Great-West Lifeco Inc. to Cut its Way to Greater Profits

Great-West Lifeco Inc. (TSX:GWO) is cutting 1,500 jobs in an effort to get more competitive. Is this a “buy” signal?

| More on:

Great-West Lifeco Inc. (TSX:GWO)(NYSE:GWO) announced April 25 that it’s cutting 1,500 jobs across Canada over the next two years in a move to reduce overhead and transform its Canadian operations.

Shareholders will applaud the move given the competitive nature of the financial services industry here in Canada. Lean and mean gets investors excited—it expects annual pre-tax savings of $200 million by 2019—but that doesn’t necessarily make it the right move in the long run.

Here’s why.

Great-West Life, which some in the industry have given to calling “Great Waste of Life,” is eager to transform itself into a bastion of competitiveness both in Canada and in other markets where it participates.

“Late last year we began the journey to evolve our Canadian business into a more agile and innovative organization, better equipped to respond to and anticipate the changing needs of our customers,” said Paul Mahon, President and Chief Executive Officer of Great-West Lifeco. “To ensure we remain competitive and drive future growth, we are reducing costs and becoming more efficient, while at the same time investing more in customer-focused innovations and service offerings.”

Great-West’s CEO is saying the company doesn’t have the right technology in place to compete with global insurers. Whether it be those in Canada—Sun Life Financial Inc. (TSX:SLF)(NYSE:SLF) and Manulife Financial Corp. (TSX:MFC)(NYSE:MFC) come to mind—or in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Therefore, to pay for this technology, 1,500 people must go over the next 24 months. It’s another example of the unintended consequences of technology.

“Social conflicts in the next three decades will have an impact on all sorts of industries and walks of life,” Jack Ma, CEO and founder of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. (NYSE:BABA) recently said at an entrepreneurial conference in China discussing how automation could be both a blessing and a curse for humans. ”Only in this way [doing tasks humans can’t do] can we have the opportunities to keep machines as working partners with humans, rather than as replacements.”

Back in November, Great-West Life realigned from three product-centric business units into two customer-centric business units (Group and Individual) integrating wealth management into both instead of operating in a separate silo.

With greater use of technology, Mahon is betting the company will not only provide a better customer experience, but it will do so at a fraction of the cost. That’s the theory, anyway.

In 2016, Great-West Life’s Canadian unit had net income of $1.4 billion on $17.3 billion in revenue; Sun Life’s Canadian unit had $936.0 million in net income on $12.2 billion in revenue, and Manulife’s Canadian unit had $1.5 billion in net income on $12.7 billion in revenue.

I’m focusing on the Canadian business of each insurer because that’s the part of Great-West Life’s business affected by the job cuts. Sun Life’s asset management business is separate from its Canadian results. Assuming Canada accounts for 50% of Sun Life Asset Management’s 2016 results, which adds $364.5 million in net income and $2.0 billion in revenue to Sun Life’s Canadian unit giving it $1.3 billion in net income on $14.2 billion in revenue.

Manulife has the best net margin of all three insurers at 11.8%, Sun Life is second at 9.2%, and Great-West Life is third at 8.1%.

If Great-West Life can save $117 million annually on an after-tax basis, its net margin on its Canadian business jumps to 8.8% and within spitting distance of Sun Life, and that doesn’t take into account the revenue gains from new technological innovations introduced at its Canadian operations over the next two years.

Is this a buy signal?

You’ve heard the saying, “The best-laid plans of mice and men?” Adapted from a poem by Robert Burns, the Scotsman might well have been speaking about these types of transformations. Spelling them out is one thing, executing on them is another.

If it were up to me, I’d hedge my bets and buy Power Corporation instead. That way you can enjoy owning a piece of the holding companies’ other excellent investments.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Will Ashworth has no position in any stocks mentioned.

More on Investing

stock data
Dividend Stocks

3 Top Dividend Stocks to Buy in May

These three dividend stocks are ideal buys this month, given their stable cash flows, healthy growth prospects, and high yields.

Read more »

edit Businessman using calculator next to laptop
Tech Stocks

OpenText Stock Down 14.8% After Earnings: What Investors Need to Know

Meeting earnings expectations wasn't enough to sustain OpenText (TSX:OTEX) stock price. There's something more for investors to digest.

Read more »

Target. Stand out from the crowd
Bank Stocks

This Under-the-Radar Canadian Stock Rose 244% in 4 Years

There are few financial stocks doing better than EQB Inc (TSX:EQB).

Read more »

analyze data
Dividend Stocks

How Much Cash Do You Need to Invest to Make $5,000 a Year?

Want to earn an extra $5,000 per year in passive income? Here's how much cash you might need to put…

Read more »

edit Sale sign, value, discount
Dividend Stocks

These 3 Dividend Stocks (With Great Yields) Are on Sale Now

These dividend stocks appear to be cheap and offer safe and growing dividend income.

Read more »

money cash dividends
Stocks for Beginners

TD Stock’s Dividend Yield Hits Over 5%: Is it Finally Time to Buy?

TD stock (TSX:TD) saw shares fall further after announcing a probe was underway in the US to identify money laundering…

Read more »

Nuclear power station cooling tower
Energy Stocks

TSX Energy Sector: Uranium Stocks vs. Natural Gas?

Even though the demand for fossil fuels (including natural gas) is expected to slack, the timeline is in decades. Meanwhile,…

Read more »

Early retirement handwritten in a note
Dividend Stocks

The Early Retirement Roadmap: Claiming CPP at 60 — Yes or No?

Deciding on claiming CPP at 60 doesn’t need a roadmap but requires meticulous planning and setting up of multiple income…

Read more »