be hedged. Economic reserving not only differentiates Equitable from our peers, but it’s especially important in periods of market dislocation.

Turning to our approach to hedging, we believe we have won the simplest and most predictable hedge programs in the market. We seek to protect the economic liability in our GMXT portfolio through a daily rebalanced dynamic program that fully hedges first dollar equity movements and interest rate exposure with simple, plain vanilla instruments, both immunizing the impact the markets on guarantees we provide to clients. This is supported though by our static hedging program, targeting CTE98, protecting our statutory balance sheet and RBC ratio by hedging a portion of our base fees on our insurance products. While economic management and fair value hedging are key components to protecting our balance sheet, product design minimizes the effect of other risk factors.

Over the last decade, we have made significant strides to transition our in-force and shift our new business towards products that support sound economic risk management, while meeting our client needs for accumulation, income and protected equity solutions. Starting in 2009, we introduced passive investments in hedgeable indices, paired to volatility management strategy to protect against extreme equity market volatility.

Today, approximately 75% of our in-force is in passive hedgeable instruments with over 80% of equity exposure incorporating volatility management. This significantly reduces basis risk by more than 90%, which in turn improves our hedge effectiveness, manufacturing costs and capital stability. We have also shifted new product designs with 100% of new business post financial crisis and fund options that invest in passive, hedgeable indices and integrate tools that minimize the impact of elevated volatility, providing better risk-adjusted returns for clients and protecting shareholder interest.

In addition, our economic approach led to innovation of new products, creating the RILA category in 2011 with our industry-leading SCS product, leading the fastest-growing market within the VA space. As a reminder, this product is perfectly ALM met and invest in credit, allowing us to compete against fixed index annuities at a lower cost of capital. The combination of our economic management philosophy, rich experience data, hedging programs and product design in conjunction with our deep talented bench gives Equitable, its unique edge in creating capital-efficient retirement solutions that deliver a narrow set of outcomes with consistent cash generation and capital returns.

I will now turn to capital management program on Slide 8, and highlight how capital allocation is driving long-term shareholder value. Our retirement, asset management and affiliated device businesses continuing to generate positive returns for shareholders as we execute against our strategic initiatives. The close of AB transaction with CarVal demonstrates our ability to execute against this strategy to drive a higher multiple growth without impacting capital return. Using AB to fund its transaction in a deal that has no impact on capital return today, and will be accretive to EQA shareholders over time. We also continue to maximize financial flexibility, holding excess capital at Holdings, which is even more important given market headwinds and a challenging economic outlook.

Our $930 million annual dividend from our retirement business in July was above our $750 million target. This gives us confidence in our $1.6 million of cash flow guidance to the market for the year, with the retirement dividend offsetting some of the equity market impact on our other business lines. As a result, we continue to deliver our consistent 50% to 60% payout target, returning $295 million in the quarter, which included $220 million of share repurchases. Our half year RBC ratio was at 440%, highlighting our ability to maintain a strong capital position despite volatility in the markets. This reflects the strength of our fair value risk management and hedging programs. In addition, our capital position and financial flexibility was strengthened at holding with $1.3 billion of cash as of quarter end and upstreaming $930 million from our retirement company.

We remain on track to mitigate the remaining redundant reserves associated with Reg. 213 this year. And we are fortunate to be able to point to both our strong capital position and our robust business performance across all business lines, supporting consistent capital return for shareholders. Looking ahead, we are mindful of the challenging market conditions, but we are well-positioned to execute against our capital return objectives.

I will now turn the call back to Mark for closing remarks. Mark?

Mark Pearson

Thanks, Robin. Before we open up the line for questions, I would like to summarize the highlights from the quarter. First, our economic reserving and fair value hedging program are unique to Equitable and protect our balance sheet. We have shown a consistent and strong RBC ratio 440% as of quarter end. Second, we focus on maximizing economic value to generate distributable cash flows. With our strong cash position at Holdings, we reaffirm a $1.6 billion of cash generation for the year. Last, our complementary retirement, asset management and advice businesses continue to perform as expected through these turbulent markets. We see strong new business activity and value of new business across our subsidiaries.

With that, I would like to open the line for questions.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Tom Gallagher from Evercore ISI. Your line is open.

Tom Gallagher

Good morning. Just wanted to start on the RBC ending at 440%, I would concur with your comments that that was a pretty good result especially relative to some peers. But it also implies that you didn’t generate any capital during the first half of the year. So I just want to understand the components of this and how to think about it going forward? Can you talk about what the kind of normalized underlying earnings power you believe is in the business? Is it still running at around $800 million annually? And if that’s right, did the $400 million get consumed by hedge breakage and/or higher required capital? Any help thinking through that would be appreciated.

Robin Raju

Thanks Tom. Good morning. So, our robust 440% RBC ratio as of half year is a reflection of the effectiveness and strength of our economic hedging program. As the hedge gains protected our stress statutory capital against the recent adverse market movements. In a half year where markets decreased by 20%, we are able to maintain our capital solvency and upstream additional capital to the holding company. Like any period, there are several positive and negative one-timers, which ultimately offset. The primary driver was the impact and the protection of the hedge program and the cash flow that our business generates. But it was offset slightly by adverse mortality in the first quarter, and also market impacts year-to-date, which impact the base fees that we generate. Looking ahead, we remain within our target range, and we are consistent, and we still see annual cash flows of $750 million of the guidance that we have within the insurance company.

Tom Gallagher

Okay. Got it. And then my follow-up is, I just want to understand the parameters around this $2 billion higher reserve for Reg. 213. Are there certain scenarios where that will change over time? Can you give some guardrails under certain market scenarios where you would see that changing either positive or negative markets?

Robin Raju

Sure. So, with Reg. 213, as you recall, we initially had $2 billion of redundant reserves. As of last year, we resolved about half of that through to $1 billion XXX reinsurance transaction with Swiss Re. In addition, we restructured the operating companies to now have 50% of the cash flows unregulated. And we remain on track, as we mentioned in the call, that fully mitigate the remaining. Reserves move with markets similar to the Reg. 213 reserves. But the important factor for us is the reserves required above CTE98. And that’s what we would need to solve for in $1 billion redundancy over time, and that’s what we plan to solve for. But you certainly have reserve movements between VM-21 and Reg. 213 below it, but it’s offset by the hedging results.

Tom Gallagher

And Rob, just a quick follow-up on that if I could. Just are there scenarios where we will be talking about there is an extra $1 billion, let’s say, under certain market conditions that you will have to solve for again. I think that’s the concern in the market that you may fully solve for the $2 billion. But under certain market conditions, is it possible this reserve increases?

Robin Raju

No, look, we are fully focused on resolving this. At the end of the – we are confident at the end of the year-end, we will be resolving this $1 billion redundant reserves, and we will no longer have to concern ourselves with Reg. 213.

Tom Gallagher

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Krueger from KBW. Your line is open.

Ryan Krueger

Hi. Thanks. Good morning. I had a question on the general account repositioning. I think you achieved close to 80% of the originally guided NII upside, but have only redeployed about 50% of the assets. So, could you comment on, I guess – is that accurate? And then if so, I guess can you comment on the potential upside to the original NII upside target that you gave?

Robin Raju

Sure, Ryan. So, the general account rebalancing program, we targeted $180 million by year-end 2023, of which we have achieved $141 million. So, good results to this point. We do expect that we would finish that $180 million earlier as a result of higher rates and spreads. So, there may be upside on top of that as we head into 2023. The second part of your question is the $10 billion that we committed to AB, that we are about 50% deployed, but there are two separate targets. We want to commit $10 billion to AB by 2023 and complete the $180 million, but the two don’t go together. So, we will get benefits from the $10 billion fully deployed, not only into additional income, but AB’s strong track record in raising 4x to 5x of third-party capital, which effectuates the synergies between the insurance company and the asset management company and delivering value for shareholders over the long-term.

Ryan Krueger

Okay. Got it. And then could you just comment on your ULSG exposure? And any color you can give on your own last trends versus current assumption?

Robin Raju

Sure. So, as we mentioned in the presentation, our economic management means that we manage our assumptions to emerging experience in order to minimize large deviations in our reserving. As such, our policyholder behavior assumptions for all of our life business are based on the recent experience. Our objective is we never want to surprise investors adversely. Additionally, while some of our peers do have large exposure to ULSG, our exposure is minimal. So, we remain quite confident in our reserving integrity due to our economic focus on the reserves.

Ryan Krueger

Great. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Alex Scott from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Alex Scott

Hey. First one I had for you is on the some of the cash conversion of earnings. The $1.6 billion that you are retaining is the capital deployment this year. I mean even relative to my estimates, which don’t have alternatives being bad in the back half of the year yet, it’s coming in above the 50% to 60% range that you guys have talked about? And when I consider all, it’s probably going to be bad in the back half. I mean it’s coming in materially better. So, I guess the question is, what is allowing that to happen despite you have got Reg. 213 going on, markets down, etcetera, what’s allowing that to happen at the end of the day? And why shouldn’t we believe that you could continue to be actually above that 50% to 60% range?

Robin Raju

Look, Alex, the core at the end of the day is our hedging program, and how we manage the business. First dollar hedging helps protecting down equity markets and then supplement that with a statutory hedge helps protect the balance sheet. That’s why we were able to upstream the $930 million in July and felt comfortable to do so, and the regulator felt comfortable to do so. It’s because of the strength of our economic management. Our guidance maintains because we upstream more than our $750 million guidance from the retirement company, and we still expect to have $1.6 billion. And we would expect that we continue to stay within our 50% to 60% payout ratio. Our objective is always to maintain a consistency in returning cash to shareholders, and you have seen that over time, and that will continue.

Alex Scott

Got it. Second question I had is on just a holding company liquidity position, you gave it at the end of the quarter, it obviously goes up because of the July dividend. Should we think about any of that being needed for a potential solution to Reg. 213? Like, is it possible some of that gets used to be put into an internal captive or something like that to facilitate a solution, or is that not in the picture?

Robin Raju

I don’t see that in the picture right now. As I mentioned in the last call, then we continue, we have two options that we are working on to resolve Reg. 213, external reinsurance and internal reinsurance. We have made progress on both of them in the quarter. So, we feel confident that we have the solutions to resolve Reg. 213. And Reg. 213 will be behind us as of year-end.

Alex Scott

Thanks.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Elyse Greenspan from Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Elyse Greenspan

Hi. Thanks. Good morning. My first question, now that you guys closed the CarVal deal. And I know in your prepared remarks, right, you mentioned now you were able to complete that deal right without using any excess capital. Can you just update us right on just M&A thoughts from here in the pipeline, and where you might focus on transactions, and if there would ever be deals that you would consider actually using your excess capital to finance?

Mark Pearson

Hi Elyse, it’s Mark. I will take that one. Yes, you are right. The CarVal deal was really terrific deal for AB and for Equitable. On AB side, it really filled in some blank spaces on the private asset side. We have seen the power of CarVal and being able to raise to $2 billion since the date of the acquisition. And as you recall, we funded it from some of the units in our Equitable Holding of some of the units. So, it was positive on the Equitable side as well. Look, we have always said that now we are sort of 4 years, 5 years since the IPO, we will look at opportunities for inorganic growth. But we have always said that our strategy is not dependent on that. So, if something that comes along that makes sense, we will take a look at it as CarVal did, but it’s not needed for our strategy. The areas where we would be interested would of course be on wealth management. That’s an area which is – supports our low capital intense strategy and something where we have got a very solid unit to-date. Employee benefits would be something we would be interested in and just growing out our alternate platform at AB. So, they are the areas we look. But as I say, we would always do it in a way that is accretive for shareholders as well.

Elyse Greenspan

Okay. Thanks. And then my second question, mortality was favorable in the quarter. Can you just give us an update on what you are seeing with COVID. Obviously, we have seen the number of deaths really slow. And was the favorable mortality just driven off of some releases of IBNR for COVID as well?

Robin Raju

Hey Elyse, I will take that. So, the favorable mortality that we experienced was solely in conjunction with the sharp decline in U.S. COVID deaths. We were obviously surprised with the U.S. COVID deaths in the first quarter at 158,000 and pleased to see that decrease to 30,000, but we continue to monitor COVID trends in the U.S. as cases and hospitalizations are on the rise, but deaths are still not trending upward. But that said, we are maintaining our $30 million to $60 million guidance per 100,000 U.S. deaths, and we will continue to support our clients through these uncertain times. But the favorability is linked to the lower U.S. deaths related to COVID.

Elyse Greenspan

Thanks for the color.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Jimmy Bhullar from JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Jimmy Bhullar

Hey. Good morning. So Robin, you mentioned that despite the market being weak, your cash flow guidance of $1.6 billion hasn’t changed. Is it fair to assume that cash flow next year would still be impacted to the extent that in the unregulated subsidiaries, with the markets being weak earnings are probably going to be pressured. But then in the regulated businesses, the lack of increase in stat capital given the stable RBC despite no dividends being taken out, that and lower earnings in stat subs this year than you might have expected at the beginning of the year, still will have enough impact on your cash flows next year, or are there any other puts and takes that would be positive or negative?

Robin Raju

Hey Jimmy. First, this year, the $1.6 billion, the reason we are able to still keep the $1.6 billion is because we are up-streaming more than the $750 million guidance we gave in the retirement company. But our businesses are not immune to markets. We have transitioned to a capital-light business, which means we are exposed to fee-oriented impacts from equity markets. So, both the retirement and asset management company will certainly be impacted by markets, but we will have a better feel for it as we get to the end of the year in terms of guidance for 2023.

Jimmy Bhullar

Understood. And to the extent you take out more, then obviously less flexibility next year unless you want to deplete the capital base further.

Robin Raju

Correct.

Jimmy Bhullar

Okay. And then on buybacks, the amount in 2Q dropped below what you have done in 1Q and obviously, 1Q was lower than what you have done in 4Q or in the second half of last year. How should we think about the capital that you have at the holding company being used for buybacks? Should we assume that buyback – the pace of buybacks this year is not going to be impacted given your strong cash flow at the – overall for the year, or are you slowing down buybacks a little bit given the uncertain macro environment?

Robin Raju

Yes. Thanks Jimmy. Obviously, we are cognizant of the market environment around us. But because we are able to protect our balance sheet through the hedging program, that first dollar hedging and then additionally, the statutory hedging, we are able to maintain buybacks at our pace. So, our goal is to be consistent in the market and deliver returns to shareholders as we have demonstrated over the past. On a year-to-date basis, we have returned a total of over $750 million to shareholders, including dividends. That’s slightly ahead of the pace for the year relative to our guidance. This also translates to a 13% free cash flow yield, which we believe provides a significant value for shareholders at a level that’s sustainable due to the strength of our hedging program and economic management. So, we remain fully committed to our 50% to 60% payout ratio and expect that to continue. I wouldn’t read too much in small timing difference between quarters, as we will continue to keep the pace and return capital to shareholders.

Jimmy Bhullar

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Kligerman from Credit Suisse. Your line is open.

Andrew Kligerman

Hey. Good morning. It’s been some time since you did the transaction with Venerable on the variable annuity block. Are you getting much interest in any of your other legacy blocks, and what’s Equitable’s interest in divesting of another block at this stage?

Mark Pearson

Andrew, it’s Mark. As Robin has indicated, the priority for us has been mitigating the Reg. 213 redundant reserves. That’s where all of our focus has been. And as Robin said, we remain pretty confident that we will have a solution for the remaining half of that by the end of this year. That’s really where the team and myself have been working.

Andrew Kligerman

Okay. So, not much focus there then, correct, Mark?

Mark Pearson

Correct at the moment, it’s been Reg. 213. That’s been the dominant factor for us. That’s right.

Andrew Kligerman

Got it. And then just looking at SCS first year, premiums at $2.2 billion, that’s pretty robust, I think it’s a record year. Can you talk about market interest in the RILA product in general and how Equitable is doing in terms of its market share and competing?

Nick Lane

Sure. I will take that one. We see demand for protected equity solutions continuing to grow, first, given the structural shift as baby boomers enter their next life stage. And then second, further amplified by the current market dislocation volatility, it’s really a solution that’s right for this time. As Mark and Robin highlighted, we had record second quarter sales over $3 billion. And as a pioneer in developing this market over a decade ago with solutions anchored and economic realities, we think we have got a sustainable edge given our focus, our continuous innovation and our differentiated distribution platform. This is both our over 4,000 Equitable advisers, as well as our long-standing privileged third-party distribution relationships.

Andrew Kligerman

Excellent. Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Suneet Kamath from Jefferies. Your line is open.

Suneet Kamath

Yes. Thanks. Good morning. Just back on individual retirement. One issue we have seen with some companies that have sort of healthy blocks, is this concept of sort of floored out reserves, where you get this mismatch between hedges and reserve changes. Just wondering as your block evolves from – post reinsurance, is this something that could impact your capital position and your reserve position in that business?

Robin Raju

Hey Suneet, it’s Robin. Yes, the CSB for – certainly, at some point, it could be in a period of highly rise in equity markets much farther away from we are today. But as your block becomes more healthier that is something that the NAIC regulation could be exposed doesn’t impact Equitable today, and we are far away from that point, as we sit here today.

Suneet Kamath

Okay. Got it. And then I guess, in wealth management, one of the things that we have seen from other wealth management companies is sort of leverage to rising interest rates through either cash sweep programs or banks – the establishment of a bank. Is that something that you guys do or could do in this year? Just curious if that’s an opportunity ahead?

Nick Lane

Great. I will take that one. This is Nick. In a rising interest environment, it does help our earnings from sweeps. Over the next several months, we expect to benefit from those. Additionally, I would say our advisors continue to generate strong gross flows and net flows adding to our overall AUA and earnings power of the business.

Suneet Kamath

Can you quantify the benefit that you expect, or is it not material?

Nick Lane

We don’t quantify it at this time.

Suneet Kamath

Okay. Thanks.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Tracy Benguigui from Barclays. Your line is open.

Tracy Benguigui

Thank you. Nice achievement of upstreaming $930 million OpCo [ph] dividend, that’s above your $750 million guidance. Just a few questions there. Was part of that a special dividend since it was above your guide and it was above your $865 million ordinary dividend capacity, and I am just wondering if that a higher dividend may change the mix this year of cash flow sources, would it be more skewed towards regulated source versus non-regulated? I think your guide is 50-50 split, and you did reaffirm the $1.6 billion cash flow in total?

Robin Raju

Sure, Tracy. So, the – our guidance from the retirement company in annual earnings that we expect is $750 million. To get to the $1.6 billion, you have to add back AllianceBernstein and then our investment management agreement that we have between the different life companies. This $750 million, our ordinary dividend capacity for the year, the actual formula ended up being $930 million. So, it’s purely a function of our ordinary dividend formula, and that’s what we have upstreamed. This year, yes, since we upstream more out of the regulated company, that percentage may be slightly higher this year. But over the long-term, our guide is 50-50 and the $1.6 billion of cash flows.

Tracy Benguigui

Got it. And on GA optimization, any comments if you could see room for further enhancements.

Robin Raju

Yes. As I mentioned earlier, we were – we achieved $141 million in the quarter. We are delighted of the progress we have made in partnership with AB and Lifeco. We think we will come ahead of the target of $180 million, which was year-end 2023 as a function of rising rates and higher spreads that we are investing in today versus being forced run up. So, we are pleased with progress. There is certainly probably upside, but we are cautious in the current credit environment, too. We want to be cognizant of the risk that may be out there. So, we are focused on highly rated names and ensuring that we are taking appropriate credit risk in this time.

Tracy Benguigui

Okay. Just one more. I just wanted to make sure I understand the earlier conversation on favorable mortality that it was a function of lower COVID losses. But there will be a point in time where COVID will be an endemic from pandemic, like the flu. So, then I can imagine every quarter we will see favorable mortality at COVID to-date. So, I am wondering if there are other offsets in there like long COVID mortality that ran below trend.

Robin Raju

Yes, both of them ran below to our non-COVID and COVID. The COVID mortality for us, though, was very minimal in the quarter. So, it is the mortality overall on non-COVID related came in under, and we continue to see good results through this month. So, we are pleased where we are, and we maintain our $75 million guidance for the Protection Solutions segment, but acknowledge the volatility around it with mortality.

Tracy Benguigui

Thank you.

Operator

Your next question comes from the line of Mark Hughes from Truist Securities. Your line is open.

Mark Hughes

Yes. Thanks. Good morning. Your guidance around the $150 million impact from a 10% market move. Is that pretty mechanical or given that we have had a lot of volatility. Do you see that, that is still pretty much on the mark, or is your experience perhaps a little bit different?

Robin Raju

Hi Mark. Yes. No, we are still – we still believe in the 10%, $150 million guidance across the retirement and asset management company. And based on what we are seeing, it aligns pretty well.

Mark Hughes

Okay. And then any change you have seen, maybe either an individual retirement or group retirement around customer behavior perhaps withdrawals. I think you talked about lower outflows in the legacy VA block. You clearly seem to be getting more inflows, particularly with the SCS product. So, just sort of curious whether in these times of inflation, consumer stress, that sort of thing, whether you notice any behavioral changes in your customer base?

Nick Lane

Yes, Mark, this is Nick. I think in these times, consumers are looking for more resilient portfolios. And I think it speaks to the power of insurances and asset class. So, we are seeing that in terms of demand for new products, and we are not seeing material changes in in-force behavior at this time.

Mark Hughes

Thank you.

Operator

And there are no further questions at this time. This does conclude today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

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