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Manulife Financial Corp profit slides 62% as energy investments take a hit: ‘A disappointing year’

Oil and gas investment losses hurt Manulife Financial's fourth quarter profit.

TORONTO – Energy exposure hit the bottom line of Manulife Financial Corp. in the fourth quarter, causing the shares to slip up to 12 percent in Thursday trading despite a nine per cent hike in the dividend.

Quarterly net earnings missed analyst estimates and included a $361 million charge on “investment-related experience” – using the bulk of that because of gas and oil holdings.

“For the 3rd time in 2015, Manulife incurred significant investment losses associated with its energy investments,” Barclays Capital analyst John Aiken wrote in a note to clients.

“The ongoing uncertainty in oil and the broader macro outlook has management concerned,” he wrote, adding that chief executive Don Guloien and his management team are “backing away” from a $4 billion core earnings target for 2016.

Guloien told analysts on the business call that “this was a disappointing year in terms of net income, largely due to sharp mark-to-market declines in gas and oil prices, diminishing a normally great year.”

FP0211_Manulife

However, he indicated that confidence in the insurance giant’s capital levels and earnings growth momentum, aside from the investment-related issues, caused Manulife to raise its quarterly dividend to 18.5 cents from 17 cents.

Guloien noted that insurance sales were up 24 per cent in fiscal 2015, with Asia contributing to an even larger increase in new business value.

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