Hanover Insurance

The Hanover Insurance Group, Inc., based in Worcester, Massachusetts, is one of the oldest continuous businesses in the United States still operating within its original industry. It was the original name of a property-liability insurance firm established in 1852, and it remained a publicly traded company under that name until the early 1990s, when it changed its name to Allmerica Property & Casualty Companies.[2][3]

The Hanover Insurance Group, Inc.
Public company
Traded asNYSE: THG
S&P 400 Component
IndustryInsurance
Founded1852 (1852)
HeadquartersWorcester, Massachusetts, United States
Key people
John Roche (President and Chief Executive Officer)
ProductsCasualty insurance, Property insurance
Number of employees
4,600[1] (2017)
Websitewww.hanover.com

In 1996 it spun off Allmerica Financial Corporation as a property and casualty insurance and financial services holding company, which then bought out the original firm, and grew to become one of the 500 largest publicly traded companies of the United States. In 2005, Allmerica Financial Corporation reverted its name to "The Hanover Insurance Group, Inc.".

History

The Hanover Insurance Group, Inc.

The Hanover Insurance Group was established in 1852. It paid a cash dividend to shareholders every year since 1853.[3]

Though remaining a relatively small company over the next 125 years, Hanover's common stock price multiplied between 1971 and 1983 by over 23 times from its low point in the decade to its eventual peak. During the end of that period, in 1981, it split its shares three-for-two. The stock was traded publicly on the Over the Counter (OTC) exchange, now called the NASDAQ.[3]

The rapid growth of the company continued into the mid-1980s, and in 1984 it split again, two-for-one, and by 1985 nearly doubled in price once more, trading then at a high price/earnings ratio of 61. At that time the company was debt-free, and carried a book value of nearly US$330 million. However, by then the company's earnings had fallen to about a third of what they had been in the early 1980s.[3]

In 1987, the company split its stock two-for-one again, and was yet again on its way to another double in price, even as its PE ratio dropped back down to a bargain five times earnings. Those earnings had grown to nearly US$100 million, more than double what the company had earned at the prior peak of 1981. Book value by 1987 stood at US$550 million.[3]

However, by the early 1990s recession, Hanover's earnings had declined once more, to about US$50 million.[3]

Allmerica Property & Casualty Cos

In 1993, earnings reached another peak, up fivefold from the recession years, at over US$250 million. The stock price also reached another multi-year peak that year.[3]

By 1994, Hanover Insurance had changed its name to Allmerica Property & Casualty Companies, Inc. It moved from the NASDAQ to the New York Stock Exchange, where it traded publicly under the new symbol, APY. The company's rapid growth was back on track, as the company shares again split, three-for-one in 1994. By 1994, book value had doubled from the late 1980s to $US 1.2 billion.[3]

In summer 1995 the stock price climbed above its 1993 peak high, as the economy came out of its soft landing, and PE ratios began their historic late 1990s ascent.

Allmerica Financial

In late 1995, the company spun off Allmerica Financial Corporation, with US$200 million long-term debt assigned to that company, as a new property and casualty insurance and financial services holding company. It held a diversified group of insurance and financial services companies with total assets of $19 billion. Allmerica Financial products included insurance and retirement savings accounts and group benefit programs, mostly variable annuity and variable life products. That company in turn owned about a majority 60% of the original entity, Allmerica Properties & Casualty Companies.[2][3][4]

By year end 1995 the new independent holding company (AFC) had a book value of over US$1.4 billion, nearly identical in size to its debt-free predecessor, which remained a majority-owned also a publicly traded subsidiary of AFC.[3]

On October 11, 1995, Allmerica Financial Corporation began to trade on the NYSE, under the new symbol AFC. The initial offering price was $21.00.[5]

At the time, John F. O'Brien was the chief executive officer of Allmerica Financial Corporation.[6]

By 1997, Allmerica Property & Casualty Companies was among the top 30 property and casualty insurers in the United States, based on net written premiums. By then its regional focus included Michigan as well as its traditional Northeast territory. It operated two primary subsidiaries. One subsidiary, The Hanover Insurance Company, was the company's original business.[6]

And the second subsidiary, Citizens Corporation, was a publicly traded stock which issued personal property and casualty insurance.[6] It had been a dividend-paying public company since 1993. By 1996, Citizens Corporation had shareholders equity of over US$650 million.[3]

On February 20, 1997 Allmerica Property & Casualty Companies, Inc. filed U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Form 8-K, following its announcement on the day before of its intention to be acquired by Allmerica Financial Corporation (AFC). The surviving company, AFC, would acquire the 40.5% of Allmerica P&C that it did not already own, for approximately US$800 million. Shareholders of APC would receive $17.60 in cash and 0.40 shares of AFC. The merger deal was expected to be completed by the third quarter of 1997.[6]

The stock of Allmerica Property & Casualty Companies then ceased to trade, and its old ticker symbol APY was ultimately taken over on the AMEX exchange by Aspyra Inc., a microcap stock with US$20 million market capitalization.[7]

On August 28, 2003, Frederick Eppinger was elected as President, Chief Executive Officer and Director of Allmerica Financial Corporation.[8]

On September 18, 2003, Allmerica Financial Corporation announced that Robert P. Restrepo, Jr. had resigned as president of the Allmerica Property and Casualty Companies.[8]

The Hanover Insurance Group

On December 1, 2005, Allmerica Financial Corporation changed its name to The Hanover Insurance Group, Inc. and is the parent company of two divisions, Hanover Insurance and Citizens Insurance. It publicly trades under its new ticker symbol since that time. Those companies serve customers with auto, home and business insurance.[2]

The Variable Life and Variable Annuity insurance businesses of Allmerica Financial Corporation became CommonWealth Annuity and Life Insurance Company, a Goldman Sachs Company.[2]

In January 2009, CommonWealth Annuity and Life Insurance Company acquired First Allmerica Life Insurance Company (FAFLIC) from The Hanover Group.[9] FAFLIC includes closed blocks of traditional whole and term life insurance (originally issued by State Mutual Life Assurance Company of Worcester, MA), as well as variable annuities and variable universal life products sold in New York (originally issued by State Mutual Assurance Company).

In 2008, The Hanover Insurance Group acquired AIX Group. In 2011, The Hanover Insurance Group acquired London-based Chaucer Holdings.

In February 2020, The Hanover Insurance Group appointed Sarah M. Medina, a former Hartford VP, as president of professional liability.[10]

Hanover Technology Professional

On 11 June 2020, The Hanover Insurance Group , Inc. confirmed the introduction of Hanover Software Professional and Cyber Advantage, an innovative and comprehensive errors and omissions, security, and risk control approach.[11]

A spokesperson said there are limitations of $25 million available for software professional / third party cyber and $10 million available for first party cyber.[12]

gollark: (I am trying to fit large quantities of text documents onto a 128MB USB stick for no particular reason)
gollark: Wow, zstd has some *impressive* compression ratios.
gollark: Did you know? The apioaudioforms approach.
gollark: It's very* cost-effective to do that.
gollark: Why not just parallelize all of your things ever, and assemble a vast cluster of somewhat bad computers?

References

  1. "Hanover Insurance Group". Fortune. Retrieved 2019-01-08.
  2. Allmerica Financial Corporation
  3. Standard & Poor's Stock Guide, various issues
  4. "ALLMERICA PROPERTY & CASUALTY COMPANIES INC, Form 8-K, Current Report, Filing Date Feb 20, 1997". secdatabase.com. Retrieved May 14, 2018.
  5. Analysts say Allmerica Financial came to market at a low price. New York Times, 10/13/1995
  6. ALLMERICA PROPERTY & CASUALTY COMPANIES INC Unscheduled Material Events (8-K) Exhibit 2 Archived 2007-10-01 at the Wayback Machine, EdgarOnline, SEC Form:8-K, Filing Date:2/20/1997/
  7. "NYSE Euronext, APY". Archived from the original on 2012-10-10. Retrieved 2017-08-29.
  8. Item 6 - Exhibits and Reports on Form 8K, The Hanover Insurance Group
  9. http://www.allbusiness.com/company-activities-management/company-structures-ownership/11754155-1.html
  10. Adriano, Lyle. "The Hanover names president of professional liability". Insurance Business. Retrieved 2020-02-28.
  11. "The Hanover Announces Enhanced Protection for Technology Clients". yahoo! finance. 11 June 2020. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  12. "Hanover unveils E&O cyber product". Business Insurance. 11 June 2020. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
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