AFLAC Buying Dollar-Denominated Debt

Bloomberg notes that AFLAC (AFL) is buying as much as $1 billion worth of corporate bonds through the end of this year:

Columbus, Georgia-based Aflac, the world’s biggest seller of supplemental health insurance, is shifting from Japanese government securities and focusing on dollar-denominated corporate debt rated A with a duration of about 10 years. Japanese government bonds due in 7 to 10 years yield about 0.99 percent, compared with 4.52 percent for A rated U.S. corporate debt.

“Given that interest rates are so low you have to look at your duration preferences,” Kriss Cloninger, president and chief financial officer of Aflac, said in an interview last week. “At the time we were placing the money, we felt the risk- reward advantage was with shorter-duration corporates as opposed to the longer-term Treasuries.”

Posted by on December 13th, 2010 at 1:17 pm


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