Allstate turns $1.16b profit
CHICAGO (AP) ? Allstate Corp., the second-largest US personal-lines insurer behind State Farm, reported a $1.16 billion third-quarter profit yesterday as it benefited from a quiet hurricane season.
The company raised guidance for its full-year earnings after topping Wall Street estimates with its quarterly result.
The large gain contrasted sharply with the third quarter of 2005, when Katrina and other hurricanes that devastated the Gulf Coast sent the Northbrook, Illinois, insurer to a record $1.55 billion loss.
Earnings for the July-through-September period amounted to $1.83 per share and compared with a loss a year earlier of $2.36 per share.
Revenue was $8.74 billion, down two percent from $8.94 billion in the third quarter of 2005.
Analysts polled by Thomson Financial had been looking for earnings of $1.78 per share on revenue of $8.32 billion.
The company sustained only $169 million in catastrophe losses during the quarter, compared with $4.7 billion a year earlier. Catastrophes are defined as events generating more than $1 million in claims to a company.
Allstate raised its estimate for 2006 operating earnings to a range of $7.35 per share to $7.50 per share, up from the previously announced range of $6.70 to $7.
The company also announced a new $3 billion share repurchase program, to be completed after the current $4 billion plan ends in the fourth quarter and before April 2008.
?We remain very confident in the company?s strategy and are investing in our core businesses to generate profitable growth,? said Edward Liddy, chairman and chief executive.
Allstate announced last month that Liddy is stepping down from the CEO post at the end of 2006 after eight years and will be succeeded by No. 2 executive Thomas Wilson, currently president and chief operating officer.
For the first nine months, net income more than quintupled to $3.78 billion, or $5.91 per share, from $724 million, or $1.08 per share, a year earlier. Revenue was up 1 percent to $26.69 billion from $26.44 billion.
Shares were unchanged in extended-hours activity after closing down 19 cents at $63.30 on the New York Stock Exchange before the earnings report was released. They are up 17 percent for the year.
