SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
__________________
FORM 8-K
CURRENT REPORT
Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of Report: December 6, 2007
(Date of earliest event reported)
PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL GROUP, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
Delaware |
1-16725 |
42-1520346 |
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation) |
(Commission file number) |
(I.R.S. Employer Identification Number) |
711 High Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50392
(Address of principal executive offices)
(515) 247-5111
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:
[ ] |
Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425) |
[ ] |
Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12) |
[ ] |
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b)) |
[ ] |
Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c)) |
__________________
Item 2.02 Results of Operations and Financial Condition.
The slide presentations attached hereto as Exhibits 99.1 and 99.2, and incorporated herein by reference, will be presented at Principal Financial Group, Inc.’s Investor Day Conference on December 6, 2007 and may be used by the Company in various other presentations to investors. The slide presentations are furnished and not filed pursuant to instruction B.2 of Form 8-K.
Item 7.01 |
Regulation FD Disclosure |
The slide presentations attached hereto as Exhibits 99.1 and 99.2, and incorporated herein by reference, will be presented at Principal Financial Group, Inc.’s Investor Day Conference on December 6, 2007 and may be used by the Company in various other presentations to investors. The slide presentations are furnished and not filed pursuant to Instruction B.2 of Form 8-K.
Item 9.01 |
Financial Statements and Exhibits |
Exhibit 99.1 |
Slide presentations presented at Principal Financial Group, Inc.’s Investor Day Conference on December 6, 2007. The slide presentations are furnished and not filed pursuant to Instruction B.2 of Form 8-K. |
Exhibit 99.2 |
Additional slide concerning 2008 guidance presented at Principal Financial Group, Inc.’s Investor Day Conference on December 6, 2007. The slide is furnished and not filed pursuant to Instruction B.2 of Form 8-K. |
SIGNATURE
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
|
PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL GROUP, INC. |
|
By: |
/s/ Tom Graf____________________ |
|
Name: |
Tom Graf |
|
Title: |
Senior Vice President – Investor Relations |
Date: |
December 6, 2007 |
EXHIBIT INDEX
EXHIBIT
NUMBER_____________________________EXHIBIT________________________________
|
99.1 |
Slide presentations presented at Principal Financial Group, Inc.’s Investor Day |
Conference on December 6, 2007
|
99.2 |
Additional slide concerning 2008 guidance presented at Principal Financial Group, Inc.’s Investor Day Conference on December 6, 2007 |
Investor Day
Principal Financial Group, Inc.
December 6, 2007
Exhibit 99.1 Page 1 of 130
Tom Graf
Senior Vice President & Investor Relations Officer
Use of Non-GAAP Financial Measures
A non-GAAP financial measure is a numerical measure of performance, financial position, or
cash flows that includes adjustments from a comparable financial measure presented in
accordance
with U.S. GAAP.
The company uses a number of non-GAAP financial measures that management believes
are useful to investors because they illustrate the performance of the companys normal,
ongoing operations
which is important in understanding and evaluating the companys
financial condition and results of operations. While
such measures are also consistent with
measures utilized by investors to evaluate performance, they are not a substitute for U.S.
GAAP financial measures. Therefore, in the back of the handouts, the company has
provided reconciliations
of the non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly
comparable U.S. GAAP financial measure. The company adjusts U.S. GAAP financial
measures for items not directly related to ongoing operations. However, it is possible that
these adjusting items have occurred in the past and could recur in the future. Management
also uses non-GAAP financial measures for goal setting, to determine employee and senior
management awards and compensation, and to evaluate performance
on a basis
comparable to that used by investors and securities analysts.
The company also uses a variety of other measures not considered to be non-GAAP
financial measures. These are operational measures and do not have U.S. GAAP
counterparts. Assets
under management is an example of an operational measure.
Forward Looking Statements
Certain statements made by the company which are not historical facts may be considered
forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, statements as to sales targets, sales
and
earnings trends, and managements beliefs, expectations, goals and opinions. The
company does not undertake to update these statements, which are based on a number of
assumptions concerning future conditions that may ultimately prove
to be inaccurate. Future
events and their effects on the company may not be those anticipated, and actual results may
differ materially from the results anticipated in these forward-looking statements.
The risks, uncertainties and factors that could cause or contribute to such material differences
are discussed in the companys Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 2006 and in the companys quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended
September 30, 2007, filed by the company with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
These risks and uncertainties
include, without limitation: competitive factors; volatility of
financial markets; decrease in ratings; interest rate changes; inability to attract and retain
sales representatives; international business risks; foreign currency exchange rate
fluctuations;
a pandemic, terrorist attack or other catastrophic event; default of the company's
re-insurers; and investment portfolio risks.
Agenda
Noon
11:55 am
11:40 am
11:25 am
11:10 am
11:00 am
10:30 am
10:15 am
10:00 am
9:30 am
9:15 am
8:45 am
8:20 am
8:00 am
Time
Julia Lawler
Investments
BREAK
BREAK
Norman Sorensen
Principal International
Mary OKeefe
Lunch Presentation
Building a World Class Brand
J. Barry Griswell
Closing Remarks
PANEL
Q&A
Mike Gersie
Capital Management; ERM
PANEL
Q&A
Jim McCaughan
Global Asset Management
Dan Houston
U.S. Asset Accumulation
PANEL
Q&A
Larry Zimpleman
Trends, Strengths & Execution
J. Barry Griswell
Strategy Overview
Presenter
Topic
J. Barry Griswell
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Strategy Overview
Why Invest in The Principal?
Additional ROE improvement
Further P/E
multiple expansion
Substantial and increasing
free cash flow
Continued outstanding
EPS growth
Promises made, promises kept.
Overarching Themes
Marketplace trends create meaningful growth opportunities
Strengths at work to capitalize on trends:
Industry leadership;
Expertise developing needs-based solutions; and
Ability to build long-term customer and advisor relationships
Highly effective execution drives exceptional financial
performance
Execution Drives Strong Results
16%
+120
bps
42%
19%
-2.6%
16%
Change
$54.28
15.1%
$215
$2.60
277
$720
9 months
06
$24.00
8.9%
$98
$1.59
362
$577
01
$63.09
16.3%
$306
$3.09
270
$833
9 months
07
+640
bps
15.3%
ROE***
20%
$58.70
Ending Share
Price
21%
$257
AUM ($B)*
17%
$3.53
EPS**
-5%
276
Wtd. Avg.
Shares (M)**
11%
$972
Operating
Earnings* ($M)
CAGR
(01-06)
06
Note: data in tables throughout presentation have generally been rounded. Calculations based on un-rounded
financial supplement data.
*Excludes discontinued operations
**Diluted
***Operating return on average equity excluding other comprehensive income, based on trailing 12 month period
Execution drives results:
Asset Management/Accumulation
Growth Engine
24%
$569
$296
6 business total
13%
$972
$668
Total company
$35
$36
$225
03 OE ($M)
27%
$72
Principal International
42%
$103
Principal Global Investors
20%
$394
U.S. accumulation businesses*
CAGR
(03-06)
06 OE ($M)
*Full service accumulation, Principal Funds, Individual Annuities and Bank combined
Execution drives results:
Asset Management/Accumulation
Growth Engine
21%
$257
$144
Total company (AUM)*
37%
35%
25%
CAGR
(03-06)
$8
$24
$69
03 AUM or
AV ($B)
$19
$59
$137
06 AUM or
AV ($B)
Principal International (AUM)
Principal Global Investors*
(3rd party AUM)
U.S. accumulation businesses* (AV)
Assets under management (AUM) or
Account values (AV)
*Total includes $28 billion of assets under management acquired with the WM Advisors transaction, which
closed effective December 31, 2006. Approximately $23 billion are included in
the 2006 U.S. accumulation
businesses account values, approximately $5 billion in Principal Global Investors 3rd
party AUM.
1879: A Solid, but Simple Beginning
There must be a better,
less expensive way for
honest employees who
want assured protection
for their families
Edward A. Temple
Growth by Evolution/128 Years of Success
1879
1911
1936
1941
1968
1990
1998
1999
2001
1970s
2002
2004
Life
Assoc
Mutual
Life
Company
Mortgage
Banking/
Commercial
Mortgages
Group
Health/
Pension
Mutual
Funds
Defined
Contribution
Principal
International
Principal
Bank /
Mutual Holding
Company
Principal
Global
Investors
BCI
Acquisition/
TRS* strategy
125th
Anniversary
1985
WM
Advisors,
Inc.
acquisition
2006
Principal
Financial
Group
*Total Retirement SuiteSM
Broadening of the
retirement system
Opening of global markets
Easing of regulatory restrictions
Rise of the consumer
Era of Personal Responsibility
Expansion of
individual savings
Employee
One-stop shopping
Save/invest for retirement
Personal investment solutions
Security and health in old age
Protection for families
Global demand
Transparency
1879
1941
1968
1970
1990
1999
2001
2006
Simplification
Evolving to Meet Market Needs
Keys to Success Today
New product education, needs analysis tools and point of
sale expertise
Financial
advisors
Assets appropriate for retirement and other long-term
investing strategies, and consistently strong investment
performance
Institutions
Help developing and executing a tailored financial plan and
getting the most out of employee benefits offerings
Employees
and other
individuals
Help understanding complex employee benefit rules and
building cost-effective benefit programs to attract and retain
employees
SMBs,
business
owners
Changing Landscape Creates Opportunity
Rising benefit
costs and
global
competition;
Resource-
constrained
HR
departments
Aging
population and
increased life
expectancies
Trend
Squeezed benefits
budgets
Shift of cost and
decision-making
responsibility for
financial security to
employees
U.S. government
benefit programs under
pressure/Pension
Protection Act
International
government benefit
programs under
pressure/privatization of
retirement
systems/pension reform
Impact
Bundled solutions
Voluntary benefits
High deductible health plans
Workplace financial guidance
LifeCycle funds
Health savings accounts
To meet demands of continued shift
to defined contribution
To meet increasing demand for
retirement income management
solutions
To leverage U.S. expertise in high-
potential markets in Asia and Latin
America
Opportunity
Our Strategy
Deepen SMB market penetration
Deliver complete retirement solutions within
comprehensive
employee benefits package
Expand multi-channel distribution footprint
Capitalize on global asset management expertise
Leverage retirement leadership/expertise in select
international markets
Extend retirement leadership to capture retail rollover
opportunities
Maximize capital structure and usage
What Will Define The Principal Long-Term?
Power of Purpose and Focus
Delivering on our promises to shareholders, employees
and customers
Retirement market leader in the U.S. and select international
markets
Top tier global asset manager
Leading provider of retirement and other employee benefit
solutions
Best in class do it for me solutions for individuals
Expert in worksite financial planning
Products and supporting services to independent
channels/advisors
Technological and operational savvy to meet customers needs
World-class brand
Premier employer
Larry Zimpleman
President and Chief Operating Officer
Trends, Strengths & Execution
Targeting Strong Long-Term Growth
(1) Actual quarterly and annual results may fall outside the average annual range. Longer-term growth
expectations should be applied to normalized results.
(2) Operating return on average equity excluding accumulated other comprehensive income, calculated
over the trailing twelve month period.
EPS (1)
11% - 13%
average annual
growth
50 bps average
annual improvement
ROE (2)
Key Drivers of Long-Term Growth
Trends
create
opportunity
1
Strengths to
capitalize on
trends
Execution
drives
results
2
3
Trends create opportunity:
Baby Boomer Demand
Source: Growing Up Digital: The Rise of the Net Generation
Don Tapscott, McGraw-Hill, 1997
Live Births
5
42
19
22
40
14
22
36
0
25
50
75
100
1974
2030E
Income from Personal Assets
(i.e. IRAs, 401(k) plans)
Wages in Retirement
Federal Income (i.e.
Social Security)
Private Pension Plans
(i.e. Defined Benefit
Plans)
Source: EBRI and Cerulli Associates
Trends create opportunity:
Era of Personal
Responsibility
Sources of Retirement Income
44%
76%
Trends create opportunity:
Trusted Advisor in Increasingly
Complex World
Pension Protection Act of 2006
Global Pension Reform
Technology/Privacy
Corporate Owned Life Insurance
American Jobs Creation Act
Estate tax planning
Healthcare Reform
Existing strengths:
Capabilities Align with Market
Needs
Baby Boomer
Needs
Personal
Responsibility
Increasing
Complexity & Risk
Retirement leadership
Top tier asset manager
Global presence
Retail capabilities
Do-it-For-Me solutions
Worksite benefits counseling
Advisor-based distribution
SMB leadership
Bundled offerings
Comprehensive business solutions
Existing strengths:
Deep SMB Market Penetration
U.S. Market Penetration for The Principal
125,000 SMB customers worldwide
Existing
strengths:
Broad,
Needs-Based Solutions
Group and individual life
Group medical,
wellness
and disease management
Group dental and vision
Group and
individual
disability income
insurance
Personal
Retirement
Accounts
Defined Benefit plans
Traditional, Roth
and
Rollover IRAs
LifeCycle Funds
Income annuities
Stable value
401(k), 403(b)
and
Employee Stock
Ownership plans
Principal Funds
Variable and
fixed
deferred annuities
U.S. and
International
Equities, Real Estate and
Fixed Income
Risk
Protection
Retirement
Income
Management
Asset
Accumulation
Existing strengths:
Bundled Approach Employers Value
Integrated services
on a
single platform:
Plan design
Compliance
Investments
Employee education
Cost savings
Efficiency and time savings
Improved plan
sponsor
services
Improved
participant
services
Greater accountability
Existing
strengths:
A
Multichannel Approach
Via employers
Independent
Alliance-related
sales up $1.3 billion,*
or
84%
*9 months ’07 compared to 9 months ‘06
Proprietary
Career
Agency
Principal
Connection
Worksite
The place to build
long-term
relationships
Financial solutions
for the
rest of us
Retirement and
voluntary
solution focused
Proactive,
face-to-face
guidance
Emerging strengths:
Excellence in Worksite Benefits Counseling
+13%
average
deferral rate
+13%
average
participation rate
Plans using our
Worksite
offerings* boast strong
increases :
*RetireSecure results as of 9/30/07.
Emerging strengths:
Build-out of Local Consulting Capability
National Network of Sales, Service and Consulting Resources 800 Strong
Sales and business development 280
Consultants* 270
Client service 250
&nbs p; 800
*Worksite benefits
counselors; education specialists; Total Retirement Suite, ESOP
and actuarial consultants; and retention and income management specialists.
25.7%
DC/DB
7.1%
DC/
NQ
37.1%
DC/DC
15% Other
23.2%
DB/DB
Execution:
Retirement
Leader Delivers Complete Solutions
#1 Bundled 401(k)
plans
(1)
#1 ESOP (2)
#1 NQ-401(k)
mirror
plans
(3)
#1 Defined Benefit (4)
#2 Fully bundled
TRO
plans
(5)
#3 Plan
termination
annuities
(6)
Sources:
(1)Spectrem
Group 2006,
(2)PlanSponsor
06/07,
(3)PlanSponsor
12/06,
(4)Investment Advisor Magazine 03/07;
(5)PlanSponsor
07/07
(6)LIMRA
09/06
In
2006,
58%
of our sales,
based on
assets, involved
more than one
type of plan:
Defined Contribution
Defined Benefit
ESOP
Non-qualified
Execution:
Insurance
& Employee Benefits Know-How
*Sources: National
Underwriter 08/07 and LIMRA International, 03/06; Life ranking based on statutory
assets, Health ranking based on premiums earned and Non-medical ranking based on
in-force
**Global Asset Management (Principal Global Investors)
Operating Earnings After Tax
9 months ended 9/30/07
U.S.
AA
59%
L&H
21%
IAMA
10%
Specialty
Benefits
38%
Health
25%
Indiv.
Life
37%
Leading Provider*:
#7 Life Insurance
#11 Health Insurance
#3 Non-medical coverage
#5 Dental
#3 Group Term Life
#4 Short-Term Disability
#6 Long-Term Disability
GAM**
10%
Execution:
Asset
Management Expertise
U.S.
institutional
World
ranking
Top Manager
Rankings
(by assets)
24
42
2006
27
23
92
71
2004
2005
*Based on U.S. institutional tax-exempt assets, as of 12/31/06, unless otherwise stated
Sources: **
Pensions & Investments
Pionline.com;
***Pensions & Investments as of June 30, 2007; ****Institutional Investor
(Fixed
Income Under Management);
*****Pensions
& Investments 2006 Databook posted Dec. 2006, data as of 12/31/05; ******Pensions
&
Investments 2007 Money Managers Directory; *******
Pensions &
Investments 2006 Databook
posted Dec. 2006,
data as of 3/31/06
Principal Global Investors AUM of $233 billionas of 9/30/07
#50*******
International/global
#25******
Emerging Markets
#28*****
Large Cap Growth
#30****
Fixed Income
#4***
U.S. Real Estate
#3**
Stable Value
2006 Rank*
Asset Category
PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL GROUP
Headquarters
Des Moines, Iowa
Mexico
Principal AFORE
Pensions
Principal
Fondos de
Inversión, S.A. de C.V (PFI)
Mutual
Funds, IAM
Chile
Principal Vida
Annuities
/
Pensions
Principal Creditos
Hipotecarios
Residential
Mortgages
Principal AGF
Mutual
Funds, IAM
Brazil
BrasilPrev
-
JV with
Banco do Brasil
Pensions,
Annuities,
IAM
India
PNB-
Principal
AMC -
JV with PNB &Vijaya
Mutual Funds, Insurance
Brokerage, IAM
Malaysia
CIMB-Principal AMC-
JV
with CIMB
Mutual
Funds, Asset
Management
Hong Kong
Principal Insurance
Company
Pensions,
Mutual Funds, IAM
China
CCB – Principal
AMC –JV with
CCB
Mutual Funds, IAM
Representative Offices
Pensions, Asset Management
Execution:
Well-positioned
for Global Growth
Principal International
AUM up 259% since year-end 2003
Top 5 market positions in Brazil, Chile, Malaysia and Mexico
Execution:
Disciplined
Capital Management
1. ORGANIC GROWTH
2.STRATEGIC
ACQUISITION
3. RETURN TO
SHAREHOLDERS
Asset Management:
WM Advisors
CCI
Post
Spectrum
Morley
Enhance capabilities:
BCI Group (ESOP)
Molloy (Wellness)
EBS (NQ)
Targeted Int’l
Expansion:
CCB Principal
Asset Management
Dao Heng
CIMB Principal
Zurich AFORE
Tepeyac AFORE
DC Consolidation:
ABN AMRO Trust
Services Company
KeyCorp
Execution
drives results…
Comparison to peers
Growth:
‘01 to ’06
Measure
up
640
bps
21%
CAGR
34%
higher than Life
& Annuities
companies,
218%
higher than the Asset
Managers**
ROE
2X
the pace of the Asset
Managers,
nearly
3X
the pace of the
Insurance Industry*
AUM
Sources: *Investment
Company Institute 2007 Factbook; Best’s Aggregates &
Averages, A.M. Best Editions
2006 & 2007; **UBS analysis, 6/30/07
Execution drives
results:
…and
Significant Share Price Appreciation
PFG Share
Price
6-YR** CAGR
20%
S&P 500
6-YR* CAGR
5.5%
*From 1,089.90 at opening on 10/23/01 to 1,506.33 at close on 10/22/07.
**From $20.50 at opening of trading following the company’s IPO on 10/23/01 to $62.50 at close on 10/22/07.
Trends Support our Approach
Drives asset
management
and accumulation
opportunities in select
international markets
Global demographics
Enables
relationship
building, expansion of retail
investor strategy
Greater access to
employees
through workplace
Increases demand
for “do-it-
for-me” solutions for
individuals
Era of personal responsibility
Benefit
PFG 2017
14 to 17%
Principal International
5 to 8%
Life and Health Segment
14 to 17%
Principal Global Investors
11 to 14%
U.S. accumulation businesses*
OE CAGR*
‘06A to
’17E
One Scenario
Key growth drivers
*Operating earnings compounded annual growth rate
**Full Service Accumulation, Principal Funds, Individual Annuities and Bank
PFG 2017
13%
- 2.5%
10%
CAGR
(’06-’17E)
EPS
Avg. Shares
Operating
Earnings
Total
company
Assumptions for one scenario:
Roughly 2% per quarter market appreciation
No major acquisitions or dispositions
No significant changes in regulatory environment
2017E
Asset management
and
accumulation approx. 85% of
total company earnings
PGI and PI
2nd
and
3rd
largest
businesses, respectively, with
combined earnings of approx.
$800 million
ROE of approx. 21%
Free cash flow up > 250%
Q&A
Break
Dan Houston
Executive
Vice President
U.S. Asset Accumulation
Execution drives
results:
Asset
Accumulation Growth Engine
$5.3
16.1
154.4
$375.2
9 mths
’07
$5.8****
$9.6
$69.4
$225.4
’03
$6.8
$13.5
$137.1
$394.2
’06
6%
12%
25%**
20%
CAGR
(’03-
’06)
10%
59%
45%
31%
change
$4.8
$10.1
$106.5
$287.0
9 mths
‘06
Sales ($B)***
Net cash flows ($B)
Account values ($B)**
Operating earnings ($M)
FSA*, Principal Funds,
Individual Annuities &
Bank combined
*Full Service Accumulation
**2006 account values
include $22.5 billion acquired with the WM Advisors transaction, which closed
effective December 31, 2006. CAGR of 18% excluding transaction.
***Sales data for FSA, Principal Funds & Individual Annuities only
****Excludes $0.8 billion of account values related to KeyCorp sponsored endorsement.
Asset accumulation
growth engine:
Tailwinds
Significantly Outweigh Headwinds
Traction with
alliance
sales strategy
New accumulation
and
payout solutions, including “in
plan income options”
Broader, deeper
distribution relationships
Job changer
phenomenon
Broader rollover
market,
including roll-ins
Pension Protection Act (PPA)
Boomer retirements
Principal
Bank
Individual
Annuities
Mutual
Funds
Full Service
Accumulation
Combined long-term earnings growth of 11 to 14%
No impact
Growth by
Evolution
Market Needs Met
Customer
Segmentation
New Product
&
Service Solutions
New
Distribution
Channels
Expansion
through
Acquisition
Driving Continued
Growth in
U.S. Asset Accumulation
SMB segmentation
drives service model
Specialized needs
of
business owners,
key execs and broad
employee base
Local enrollment
and
guidance resources
Life stage
segmentation
Personalized
planning
and long-term
relationship building:
with business owners,
employees and other
individuals
Nearing retirement
and
in retirement life stages
Yesterday
& Today
Tomorrow
Customer
Segmentation
Driving Continued
Growth in
U.S. Asset Accumulation
Yesterday
& Today
Tomorrow
New Product
&
Service Solutions
Principal
Advantage
Total Retirement
Suite
LifeCycle Funds
Retail rollover
solutions
GMWB
PPA levers –
auto
enroll, auto escalate
Benefits data
management
Retirement income
management, in
plan solutions
DC Investment Only
Driving Continued
Growth in
U.S. Asset Accumulation
Tomorrow
Yesterday
& Today
New
Distribution
Channels
Greater sales and
service specialization
Principal
Connection
retention specialists
Wirehouse &
Regional B/D
Alliances
Bank Channel
Channel
developers
& emerging market
reps
Deepen/strengthen
existing alliances
Collaborative,
flexible
retention solutions
with alliances/product
placement
opportunities
Additional asset
capture
Workplace
benefits
counseling
Driving Continued
Growth in
U.S. Asset Accumulation
Tomorrow
BCI Group
Benevation
Executive Benefit Services
Professional Pensions, Inc.
ABN AMRO
WM Advisors
Additional DC
consolidation
Moving the mutual
fund
business from top 50 to
top 25
Opportunities to
expand offerings within
Total Retirement Suite
Yesterday
& Today
Expansion
through
Acquisition
Personalized
benefits/
“do-it-for-me”
solutions
Customer
segmentation:
Meeting
New Demands from
“Era of Personal Responsibility”
Targeted educational materials
Automatic
enrollment and step-up
features
One-on-one
meetings with retirement
specialists
Balanced funds/LifeCycle funds
Age-appropriate
investment default
options
Annuity and payout options
Customer
segmentation:
Drives Strong
Customer Satisfaction
#1 in DC client
retention
(Boston
Research Group, Aug. 2007)
27 “Best in
Class” ratings,
including recognition for flexibility,
accessibility and responsiveness of
client service teams
(Chatham
Partners, Dec. 2006)
Dalbar 2007
Communication Seal of
Excellence
Total Retirement Statement
Mutual Fund Quarterly Statement
Variable Annuity Statement
Defined Contribution
Plan Participant
Statement
Defined Benefit Plan
Participant
Statement
Client loyalty
ratings*
continue to exceed
benchmarks:
94%
vs. industry
standard
92%
*Chatham Partners, Dec. 2006.
2003
2004
Total DC assets
retained by all
channels in $ Millions
%
Total Assets
retained
as a percentage of
assets at risk
$2,486
$3,005
$3,518
Job
changers
Retirees
Customer
segmentation:
…and
Outstanding Retention
$3,630
2005
2006
55%
54%
53%
54%
$3,685
$3,190
2002
52%
51%
YTD’07*
*9 months ended September 30, 2007
Distribution:
Local Sales
and Service to Meet Needs of SMBs…
March 2007
NOTE: Approximate view. Check www.principal.com for actual locations.
Co-Located Office (31)
HI
WA
OR
CA
MT
ID
WY
NV
UT
AZ
NM
CO
ND
SD
NE
KS
OK
TX
MN
IA
MO
AR
LA
MS
WI
IL
MI
IN
OH
KY
TN
AL
GA
FL
SC
NC
VA
WV
PA
NY
ME
NH
VT
MA
CT
NJ
MD
DE
Group Office (8)
Group & Retirement Office (13)
Individual Office (49)
Retirement Services Office (6)
Distribution:
…and
the Advisors who Serve them
Source: Brightwork Partners 2005 Advisor Study.
Long-Term Player
#1 = The Principal
#2 = ING
#3 = Fidelity
#4 = American Funds
#5 = MassMutual
Shelf Space
#1 = American Funds
#2 = Hancock
#3 = The Principal
#4 = Nationwide
#5 = ING
Best Overall Package
#1 = Mass Mutual
#2 = Hancock
#3 = The Principal
#4 = American Funds
#5 = ING
Distribution:
Increasing
Alliance Strategy Momentum
n/a
39%
CAGR
40%
28%
12%
As % of Total Sales*
YTD’07**
2001
2006
Alliance sales
$2.8 B
$2.1 B
$0.4 B
Assets
* Based on assets
**9 months ended 9/30/07
Wirehouses
Insurance
Producers
Regional
Broker Dealers
(B/Ds)
Planners/
Independent
B/Ds
Bank, B/Ds
and Marketers
Distribution:
Our Unique
Approach to the Workplace
What it IS:
Financial solutions
for the
“rest of us”
Needs analysis
Personalized guidance
Simplified enrollment
Planning resources
Local service
What it IS NOT:
Product pushing
by
commissioned sales people
High net worth only
Principal RetireSecureSM& Principal WorkSecureSM
Distribution/Solutions:
Personalized
solutions
Distribution:
Workplace
Guidance Improves Plan Economics
+76%
n/a
Average annual
premium per
participant
n/a
+13%
Avg Deferral rate
+48%
+13%
Participation
+100%
+46%
Close Ratio
(by contract)
With
WorkSecure*
(as of 09/30/07)
With
RetireSecure*
(as of 09/30/07)
*One-on-one benefit counseling services for retirement and protection benefits
Solutions:
Leading
Total Retirement Solutions Provider
Comprehensive
retirement plan consulting
and
administration
for all plan designs, including DB, DC, ESOP, and NQ
Benefits to Employers
Best-in-class products
Principal Connection to assist employees
Simplifies participant data management
Expanded resources to
help plan sponsors meet their
fiduciary obligations
Speeds service to employer and employee
Efficiency and time savings
Solutions:
Total
Retirement
SuiteSM
Gets Results…
343
449
183
77
Plans
58%
$3.9
2006
60%
34%
24%
% of Total Sales*
9 months
‘07
2004
2005
TRS
$4.0
$2.1
$1.3
Assets ($B)
*Based on assets
*Report as of
12/31/06. A number of significant competitors did not participate,
including Diversified, Fidelity, Paychex, T. Rowe Price and Vanguard.
Solutions:
…Driving
Full Service Accumulation Sales Leadership
Plan Category Rankings
(10 categories by employer size)
#1 in 5 categories
100-249, 250-499,
500-999,
1000-2499, and 2500-4999
employees
#2 in 3 categories
26-49, 50-99, and
5000-9999
employees
#3 in 10,000+
employees
category
#1
Total 401(k) assets
#1
Total 401 (k)
participants
#3
Total 401 (k) plans
PFG
Ranking
LIMRA 401(k)
Scorecard
Highlights*
Plan analysis & asset review
Plan design & redesign
Plan freeze & termination
DC consulting for transitions from DB to DC
Auto options
Financial advice
DB(k)
Defined
Benefit
Reform
Enhanced
Defined
Contribution
Longer-Term
Solutions:
Pension
Protection Act Opportunities
Solutions:
Comprehensive
Services to Capitalize on PPA
Our comprehensive suite :
Auto enrollment and
increase
options since 2000
Expanded education
&
guidance capabilities
DC consulting for
transitions
from DB to DC
DB plan analysis,
design,
freeze & termination
DB(k) and other innovations
+61%
Use of auto
enrollment*
+80%
Use of auto
increase*
*Increase in usage from 12/31/06 to 09/30/07
Plan Consulting Cements Employer Relationships
DC Features Encourage Savings, Accelerate Deposit Growth
Solutions:
Evolution
of Income Management
Accumulation:
IRAs
401(k)
Mutual Funds
Annuities
Life Insurance
Income:
Income annuities
Periodic withdrawals
The Principal
is
well-positioned
to turn savings
into income:
Planning
assistance
Full array of
investments
Innovative
solutions
Our Approach:
Auto
features Needs-based
Easy-to-use
Education & guidance Flexibility
Distribution and
Solutions:
WM Advisors
Acquisition
Substantial added scale
Intermediary distribution
The SAM Portfolios
–
Lifestyle segment leadership
Improved combined
product
suite
Investment professionals
5th
largest
manager of
LifeCycle
funds*
*Source: Financial Research Corporation March 2007
Distribution and
Solutions:
Defined
Contribution Investment Only (DCIO) Strategy
Principal Funds on
third party
accumulation platforms,
available through TPAs,
RIAs, record-keepers and
others
Principal LifeTime
Funds and
Strategic Asset Management
portfolios serve as
foundation, complemented by
full range of asset classes,
investment styles and
portfolio structures
DCIO sales through 9
months
of approx. $300 million
On 35 platforms,
including:
Fidelity, Merrill Lynch
Retirement, Nationwide
Investment Services,
Schwab, SunGard, and
Wachovia Retirement
Services
One Scenario:
Continued
StrongAccount
Value Growth
12/31/06
2017E
Cumulative
market
performance
12% CAGR
$350B
$200B
$175B
$100B
$175B
$125B
Cumulative
asset
accumulation
sales
Growth in FSA
recurring
deposits
FSA member
level
withdrawals
Retention of
at risk FSA
member
level assets
Normal
withdrawals
from Mutual
Funds,
Individual
Annuities and
Bank
Normal FSA
contract level
withdrawals
$215B
$137B
$475B
One Scenario
10%
$19
$6.8
Net cash flows ($B)
12%
$475
$137
Account values ($B)
12%
$1,370
$394
Operating earnings ($M)
CAGR
(’06-’17)
’17E
’06A
FSA, Principal
Funds, Individual
Annuities and Bank combined
Jim McCaughan
Chief
Executive Officer, Principal Global Investors
Global Asset Management
Asset Management Growth Engine
32%
$399
$302
15%
$435
$283
Fee revenues ($M)
$11.3
$233**
$81
9 mths
’07
$7.2
$113
$36
’03
$12.8
$191*
$103
’06
21%
19%
42%
CAGR
(’03-’06)
19%
46%
15%
change
$9.5
$160
$70
9 mths
‘06
Net cash flows ($B)
AUM ($B)
Operating earnings ($M)
Principal
Global
Investors
*Includes $22.6
billion of assets under management acquired with the WM Advisors
transaction, which closed effective December 31, 2006.
**Includes AUM
acquired with WM Advisors transaction, and $13.7 billion of AUM acquired
with the Morley Financial Services transaction, effective August 31, 2007.
Fee Strength
Eclipses Adverse
3Q07 Credit Conditions
57%
$66
$42
Fee business earnings ($M)
(48)%
$15
$29
Spread business earnings ($M)
32%
$399
$302
Fee revenues ($M)
$233
$81
9 months
’07
46%
15%
change
$160
$70*
9 months
‘06
AUM ($B)
Operating earnings ($M)
Principal Global Investors
YTD06
3Q06
1H06
$29
$9
$20
$15
$(1)
$16
YTD07
3Q07
1H07
Spread earnings
reflect transition to CMBS JV,
coupled with adverse credit conditions in 3Q07
*Rounding
In $Millions
Strong Net Cash Flows (NCF)…
…Reflect Strong Institutional Traction
New 3rdParty Mandates
78
47
TOTAL
11
4
- Relationship
Management/
Client Service
11
6
- Sales/Consultant Relations
International
27
18
- Relationship
Management/
Client Service
5
1
- Consultant Relations
24
18
- Sales
Domestic
3Q2007
1Q2006
Sales Force Build-up
Principal Global Investors at a Glance
Assets Under Management*
By Asset Class, in $ Billions
Diversified global
asset
management organization
$233 billion in
assets under
management*
1,300 employees
including
approx. 500 investment
professionals
Serving
institutional clients
in 26 countries, including 14
of the 30 largest U.S.
pension plans
*As of September 30, 2007*
Principal Global
Investors
A Manager
of Assets Appropriate for Retirement…
…and Other Long-Term Investment Strategies
Fundamental approach, appropriate risk levels
Comprehensive range of income assets
Building capabilities organically and through M&A
Global Reach
Asset Management Locations
Principal Global Investors & Principal International Affiliates
Diverse and High Value Added Capabilities
Strengthened Through Strategic Acquisitions
Large enough to have scale
small enough to have flexibility
Keys to Continued Growth in
Global Asset Management
Top-tier investment performance/assets suitable for retirement and
other long-term strategies
Talent retention
Multi-boutique strategy/managing & maximizing acquisitions
Expanding U.S. and International distribution channels
Refining products to meet client demand
Absolute returns
Separation of alpha and beta
Alternatives real estate, hedge funds, private equity
Growing demand for income producing investments
Search Competitive Investment Performance
51%
1yr
85%
3yr
84%
5yr
Retirement Assets in Top Two
Morningstar Performance
Quartiles (as of 9/30/07)
Fund manager of the year awards
include recognition for:
Japanese Equity Fund
Asia ex-Japan Equity strategy
The Principal Property Securities
Fund
Sources of awards: South China Morning Post, based on 3-year performance, March 2007;
AsianInvestor magazine, based on 5-
year risk-adjusted performance, April 2007; and IMCA/Money Management, May 2007, respectively.
and a Track Record of Maximizing Acquisitions
368%
$41.2B
$8.8B
n/a
Total
323%
$16.5B
$3.9B
2005
Columbus Circle
185%
$11.1B
$3.9B
2003
Post Advisory
1260%
$13.6B
$1.0B
2001
Spectrum
%
increase
AUM at
09/30/07
AUM
acquired
Year of
transaction
M&A
Drives Significant Growth in 3rd Party AUM
Principal Global Investors
Third Party AUM
54%
6-Year
CAGR
*Including affiliates, as of November 2007.
Principal Global Investors*
has 15 relationships of
$1 billion or more including:
California State Teachers
Retirement System
Iowa Public Employees'
Retirement System
Thrivent Financial for
Lutherans
Expanding U.S. and International Footprint
Continue targeting:
Institutional clients (entities with investable assets > $250 million)
Third party insurance (both life and P&C, general account assets
between $1-$20 billion)
Third party Separately Managed Accounts (SMA/UMA) for major
wirehouses Merrill, UBS, Morgan Stanley
Sub-advisory market (focus on 75 largest U.S. sub-advisory
purchasers)
Dublin Series enables broad offshore distribution
Distribution to institutional and sub-advisory clients in Europe,
Asia and Latin America
Product Development Leverages Expertise
Recent launches/developments
International and Global
Property Securities
Capabilities to invest in Green
Real Estate
International and Global 130/30
New credit derivatives product
company
Potential product opportunities
Volatility capabilities
Global Credit opportunity
Socially Responsible Equity
High yield commercial mortgage
Asset allocation strategies
One Scenario
14%
$1,800
$435
Fee revenues ($M)
$12.8
$59*
$103
06A
$ 45
$ 400
$475
17E
12%
19%
15%
CAGR
(06-17)
Net cash flows ($B)
Third Party AUM ($B)
Operating earnings ($M)
Principal Global Investors
*Totals include $5 billion of assets under management acquired with the WM
Advisors transaction, which closed effective December 31, 2006.
Norman Sorensen
Senior Vice President, CEO, Principal International
International Asset
Management & Accumulation
Intl Asset Management & Accumulation Growth Engine
42%
$2.3
$1.6
26%
$2.0
$1.0
Net cash flows ($B)
+110***
bps
9.9%
8.8%
+320
bps
7.8%
4.6%
ROE
$27
$85
9
mths
07
$8
$34
03
$19
$72
06
37%
28%
CAGR
(03-06)
51%**
50%*
change
$18
$57
9
mths
06
AUM ($B)
Operating earnings
($M)
Principal International
*YTD operating earnings growth of 38% on normalized basis
**AUM as of 9/30/07 up 38% from a year ago on an organic basis
***Segment ROE of 7.7% on normalized basis for the trailing twelve months ended 9/30/07
compares to 6.8% on a normalized basis for the trailing twelve months ended 9/30/06.
Retirement-centric top defined
contribution pension and
retirement countries over the next
generation
Long-term mutual funds
Institutional asset management
as employers begin to replace
government retirement programs
Large emerging markets
global shifts in population and
wealth
Business strategy
Principal International
Capitalizing on Emerging Global Growth in
Asset Management and Accumulation
Driving Continued Growth for
Principal International
Significant growth in demand for employer and personal
retirement savings
Ability to leverage strong local partner distribution
Increasing scale and brand awareness in key markets
Continued transition to fee-based businesses
Increasing Demand
for
Privately Provided Retirement Savings
1960
Population
aged 65+
Percent
1990
2020E
2050E
Source: The Future of Retirement, HSBC
Developing world
Developed world
2000
By 2050, the
world is
expected to
have 2 billion
people > the
age of 65
Leveraging Strong
Local Partner Distribution
4,500 branches,
300,000
business accounts, 35 million
individual customers
2nd
largest public
sector
commercial bank in
India
Punjab National
Bank
India
380 branches,
250,000
business customers, 4.5
million individual customers
2nd
largest financial
services provider in
Malaysia
CIMB Group
Malaysia
13,600 branches, 2.6
million
business accounts, 157
million individual customers
Third largest
commercial bank in
China
China
Construction
Bank
China
3,900 branches, 1.5
million
business accounts, 24 million
individual customers
Largest bank in
Latin
America
Banco do Brasil
Brazil
Distribution Reach*
Partner’s
Industry
Ranking
Partner
(or
Primary Partner)
Country
*Data rounded
*As of 9/30/07
**IAM – Institutional asset management
***China AUM not included in reported totals due to level of ownership in joint venture
International funds awards include:
INDIA
-- Principal Income
Fund CNBC
TV18 - CRISIL Platinum Mutual Fund
of the Year Awards 2006
MALAYSIA
-- Fund House of
the
Year, Asian Investors Award, 2006
HONG
KONG --
MPF and mutual
funds awards for Best Equity Fund
Group (3 years) from Lipper
MEXICO
-- Fund Pro
Platinum
Performance Award for outstanding
achievement International Fixed
Income Funds segment during 2006
Increasing Scale and Brand Awareness
4.7
Pension
Mexico
4.8
Mutual
Funds/IAM
Malaysia
3.8
Mutual
Funds/IAM
India
2.1
Pension/IAM
Hong Kong
5.6***
Mutual
Funds/IAM**
China
3.4
Payout
Annuities/
Mutual Funds
Chile
8.1
Pension
Brazil
AUM*
($B)
Primary
business
Country
In a relatively short period of time, Principal International has built:
Top-5 positions in most markets
A customer base 6.3 million strong
Brazil and China
*For the trailing
twelve months ended 3Q07, based on the current
defined contribution offerings approved for distribution in Brazil.
CCB Principal Asset Management Co.
Own 25% of a joint
venture with China
Construction Bank
AUM up $5 billion
over the trailing twelve
months to $5.6 billion as of September
30, 2007
3 Mutual Fund
launches over the trailing
twelve months, each in excess of $600
million
Working toward
licenses to participate in
the Enterprise Annuity market, China’s
new employer sponsored defined
contribution pension program
BrasilPrev Seguros e Previdência S.A.
Own 46% of a joint
venture with Banco
do Brasil
AUM up $5.7 billion
to $8.1 billion as of
September 30, 2007, for a 3-year CAGR
of 49%
At 52%, strongest
asset growth of top 4
pension providers*
Ranked 3rd largest
pension company in
Brazil based on assets (11% market
share)
BrasilPrev one of
Brazil’s most admired
companies; one of the Best Companies
to Work for; and one of the Best
Companies For Women
Strengths at
work:
Transitioning
to Fee-Based Businesses
Fee Revenues ($ millions)
9mths
06
Reported
+15%
Incl. equity
method subs
+66%
9mths
07
9mths
06
9mths
07
Fee revenues
were
52% of combined
premiums and fees
through 9 mths ‘07
as compared to
38% for 9 mths ‘06
One Scenario
16%
$100
$19
AUM ($B)
7.8%
$2
$72
’06A
15%
$7
$325
’17E
+720
bps
12%
15%
CAGR
(’06-’17)
ROE
Net cash flows ($B)
Operating earnings ($M)
Principal International
Q&A
Break
Mike Gersie
Executive
Vice President & Chief Financial Officer
Capital Management
&
Enterprise Risk Management
Strengths at
work:
Financial
Strategy Overview
Grow earnings
Manage capital
Control risk
Increase shareholder value
Influence drivers that influence results.
Strengths at
work:
Effective
Capital Management
Managing capital to build shareholder value
Capital management metrics
Maintaining AA Rating
Lowering weighted average cost of capital (WACC)
Meeting capital needs going forward
Capital Management
Focus:
Capital
Management Metrics
21%
23%
20%
Debt/Capital (Moody’s) <25%
381%
11.6X
108%
2007
Estimate
375%
10.4X
111%
2006
Actual
360%
Liquidity (S&P) >260%
9.9X
GAAP Earnings
Interest Coverage
(Moody’s 5 yr avg) 10X
126%
Capital Ratio (S&P) AA level
2005
Actual
8.48%
8.69%
9.04%
2007E
WACC
2006
2005
Capital Management
Focus:
Capital
Usage Today and Longer-Term
100%
0%-25%
0%-25%
Approx.
15%
Approx.
60%
Option, as
% of OE,
2002
$0-$1.2 billion
0%-45%
0%-35%
Repurchase
$2.7 billion
100%
100%
Total
$0-$1.2 billion
0%-45%
0%-35%
Acquisitions
Approx.
$500 million
Approx.
20%
Approx.
20%
Shareholder
dividend
Approx.
$1 billion
Approx.
35%
Approx.
45%
Organic
growth
Applied to one
scenario OE of $2.7
billion for 2017E
Option, as
% of OE,
2017E
Option, as
% of OE,
2007E
Capital usage
options
Capital Management Summary
Strong earnings growth generating substantial
and increasing free capital
Flexibility & capacity supports EPS growth and
ROE expansion
Effective capital management creates
exceptional value
Enterprise Risk Management (ERM)
Diligent and disciplined ERM program tied to company strategy
Built on strong, well-established, traditional risk management
fundamentals and controls
Established risk appetite and tolerances
Tools & processes to assess, monitor, and manage risk
Scenario planning/what-if testing to prepare for unexpected
Regular quarterly reporting to Audit Committee and full Board on
risk management topics
Risk Astute, Not Risk Averse
Enterprise Risk Management
Robust risk models/metrics
Earnings at Risk (EaR)
Embedded Value at Risk (EVaR)
Economic Total Asset Requirement (Economic Reserves
plus Economic Capital)
Economic Value Added
ALM Models
5-Quarter Rolling and 10-Year Forecasts
Liquidity Analysis
ERM
Economic Risk Metrics
Total assets
required to ensure
we can meet all
obligations with
99.5% confidence
Potential shortfall in
embedded value relative to
baseline under relatively
adverse business &
economic conditions
Potential shortfall in
operating earnings
relative to baseline under
relatively adverse
business & economic
conditions
Measures
108%
26%
22%
Results
Total Economic
Asset
Requirement=
Economic
Reserves plus
Economic Capital
Embedded Value (EV) =
Present Value of
Distributable Earnings
GAAP Operating
Earnings
Metric
Life of Business
Life of Business
1 year
Time Horizon
99.5%
90%
90% (1-in 10 yr event)
Confidence Limit
Economic Total
Asset
Requirement
Embedded Value
At Risk
(EVaR)
Earnings at Risk
(EaR)
Julia Lawler
Senior Vice President & Chief Investment Officer
Investments
Strengths at work
Investment Philosophy and Strategy
Maximize
after-tax returns
consistent with
acceptable risk
parameters
1.
Maintain Quality, Well
Diversified Portfolio
2.
Active Asset/Liability
Management and
Strategy
3.
Optimize Risk Adjusted
Yields and Returns
$62.0 Billion
$65.5 Billion
Principal Financial Group Investments
Cash and Invested Assets
09-30-2007
12-31-2006
U.S. Invested Assets
Corporate Fixed Maturities Portfolio
by Salomon Industry
09-30-2007
12-31-2006
$30.4 Billion
$30.8 Billion
12-31-2006
$42.4 billion
$43.8 billion
U.S. Fixed Maturities Composition
by Asset Type
09-30-2007
U.S. Invested Assets
Fixed Income Securities Portfolio
$43,754
$42,424
$40,116
$39,227
Total (in millions)
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
100.0%
57.5%
38.2
3.7
0.5
0.1
0.0
57.1%
38.2
3.9
0.7
0.1
0.0
55.7%
38.9
4.5
0.7
0.0
0.2
53.5%
40.8
4.3
0.9
0.1
0.4
1
2
3
4
5
6
NAIC Class
% of Fixed Income Securities Portfolio
09-30-2007
2006
2005
2004
3.1%
3.5%
4.0%
4.1%
BIG as % of Total U.S.
Invested Assets
4.3%
4.7%
5.4%
5.7%
BIG as % of Total Fixed
Income Securities
Portfolio
GAAP Carrying Value
Principal Financial Group Investments
Managing the Portfolio/Areas of Focus
Commercial Mortgages: an important asset for
Asset/Liability Management (ALM) strategy
Sub-prime: exposure small, investments high
quality
Managing exposure to troubled markets
Financials
Homebuilders
CMBS
CDOs
Principal Financial Group Investments
Commercial Mortgage Loan Portfolio
Important asset for ALM strategy
Solid, high quality portfolio
Low loan to value, 60%
High debt service coverage, 1.9X
Well diversified by borrower, property type and geographic
region
Historically, losses over all economic cycles of 12 to 13
basis points, reflecting strong expertise
Equivalent to A/A- bond rating, which compares to bond loss
experience and portfolio quality of A-/BBB+
Principal Financial Group Investments
Subprime Exposure
Small, Investments High Quality
$699 million of subprime residential mortgages at
September 30, 2007, or 1.1% of invested assets.
Almost all exposure in highly rated tranches of asset
backed securities, 79% of total issued 2005 or earlier.
$591 million of subprime first lien mortgages, 99% rated AA
or better, 87% issued 2005 or before
$108 million of CDO backed by subprime mortgages (61%
rated AA, and 36% rated A or A-; 33% issued 2005 or before
Principal Financial
Group Investments
Managing
Exposure to Troubled Markets
Exposure to Financials
Banks $4.16 Billion
Broker Dealers $1.36 Billion
Mono-line Insurance $947.9 Million
Exposure to U.S. Homebuilders $242.8 Million
All exposures are GAAP carry value as of 9/30/2007.
Principal Financial
Group Investments
Managing
Exposure to Troubled Markets
Exposure to CMBS $4.7 Billion
Exposure to CDOs
CMBS $273.3 Million
Credit $753.7 Million
All exposures are GAAP carry value as of 9/30/2007.
Strengths at
work:
Investment
Risk
Management
Market Risk Exposures:
Interest rate risk
Foreign currency risk
Equity risk
Credit risk
Counterparty risk
Liquidity Risk
Managing overall exposure:
Within established
risk
tolerance ranges
Mismatch allowances:
0.25 year duration
0.10 year key rate duration
Rebalancing existing
asset or
liability portfolios
Controlling risk
structure of
newly acquired assets and
liabilities
Using derivative instruments
Net
Realized/Unrealized Gains/(Losses)
in $millions,
after-tax
(0.7)
(1.6)
0.6
(2.0)
Total fixed maturities, trading
3.1
(37.0)
(12.0)
36.5
Mark-to-market of hedged item
(65.8)
11.2
(3.9)
(59.2)
Derivatives gains/losses
(62.7)
(25.8)
(15.9)
(22.7)
Total hedge activities
(18.2)
30.9
(24.4)
10.0
(18.0)
(16.4)
09/30/07*
(3.6)
(18.6)
(14.0)
Fixed maturities
securities credit impaired
losses
(62.3)
(20.6)
18.0
Net Realized/Unrealized Capital G/(L)
18.7
(11.0)
47.8
Other
(17.6)
17.8
(14.5)
Total fixed maturities, afs
15.1
6.9
6.3
Other fixed maturity sales
(29.1)
29.5
(6.8)
Fixed maturities securities impairments
2004
2005
2006
* As of the nine months ended 2007
Q&A
J. Barry
Griswell
Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer
Closing Remarks
The Principal®
Edge for
Shareholders:
Why Invest in The Principal?
Trends in marketplace
creating meaningful growth
opportunities
Strengths at work to capitalize on trends
Highly effective
execution drives exceptional financial
performance
Outstanding share price appreciation
Strengths at
work:
Living our
Core Values…
Customer
focus
Financial
strength
Operational
excellence
Employee
development
INTEGRITY
Strengths at
work:
…Deeply
Committed to our Most Important Asset
FORTUNE 100 Best
Companies
to Work For
LATINA Style – 50 Best
National Assoc of
Female Execs
– Top 30
Working Mother
– 100 Best (Top
10 in 2006)
Computerworld – 100 Best
Essence magazine – Top 30
AARP – Best
Employers for
Workers Over 50
WELCOA –
Platinum Well
Workplace
Strengths at
work:
…with
a Constant Underlying Motivation
Give People An Edge Everyday
5.5%
2.1%
10.6%
11.0%
12.2%
14.1%
13.8%
14.9%
Net income ROE available to common stockholders (including OCI)
0.2%
0.1%
0.2%
0.1%
0.1%
0.1%
0.1%
0.0%
Foreign currency translation
-0.2%
-0.2%
-1.8%
-2.4%
-2.3%
-2.2%
-2.3%
-1.3%
Net unrealized capital gains (losses)
5.5%
2.2%
12.2%
13.3%
14.4%
16.2%
16.0%
16.2%
Net income ROE available to common stockholders (x-OCI)
1.3%
-3.0%
2.1%
2.0%
0.9%
0.6%
1.0%
0.0%
Other after-tax adjustments
-4.7%
-3.9%
-0.8%
-1.0%
-0.3%
0.3%
-0.1%
-0.1%
Net realized/unrealized capital gains (losses)
8.9%
9.1%
10.9%
12.3%
13.8%
15.3%
15.1%
16.3%
Operating earnings ROE (x-OCI)
Net income ROE available to common stockholders (including OCI)
$ 358.8
$ 142.3
$ 746.3
$ 825.6
$ 901.3
$ 1,031.3
$ 747.2
$ 793.2
Net income available to common stockholders
88.6
(189.7)
127.9
123.1
59.5
41.2
18.8
(21.2)
Other after-tax adjustments
(306.6)
(247.3)
(49.3)
(62.3)
(20.6)
18.0
8.3
(18.2)
Net realized/unrealized capital gains (losses)
$ 576.8
$ 579.3
$ 667.7
$ 764.8
$ 862.4
$ 972.1
$ 720.1
$ 832.6
Operating earnings
Net income available to common stockholders
$ 0.99
$ 0.41
$ 2.28
$ 2.62
$ 3.11
$ 3.74
$ 2.70
$ 2.94
Net income available to common stockholders per diluted share
0.25
(0.54)
0.39
0.39
0.20
0.14
0.07
(0.08)
Other after-tax adjustments
(0.85)
(0.70)
(0.15)
(0.20)
(0.06)
0.07
0.03
(0.07)
Net realized/unrealized capital gains/(losses)
$ 1.59
$ 1.65
$ 2.04
$ 2.43
$ 2.97
$ 3.53
$ 2.60
$ 3.09
Operating earnings per diluted share
Net income available to common stockholders per diluted share
31-Dec-01
31-Dec-02
31-Dec-03
31-Dec-04
31-Dec-05
31-Dec-06
30-Sep-06
30-Sep-07
Twelve Months Ended,
Nine Months Ended,
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
$ (104.8)
$ (11.2)
$ 44.7
$ 3.7
GAAP net realized/unrealized capital gains (losses)
(8.0)
(12.1)
(1.3)
(3.5)
Certain market value adjustments to fee revenues
(2.1)
1.1
0.8
8.7
Unearned front-end fee income
Less:
(51.1)
(10.6)
12.1
(7.1)
Tax impacts
0.3
2.5
7.7
6.7
Minority interest capital gains
4.4
5.8
11.8
7.7
Capital gains distributed
(6.2)
0.7
(5.4)
4.9
Amortization of deferred
policy acquisition and sale inducement
costs
-
-
-
14.9
Periodic settlements and accruals on non-hedge derivatives
Add:
$ (62.3)
$ (20.6)
$ 18.0
$ (18.2)
Total net realized/unrealized capital gains (losses)
Net Realized/Unrealized Capital Gains (Losses):
31-Dec-04
31-Dec-05
31-Dec-06
30-Sep-07
Twelve Months Ended,
Nine Months
Ended,
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
Outlook for 2008
* $4.10 was the First
Call mean estimate as of 11/26/2007 for 2007 EPS. The company is not
affirming the reasonableness of this
estimate. It is being used for illustration only.
** The company has disclosed unsustainable items through nine months of 2007, which on the net have benefited operating earnings per share by 15 cents.
*** The S&P 500 closed at 1,407 on November 26, the day the company finalized guidance, approximately 9 % below the company’s normal growth assumption. Under normal market conditions, applying the company’s equity market sensitivity of roughly 5%, both ends of the range would have been approximately 4.5% higher.
$4.10*
$0.15**
$3.95
$4.20
$4.45
6.3%
12.7%
Growth over
adjusted 2007
2008 EPS outlook
announced 11/28/07
Estimated growth
x-impact of
markets
at time outlook
finalized***
11%
17%
Exhibit 99.2