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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2017 - Q3
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Executives

Paige Hart - IR James Belardi - CEO and CIO William Wheeler - President Martin Klein - EVP and CFO.

Analysts

Erik Bass - Autonomous Research Sean Dargan - Wells Fargo Tom Gallagher - Evercore ISI Alex Scott - Goldman Sachs Suneet Kamath - Citi Mark Hughes – SunTrust.

Operator

Thank you for joining us today for Athene's Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this call is the property of Athene, and that any unauthorized broadcast of this call in any form is prohibited. An audio replay will be available on athene.com. Please note this call is being recorded. I will now turn the call over to Paige Hart. Ms.

Hart, you may begin..

Paige Hart

Thank you, operator. Good morning everyone and welcome to Athene’s conference call to discuss Q3 2017 earnings. Our earnings release, presentation material and financial supplement, can be found on our website at ir.athene.com. Reconciliations of non-GAAP performance measures discussed on today's call can be found in those documents.

Joining me today from Athene management are Jim Belardi, Chairman and CEO; Bill Wheeler, President; and Marty Klein, Chief Financial Officer. I would like to highlight that some of the comments made during this call may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act.

We do not revise or update such statements to reflect new information, subsequent events, or changes in strategy. There are a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied.

Such Factors are discussed in detail in our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2016, and our other SEC filings, which can be found at the SEC's website. An audio replay will be available on our website shortly after today's call.

Please note that any comparisons made will be versus the same period of the prior year, unless otherwise noted. And now, I’d like to turn the call over to Jim Belardi..

James Belardi Co-Founder, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & Chief Investment Officer

Thank you, Paige and welcome everyone to our third quarter 2017 earnings call. I love talking about Athene, and the only thing I like better than talking about Athene is working at Athene. I’m pleased to report that once again Athene has delivered strong quarterly earnings.

In the third quarter, we generated net income of $274 million, and operating income net of tax of $231 million, both more than double our results in 2016. After tax operating income within Retirement Services, excluding notable items was $250 million.

During the quarter new deposits were $2.8 billion, driven by $1.3 billion of retail sales and $1.3 billion of funding agreement issuance. We’re very confident in the organic growth from our multichannel platform and last month we won our second and third pension risk transfer deals totaling approximately $1 billion of pension deposits.

We expect our wholesale channel, which includes PRT and funding agreements to be a significant growth segment for Athene. We are confident that our product diversification will continue, which combined with our very strong capital position and excellent operating performance, makes us optimistic about additional ratings improvements.

We’re aggressively pursuing opportunities to deploy a significant amount of our excess equity capital and are confident about our prospects. In addition, our future operating results will be enhanced in a higher interest rate environment. We’re positioned to perform extraordinarily well in the future.

Turning to the Tax Reform Bill that was proposed by the House last week, it’s important to note that the bill was preliminary and as with any significant reform bill, we expect there will be changes in what is ultimately adopted. Regarding the excise tax provisions starting in 2019, it may apply to profit payments made by our U.S.

subsidiaries to our Bermuda reinsurer. Importantly our direct-to-Bermuda reinsurance business, as well as funding agreements if issued by our Bermuda subsidiary would be unaffected by the provisions. Our current estimate of the provisions impact is an increase of about 4 to 5 points to our overall tax rate.

From a policy standpoint, the bill would increase cost to consumers who need and buy retirement savings and other insurance products, in both the life and property and causality sectors. As a result, we believe the bill will cost jobs in the U.S. insurance industry.

If this proposal becomes law, we expect to quickly and successfully adjust our business model and to continue to report strong results. We're having a great first year as a public company and plan to perform even better going forward. We expect to improve get that every day because if we're not getting better we're getting worse.

Now, Bill will review the strength of our distribution platform and liability profile..

William Wheeler

Thanks, Jim and welcome everyone. We continue to execute on our goals of growth and diversification and make great progress this quarter. As Jim said, in the third quarter, we generated total deposits of $2.8 billion.

While this is slightly less than the prior year, I'll note that in the third quarter of 2016 retail deposits benefited from being the first full quarter for two newly launched products, which were very successful.

While competition remains strong, our multichannel distribution model enables us to profitability source liabilities by pivoting to where we feel we have the best opportunity. We do not have volume requirements for our channels.

To that end, sequential or annual comparisons of the deposit mix is not necessarily indicative of the strength of our business. In our retail business, we generated sales of approximately $1.3 billion this quarter, which is down from the prior year.

We feel that these results are very solid when accounting for the strong prior year comparable, typical summer seasonality, as well as the interest rate environment and strong equity market.

We remained one of the largest and fastest growing writers of fixed indexed annuities and we’re the number two writer of FIAs for the 12 months ending June 30, according to LIMRA, while still managing to meet our return targets. During the quarter, we executed on our growth strategy to enhance our products and expand our distribution.

For several of our accumulation products we added a 100% equity index for which we are seeing significant interest. We also on-boarded a new bank partner in the quarter, which became our largest producing bank in the month of August.

Our pipeline of potential bank and broker dealer partners is growing and moving along at a faster pace, bolstered by our recent ratings upgrades, expanded sales team and our strong reputation for competitive products and high quality service.

Additionally, as we look for ways to maintain our leadership position in this channel, we have several projects underway to make our already solid sales and service IT platform the most advanced in the industry. With respect to the DOL rule, as you know it has been proposed that the applicability date be extended to July 1, 2019.

We continue to monitor the situation, but remain encouraged with the DOL, SEC, FINRA and the NAIC together will achieve a workable standard. Turning to our reinsurance business, in the third quarter we generated $190 million of new flow deposits.

Flows during the quarter remained under pressure as the convergence of factors including tighter spreads and a booming equity market pressured market sales. We on-boarded Lincoln Financial in August with good momentum and we anticipate that monthly sales will grow going forward, particularly given that the relationship includes FIAs as well as MYGAs.

We expect to maintain our leadership position in the flow reinsurance market by expanding our product portfolio and adding new partners. We are already seeing a larger proportion of our flow deposits coming from FIAs, which are less sensitive to low interest rates than MYGAs.

Since the announcement of our deal with Lincoln we're seeing increasing interest from and meaningful dialog with potential partners. The size and scope of our reinsurance business has made us one of the best fixed annuity product partners in the market.

We help counterparties improve what they're doing by developing new or tweaking current products and we back our ideas with capital. Moving our institutional channel, we continue to gain momentum as we rapidly expand our reach and distribution.

In the third quarter, we issued 1.3 billion of funding agreements and continue to receive a positive reception from high quality investors. The funding agreement market remains strong with year-to-date issuance higher than all of 2016.

Beyond general market strength, asteady stream of new high quality investors are coming into our deals with meaningful interest, creating demand which has driven spreads consistently tighter. We are always monitoring the market for opportunities to expand our platform by issuing into strong demand.

In the pension risk transfer market, the pipeline of deals remains healthy and we continue to aggressively pursue opportunities. As Jim mentioned, in October we entered into our second and third PRT agreements, representing pension obligations of approximately $1 billion covering nearly 30,000 retirees.

Our momentum in this channel is just beginning to build and every deal won further solidifies our presence in this market. We are optimistic about our growth potential in this channel and I am pleased to announce that in September we hired Sean Brennan as the new Head of PRT.

Sean previously worked for Mercer where he was a key member of their PRT practice. In addition to organic growth, we continue to pursue opportunistic acquisitions and block transactions as they are a key part of our business model, given our expertise and balance sheet strength.

The deal environment is picking up as the restructuring trend in the insurance industry continues. However, we remain disciplined in the transactions that we pursue and will continue to evaluate each opportunity and the scope of our strategic priorities.

Turning to our liability profile, in the third quarter, our reserve liabilities increased by approximately $7 billion from the prior year to $78 billion. We have limited exposure to legacy liabilities as we have priced our book to reflect the low interest rate environment.

We believe we are conservative in writing our liabilities and they are generally persistent, which complements our unique asset management capabilities.

As of September 30, 86% of our deferred annuity policies including surrender charges and 72% were subject to market value adjustments, both of which increase the probability that a policy will remain in force from one period to the next.

Within our rapidly growing institutional channel, funding agreements have a fixed maturity and pension risk transfer obligations have no optionality, features which enhance the persistency and predictability of our overall liability profile.

Going forward, we expect to continue to diversify and expand our existing distribution, as well as pursue opportunistic growth opportunities to enhance the Athene’s earnings momentum. Now I am going to turn the call back to Jim, who will review our investment portfolio in more detail..

James Belardi Co-Founder, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & Chief Investment Officer

Yes, thanks Bill. Our low cost, surrender-protected, stable liability profile is the foundation for our asset management strategy, which underwrites complexity and liquidity risk rather than just credit risk. This allows us to achieve a 2% to 3% investment margin without taking excessive asset risk.

Our high quality investment portfolio continues to perform very well. We ended the third quarter with approximately $79 billion of total invested assets, a 10% increase over the prior year, driven by strong growth in new deposits.

In terms of yield in our retirement services segment, our annualized net investment earned rate in Q3 was 4.64%, a decrease of 11 basis points over the prior year. Fixed and other income increased 8 basis points, benefitting from higher short-term interest rates on our floating rate securities, which comprised 28% of total invested assets.

Offsetting this was lower alternative income compared to the prior year, which benefited from the removal of liquidity discounts for certain alternative investments and strong performance in some credit funds.

The credit quality of our investment portfolio remains very high at 9/30 approximately 93% of our available for sale fixed maturity securities was designated NAIC 1 or 2 the two highest categories. Year-to-date our annualized OTTI as a percentage of total average invested assets was only 4 basis points.

We continue to invest record volumes, approximately 20% more than in the first nine months of 2016, in a very difficult environment. In some sectors we believe investors have become irrational based on the risk they are taking for low expected returns. We are not one of those investors.

We remain disciplined and committed to our downside protection principles and an appropriate risk-return philosophy. Our investments in private corporates, deliver a yield premium to public corporates and typically have superior covenants with strong downside protection.

We purchased about $1 billion in the space in Q3 diversified across a variety of borrowers. Structured securities provide us with attractive yields, downside protection and are highly rated and very capital efficient. While we see U.S.

housing fundamentals as favorable, spreads on RMBS have tightened to post crisis types, making current prices on the majority of new assets unattractive. Instead during the quarter we deployed approximately $500 million into ABS and $625 million in the first lien and mezzanine commercial mortgage loans.

Our alternatives portfolio which is currently 5% of invested assets is a source of outperformance. We invest in fixed income like funds with cash flows as opposed to equity like funds that rely more on capital appreciation. We have not purchased traditional hedge fund or private equity investments.

Athene continues to look for opportunities in asset originators where the value of the entity is cheaper than buying the underlying assets. Recently we've been looking at real assets like royalties and real-estate strategies that have shown cyclical resiliency.

We're also targeting strategic investments that can also generate attractive assets for our balance sheet. We have made new fund commitments that, when fully funded, will materially increase the size of our alternatives portfolio. We expect this bigger portfolio to continue to generate double-digit returns over the expected life of the investments.

In summary, our investment portfolio is very high quality, performing very well, is closely matched with our liabilities and will perform even better in a higher interest rate environment. Now, Marty will review our financial performance and strong balance sheet..

Martin Klein

Thanks, Jim and good morning, everybody. In the third quarter we again delivered strong growth and financial performance, while maintaining our strong balance sheet and capital position with significant untapped debt capacity.

For the third quarter net income increased 117% over the prior year to $274 million, or $1.39 per diluted share and operating income, net of tax, increased 97% over the prior year to $231 million or $1.18 per operating diluted share, generating an operating ROE excluding AOCI of 12.5%.

Adjusting for notable items, operating income, net of tax, was $254 million and within Retirement Services was $250 million, which resulted in an operating ROE, excluding AOCI of 19.0%.

Notable items in retirement services included a pre-tax increase in other liability cost of $20 million from our annual process of unlocking, primarily related to modest impacts from updates to assumptions for the net investment earned rate and mortality, partially offset by $13 million of out of period actuarial adjustments.

The notable item within Corporate and Other was an operating loss of $17 million in our Germen operation, which I'll discuss shortly. In our Retirement Services segment, strong performance in fixed income and other drove investment income growth over the prior year, resulting in an annualized net investment earn rate of 4.64%.

The majority of this increase was driven by invested asset growth of $6.4 billion, as well as from higher short-term interest rates resulting in 10 basis points of increased floating rate investment income.

Our alternatives portfolio in this segment continued to perform in line with our expectations, yielding an annualized net investment earned rate of 9.79% versus 14.26% in the prior year, which was driven by higher credit fund income as a result of higher credit spread tightening.

Moving to our other liability costs, our cost of crediting was 1.88%, 8 basis points lower than the prior year. Our cost of crediting continues to decline as a result of recent rate actions and lower option costs.

Our investment margin on deferred annuities for the quarter was 2.76%, resulting from our diligent management on both sides of the balance sheet. Turning to Corporate and Other, we had an operating loss net of tax of $13 million in the quarter, as compared to a loss of $25 million in the prior year.

During the quarter, we had an operating loss of $17 million in our German operation, primarily driven by policyholder dividends related to a timing difference in recognition of participating income under U.S. GAAP compared to German GAAP. We expect this timing difference to reverse in the fourth quarter.

Net income for the third quarter was $274 million, an increase of $148 million or 117% over the prior year. Our annual process of unlocking assumptions resulted in a decrease in pre-tax income of $33 million compared to a decrease of $171 million in 2016.

Turning to our strong capital position, at quarter end shareholders' equity, excluding AOCI increased 23% to $7.5 billion. We continue to have more than $1.5 billion of excess equity capital, which we expect will contribute to our growth and ratings improvement overtime.

Turning to our capital ratios, at quarter end, our Bermuda estimated RBC ratio was strong at 545% and our U.S. estimated RBC ratio was also very strong at 478%. Both figures well above our 400% threshold. So to wrap up on third quarter results, we delivered very strong operating and financial results.

Turning to our outlook for the remainder of the year it remains much the same as on our last call, the details of which you can find on page 11 of our presentation. Let me move to the topic of share lockups.

We have successfully created liquidity for our pre-IPO shareholders through our IPO, two follow on offerings as well as our lockup release event increasing our public float by approximately 65 million shares in the past year. On page 21 of our presentation you’ll find some details on upcoming share releases.

As part of our previously announced early release program approximately 3.7 million shares will be released from lockup on November 10th and December 1st respectively. On December 8th we have approximately 25 million shares coming of lockup all of which are currently held by AAA.

Based on our estimation approximately half of these shares are held by what could be considered affiliates of Athene and therefore would be subject to volume limitations when selling shares. The remaining shares will be distributed to roughly 1,500 remaining shareholders of AAA.

Based on the ability of the market to absorb past share releases and having received no further indication of selling demand from our largest pre-IPO investors we have no current plans for a follow on offering before December 8.

On March 3, 2018 we have approximately 47.5 million shares coming off of lockup, of which approximately 25 million shares are held by AAA and the remainder by officers, directors and employees of Athene and Apollo.

We will continue to assess prudent courses of action to facilitate the orderly release of these shares based on market conditions, volume and share trading, investor sentiment and other considerations. I’ll spend a few moments now discussing Athene’s current tax structure and potential impacts of the Tax Reform Bill proposed by the House last week.

Today Athene has an effective income tax rate of 6% to 7%, reflecting the current U.S. corporate tax rate of 35% on roughly 20% of onshore income. Athene also currently pays an excise tax and all reinsurance from our U.S.

subsidiaries for our Bermuda Reinsurer, Athene Life Reinsurance calculated as 1% times the sum of premiums plus net investment income less reserve increases. This excise tax is reflected in other liability costs in our income statement and in 2017 is expected to be approximately $50 million.

While excise tax is structured very differently than income tax if excise taxes were converted to a rate on pre-tax income it would add approximately 4 to 5 points to our tax rate. As such our overall tax rate is approximately 10% to 12% when including both income and excise taxes.

Let me provide an example describing the potential maximum impact of the proposed provision 4303 realizing the actual bill is likely to be less -- the actual impact of the bill is likely to be less, perhaps a lot less.

If the House bill were to pass in its current form we could pay a punitive excise tax of as much as 20% on any affiliate reinsurance to Bermuda. From what we understand at this time we estimate that this would lead to an additional annual expense of approximately $50 million to $60 million using 2017 estimates.

Athene’s overall tax rate would move up to 15% to 17%, but not 20% as some earnings would not be impacted. This example excludes potential one-time impacts related to the adoption of the new bill, which will depend on the specifics of the ultimate bill.

Note that if the existing reinsurance agreements were to the grandfathered, Athene's current overall tax rate of 10% to 12% would gradually migrate to 15% to 17% over the next 10 plus years. As Jim mentioned, we expect changes to the house build as it gets debated in Congress given the extensive nature of the proposals.

In summary, we continue to execute our straightforward business model and build out our efficient and scalable operating platform. We believe our strong financial position and multiple growth opportunities combined with our track record of execution will continue to create significant value for our shareholders over the long-term.

We're excited about our prospects and look forward to updating you on our progress..

Paige Hart

Thanks, Marty. We will now begin the question-and-answer portion of our call. We ask that you please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up, then requeue for additional questions. Operator, we will now open up the questions..

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Erik Bass of Autonomous Research. Please go ahead..

Erik Bass

Hi, thank you. Just wanted to follow-up on some of the tax comments and make sure I understand 4 to 5 point impact. I guess is it correct that that does not retrospect or I'm sorry it does assume retrospective adoption. And I guess maybe start there..

Martin Klein

Sure Erik. So in our example, we've kind of assumed as we would go from what is now overall 10% to 12% that we would move to 15% to 17%. I think with respect to grandfathering I would say that the provision as currently proposed is not particularly clear cut on whether that would be grandfathered or not.

So I guess I’d say that the tax bill was supposed to being to go into effect in 2019. So if nothing were grandfathered we'd move from our current 10% to 12% rate to 15% to 17% pretty quickly.

If existing business is grandfathered, then we'd expect as I said our current rate of 10% to 12% would kind of gradually move up to that higher zip code over say 10-12 years or so..

Erik Bass

Got it.

And obviously details are a bit scant at this point, but are there potential structural work around as you could consider that would reduce this hit?.

Martin Klein

Yes, I would say that as I said on the remarks, getting to that ultimate 15% to 17% rate assumes that nothing changes in the bill. It also assumes we don't do anything.

As you might imagine, we've spent a lot of time with the bill reviewing it thinking about things that we might do differently and could do differently to optimize value for our shareholders. But obviously the bill is still in flux so it could change probably. I would expect it would change a bit over time especially as it goes over to the Senate.

And then the other thing I'd say is while we have a lot of ideas on it we don't really want to get into right now as we think it's pretty premature..

Erik Bass

Got it.

And then just a final question, does the uncertainty on tax preclude you from considering larger M&A opportunities at this point?.

William Wheeler

Eric, hi, it's Bill Wheeler. I think the short answer is no. It may influence how we structure the deal in terms of doing the acquisition. But I don't think this is going to preclude us..

Erik Bass

Okay, thank you..

Operator

Our next question comes from Sean Dargan of Wells Fargo. Please go ahead..

Sean Dargan

Hi, thank you. And I have another question about tax, just your existing excise tax, Marty, I think, you said it was levied against premium.

But GAAP accounting obviously is different for annuities, should we understand that mean it's levied against deposits?.

Martin Klein

Yes, we're using GAAP lingo that's right. It’s kind of in a statutory construct, which is really the excise tax applies to items on a statutory basis as opposed to GAAP. So that's right it really basically deposits, which is basically pretty much all of our business. So $100 deposit as example is taxed 1% on the way in.

The investment income over let's say to five year annuity. The investment income on that is taxed at 1% each year. We get a deduction for the increase in reserve on the interest credited. So for earnings say 4.5% and crediting the 2.5% we get a deduction for the 2.5% reserve increase.

And then when the policy matures or rolls off the books on the reserve lift off we pay 1%. So it’s atax on incoming deposits and investment income and with a credit against reserve increases and then pay tax when the business rolls off. And this is the difference between the current excise tax framework and what might be adopted under 4303.

Expenses under the current framework as you might have noticed aren’t a deduction, right, it’s just all deposits and investment income and interest credited, there is no deduction for expenses. That would be different as we understand it in 4303 where you get a deduction for expenses..

Sean Dargan

Okay, thanks. And then I guess to follow-up on the M&A question.

So, if you were to structure a deal as a reentrance transaction in theory you could do that directly from the Bermuda reinsurance and not be subject to this new tax, is that correct?.

William Wheeler

That’s right. Again it will really -- it like everything the tax -- the new tax rules will make some structures more attractive than others and some less viable..

Sean Dargan

Thank you..

Operator

Our next question comes from Tom Gallagher of Evercore ISI. Please go ahead..

Tom Gallagher

So the potential 4 to 5 point increase in the tax rate, does that going to change how you price your retail business at this point or do you have enough excess ROE that’s not as big of an issue? And also does this change anything else temporarily will this change your strategy at all in terms of are you going to start writing funding agreements at Bermuda or writing more reinsurance for instance any commentary you can give us kind of temporally how you pivot?.

William Wheeler

Well so, just taking the house bill literally right, which is probably a mistake because it’s undoubtedly going to change. We would -- we absolutely when that bill becomes law which for the house bill says it won’t be till 2019. We would definitely factor in whatever the right tax rate is for the pricing of our products and adjust pricing accordingly.

Now could be our return targets will change a little bit it all depends on what the competitive environment looks like in 2019. So, we might do that. With regard to shifting how we issue funding agreements, yes you are absolutely right, I think there is an opportunity to issue those directly out of Bermuda and we may choose to do that.

That might make sense, again it will really depend well we have plenty of time between now and then to decide and we’ll just have to see what the ultimate rule is..

Martin Klein

I would just add Tom, that if you think about our pricing in organic business which is mid-teens, a 15% target, if we didn’t change anything and you put the tax in it, might go to little over 14%, 14.25%. So it’s not like a massive game changer in that regard. So, we’d have to think about, to best adapt as Bill said..

Tom Gallagher

Got you.

And then just follow-up kind of question on outlook on cost of crediting, I know you still have considerable flexibility there, but does the competitive environment right now make that more of a challenge, can you talk a little bit about what your plan on doing there?.

William Wheeler

Well. So, to cost of crediting right, mega sales are very competitive and there is just not much juice because of new interest rate environment.

On in-force blocks we are -- I think we have been pretty conservative about how we’ve repriced business as it’s come up for renewal and obviously that’s helped us slightly lower our cost of crediting over the past year. You’d see the -- you would expect in this interest rate environment cost of crediting would be ticking down a little bit and it is.

And so -- and I don’t think that’s to what we are doing obviously our laps rates are still frankly below our assumptions. So, we feel good about that..

Tom Gallagher

Okay, thanks..

Martin Klein

I’d just quickly, we adjusted our lapse rate last year to true them up to our experience last year. So it’s about in line now, experience laps rate have been very low..

Tom Gallagher

Thanks..

Operator

Our next question comes from Alex Scott of Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead..

Alex Scott

Hi. I guess, I just wanted to ask a question on the alternatives in your plan to increase of some of that with the committed capital.

Will that happen regardless of whether you’re able to get deal done?.

James Belardi Co-Founder, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & Chief Investment Officer

Absolutely, go ahead, sorry..

Alex Scott

And then maybe just to follow-up on prepayments on underlying collaterals some of the structured securities.

Could you just characterize how much of a tailwind that’s been in the last few quarters I guess, as prepayments have come in greater on RMBS? And where your expectation would be for that going forward?.

Martin Klein

Yes, it’s Marty. I would say that prepayments on our RMBS portfolio, they move around a bit, we don’t typically call them out, because it’s sort of a normal course of our business. We don’t really call it out unless it’s a very, very big move. But, there is a little bit of variability that we have quarter-to-quarter.

I’d say it’s a little bit of a very modest headwind in the third quarter, probably little bit of a tailwind in the second quarter.

I’m talking about something probably an order magnitude $10 million or less with respect to pre-tax income and that might have helped us a little bit in the prior quarter and maybe it worked as a little bit of a headwind went the other way in the third quarter. We don’t typically call it out unless it’s much more significant.

We called out some bond call stuff, I think the first part of last year that was very significant but otherwise it’s a few million bucks give or take, we don’t usually call it out..

Alex Scott

Okay, thanks..

Operator

Our next question comes from Suneet Kamath of Citi. Please go ahead..

Suneet Kamath

Thanks. Good morning.

Just to follow-up on that excise tax of 1%, is that paid upfront or is that paid overtime?.

Martin Klein

Hey, Suneet, it’s Marty. So, on our business affected by the affiliate reinsurance, which is basically by and large our retail business, so I would note that funding agreements are not included in that. It’s sort of 1% up from when the deposits comes in less reserves.

So you pay 1% on that and then during the life of the product we pay 1% on the investment income, less 1% on the interest credited for the reserves. And we get a 1% tax on the reserves that lift off when the product matures, so it’s 1% g tax that is mostly backloaded on a product level, but smooths out over time.

Now the way we do it is we look at all the business in aggregate under the reinsurance that settle up between our U.S. affiliates and Bermuda and settle it up, on a periodic basis during the year in aggregate not contract-by-contract. But that’s sort of how it works, if you thought about it by contract..

Suneet Kamath

Okay, got it.

And then just on the excess capital, would purchasing another asset originator be a potential use of that excess capital or are you only looking at buying insurance liabilities?.

James Belardi Co-Founder, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & Chief Investment Officer

No, look in my comments, I think, I’ve been consistent in the past as well as currently, we’re actively looking at asset originators and spaces that we think make sense. And particularly where we can buy the entity cheaper than we can buy the underlying assets. We’ve had a great experience with AmeriHome and MidCap.

So, yes that Apollo is helping us with that as well, so we’re canvassing the landscape. But yes sure, that could use up some of the excess capital as well..

Martin Klein

I would just add to Suneet to Jim’s comments that the way that would work is we wouldn’t really probably buy one out right and consolidate on to our financials, but we might take a piece of it. So, that would benefit our -- obviously our investment income as an increase in alternatives.

And then because it would be typically an alternative, we have an increase in our capital requirements. And so that’s how we would use excess capital..

Suneet Kamath

Got it. Okay. And then maybe one last one just for Marty, the other liability costs it is a little bit noisy this quarter with some of the adjustments.

But can you give us a sense of maybe how much you benefitted from the strong equity markets in the quarter through that line?.

Martin Klein

Yes, we’ve talked about this Suneet in some other quarters, year-over-year it actually didn’t have much of an impacts.

So we didn’t really call it out in comparing versus third quarter of 2016, but what happened and again we’ve talked about this in the last couple of quarters, is when we have a very good equity markets, which we had again in the third quarter, I think the S&P was up about 4%.

What happens in our other liability costs is that more and more of the rider benefits that we have are ultimately in our projections are going to be funded by account values because the account values have ended up going up more than we would have estimated because of the higher increases in the stock market, so their index credits go up.

And so when that happens and more of the rider benefits are funded by policyholders’ account values that means the increase in our rider reserve, which is meant to fund those benefits doesn’t have to be as high. So that does create some volatility in our other liability costs line.

Again where the stock market up 4% this quarter that benefited us quite a lot, but we actually saw that benefit to a large extent in the third quarter of about a year ago. So the delta or difference between the two was not high.

I’d say for the quarter that added -- that would just stay in the range of $30 million to $40 million pre-tax of operating income, that phenomenon. Again we probably saw the same thing in the prior quarters, but to a somewhat little bit lesser extent, when I say the prior quarters, I mean, second quarter of this year and first quarter of this year..

Suneet Kamath

Got it, okay that’s helpful. Thanks..

Operator

Our next question comes from the Mark Hughes of SunTrust. Please go ahead..

Mark Hughes

Yes, thank you.

Did you give an indication, what’s the magnitude of the increase in the alternatives portfolio would be if you follow through with these commitments?.

James Belardi Co-Founder, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer & Chief Investment Officer

I think, we have said and still plan to increase the percentage of invested assets from the current 5% up a point or two, as the fundings occur.

So I think we’d like to get it into the 7% range without anything any other extraordinary growth on the current organic growth prospects, so I think that would be a reasonable assumption over a short to medium term..

Mark Hughes

And then you gave us the good early success in the fourth quarter in the PRT market, how does the fixed indexed annuity market look so far in the fourth quarter in terms of new sales?.

William Wheeler

I think consistent with what we have had this year, not weak but not strong, no, not blowing out of the door either, it remains I think a pretty competitive environment and so, so far so good..

Mark Hughes

And you had mentioned the momentum building in the PRT channel and I think you have got some new staff there.

Any kind of transition in the marketplace or are you just making your presence felt and seeing more of these opportunities?.

William Wheeler

Well we have been sort of -- the transition has really been the last year, right. We have been participating in the market and bidding on deals and establishing our administrative partner and I think intermediaries and plant sponsors and now I think gaining confidence in us.

We implemented our first deal, which we sold in the second quarter, that’s now been fully implemented. We did our first check mailing a number of weeks ago went well. So I think it’s -- the market is gaining confidence in us and we’re -- and I think the proof of that obviously is winning this next billion.

So we’re -- I think, we’re building momentum here, this is going to end up being I think an important business for our Athene going forward, because it’s a good market, right, it’s not small and that so we have high expectations..

Mark Hughes

Thank you..

Operator

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Paige Hart for any closing remarks..

Paige Hart

That completes our review this morning. On behalf of everyone at Athene, thank you for your time and consideration. And we look forward to our next update..

Operator

at Wed Nov 8 09:00:00 2017 ].

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