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Fair Value Measurements (excluding Consolidated Investment Entities)
9 Months Ended
Sep. 30, 2022
Fair Value Disclosures [Abstract]  
Fair Value Measurements (excluding Consolidated Investment Entities) Fair Value Measurements (excluding Consolidated Investment Entities)
Fair Value Measurement

The following table presents the Company's hierarchy for its assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of September 30, 2022:
Level 1Level 2Level 3Total
Assets:
Fixed maturities, including securities pledged:
U.S. Treasuries
$516 $216 $— $732 
U.S. Government agencies and authorities
— 49 — 49 
State, municipalities and political subdivisions
— 864 — 864 
U.S. corporate public securities— 8,800 15 8,815 
U.S. corporate private securities— 2,839 1,743 4,582 
Foreign corporate public securities and foreign governments(1)
— 2,854 — 2,854 
Foreign corporate private securities(1)
— 2,654 404 3,058 
Residential mortgage-backed securities— 3,956 26 3,982 
Commercial mortgage-backed securities— 4,009 — 4,009 
Other asset-backed securities— 2,022 72 2,094 
Total fixed maturities, including securities pledged
516 28,263 2,260 31,039 
Equity securities
134 195 337 
Derivatives:
Interest rate contracts353 — 358 
Foreign exchange contracts— 135 — 135 
Equity contracts— 
Embedded derivative on reinsurance— 109 — 109 
Cash and cash equivalents, short-term investments and short-term investments under securities loan agreements2,035 — 2,038 
Assets held in separate accounts70,169 5,472 339 75,980 
Total assets$72,860 $34,344 $2,794 $109,998 
Percentage of Level to total66 %31 %%100 %
Liabilities:
Derivatives:
Guaranteed benefit derivatives(2)
— — 33 33 
Other derivatives:
Interest rate contracts— 371 — 371 
Foreign exchange contracts— — 
Equity contracts— — 
Credit contracts— — 
Embedded derivative on reinsurance— (15)
(3)
89 74 
Total liabilities$— $368 $122 $490 
(1) Primarily U.S. dollar denominated.
(2) Includes GMWBL, GMWB, FIA, Stabilizer and MCGs.
(3) The Company classifies the embedded derivative within liabilities given the underlying nature of the balance and the right-of-offset.
The following table presents the Company's hierarchy for its assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of December 31, 2021:
Level 1Level 2Level 3Total
Assets:
Fixed maturities, including securities pledged:
U.S. Treasuries$745 $258 $— $1,003 
U.S. Government agencies and authorities— 81 — 81 
State, municipalities and political subdivisions— 1,111 — 1,111 
U.S. corporate public securities— 11,925 16 11,941 
U.S. corporate private securities— 3,415 1,910 5,325 
Foreign corporate public securities and foreign governments(1)
— 3,723 — 3,723 
Foreign corporate private securities(1)
— 3,148 353 3,501 
Residential mortgage-backed securities— 4,259 43 4,302 
Commercial mortgage-backed securities— 4,183 — 4,183 
Other asset-backed securities— 2,037 44 2,081 
Total fixed maturities, including securities pledged745 34,140 2,366 37,251 
Equity securities
37 — 203 240 
Derivatives:
Interest rate contracts— 147 — 147 
Foreign exchange contracts— 19 — 19 
Equity contracts— — 
Credit contracts— — 
Cash and cash equivalents, short-term investments and short-term investments under securities loan agreements
2,525 82 — 2,607 
Assets held in separate accounts94,943 5,174 316 100,433 
Total assets$98,250 $39,567 $2,885 $140,702 
Percentage of Level to total70 %28 %%100 %
Liabilities:
Derivatives:
Guaranteed benefit derivatives(2)
— — 48 48 
Other derivatives:
Interest rate contracts— 209 — 209 
Foreign exchange contracts— 19 — 19 
Equity contracts— — 
Credit contracts— — 
Embedded derivative on reinsurance— 109 87 196 
Total liabilities$— $340 $135 $475 
(1) Primarily U.S. dollar denominated.
(2) Includes GMWBL, GMWB, FIA, Stabilizer and MCGs.
Valuation of Financial Assets and Liabilities at Fair Value

Certain assets and liabilities are measured at estimated fair value on the Company’s Consolidated Balance Sheets. The Company defines fair value as the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability (an exit price) in the principal or most advantageous market for the asset or liability in an orderly transaction between market participants on the measurement date. The exit price and the transaction (or entry) price will be the same at initial recognition in many circumstances. However, in certain cases, the transaction price may not represent fair value. The fair value of a liability is based on the amount that would be paid to transfer a liability to a third-party with an equal credit standing. Fair value is required to be a market-based measurement that is determined based on a hypothetical transaction at the measurement date, from a market participant’s perspective. The Company considers three broad valuation approaches when a quoted price is unavailable: (i) the market approach, (ii) the income approach and (iii) the cost approach. The Company determines the most appropriate valuation technique to use, given the instrument being measured and the availability of sufficient inputs. The Company prioritizes the inputs to fair valuation approaches and allows for the use of unobservable inputs to the extent that observable inputs are not available.

The Company utilizes a number of valuation methodologies to determine the fair values of its financial assets and liabilities in conformity with the concepts of exit price and the fair value hierarchy as prescribed in ASC Topic 820. Valuations are obtained from third-party commercial pricing services, brokers and industry-standard, vendor-provided software that models the value based on market observable inputs. The valuations obtained from third-party commercial pricing services are non-binding. The Company reviews the assumptions and inputs used by third-party commercial pricing services for each reporting period in order to determine an appropriate fair value hierarchy level. The documentation and analysis obtained from third-party commercial pricing services are reviewed by the Company, including in-depth validation procedures confirming the observability of inputs. The valuations are reviewed and validated monthly through the internal valuation committee price variance review, comparisons to internal pricing models, back testing to recent trades or monitoring of trading volumes.

The valuation approaches and key inputs for each category of assets or liabilities that are classified within Level 2 and Level 3 of the fair value hierarchy are presented below.

For fixed maturities classified as Level 2 assets, fair values are determined using a matrix-based market approach, based on prices obtained from third-party commercial pricing services and the Company’s matrix and analytics-based pricing models, which in each case incorporate a variety of market observable information as valuation inputs. The market observable inputs used for these fair value measurements, by fixed maturity asset class, are as follows:

U.S. Treasuries: Fair value is determined using third-party commercial pricing services, with the primary inputs being stripped interest and principal U.S. Treasury yield curves that represent a U.S. Treasury zero-coupon curve.

U.S. government agencies and authorities, State, municipalities and political subdivisions: Fair value is determined using third-party commercial pricing services, with the primary inputs being U.S. Treasury yield curves, trades of comparable securities, credit spreads off benchmark yields and issuer ratings.

U.S. corporate public securities, Foreign corporate public securities and foreign governments: Fair value is determined using third-party commercial pricing services, with the primary inputs being benchmark yields, trades of comparable securities, issuer ratings, bids and credit spreads off benchmark yields.

U.S. corporate private securities and Foreign corporate private securities: Fair values are determined using a matrix and analytics-based pricing model. The model incorporates the current level of risk-free interest rates, current corporate credit spreads, credit quality of the issuer and cash flow characteristics of the security. The model also considers a liquidity spread, the value of any collateral, the capital structure of the issuer, the presence of guarantees, and prices and quotes for comparably rated publicly traded securities.

RMBS, CMBS and ABS: Fair value is determined using third-party commercial pricing services, with the primary inputs being credit spreads off benchmark yields, prepayment speed assumptions, current and forecasted loss severity, debt service coverage ratios, collateral type, payment priority within tranche and the vintage of the loans underlying the security.
Generally, the Company does not obtain more than one vendor price from pricing services per instrument. The Company uses a hierarchy process in which prices are obtained from a primary vendor and, if that vendor is unable to provide the price, the next vendor in the hierarchy is contacted until a price is obtained or it is determined that a price cannot be obtained from a commercial pricing service. When a price cannot be obtained from a commercial pricing service, independent broker quotes are solicited. Securities priced using independent broker quotes are classified as Level 3.

Fair values of privately placed bonds are determined primarily using a matrix-based pricing model and are generally classified as Level 2 assets. The model considers the current level of risk-free interest rates, current corporate spreads, the credit quality of the issuer and cash flow characteristics of the security. Also considered are factors such as the net worth of the borrower, the value of collateral, the capital structure of the borrower, the presence of guarantees and the Company’s evaluation of the borrower’s ability to compete in its relevant market. Using this data, the model generates estimated market values, which the Company considers reflective of the fair value of each privately placed bond.

Equity securities: Level 2 and Level 3 equity securities, typically private equities or equity securities not traded on an exchange, are valued by other sources such as analytics or brokers.

Derivatives: Derivatives are carried at fair value, which is determined using the Company’s derivative accounting system in conjunction with observable key financial data from third-party sources, such as yield curves, exchange rates, S&P 500 Index prices, London Interbank Offered Rates ("LIBOR"), Overnight Index Swap ("OIS") rates, and Secured Overnight Financing Rate ("SOFR"). The Company uses SOFR discounting for valuations of interest rate derivatives; however, certain legacy positions may continue to be discounted on OIS. The Company uses OIS for valuations of collateralized interest rate derivatives, which are obtained from third-party sources. For those derivatives that are unable to be valued by the accounting system, the Company typically utilizes values established by third-party brokers. Counterparty credit risk is considered and incorporated in the Company’s valuation process through counterparty credit rating requirements and monitoring of overall exposure. It is the Company’s policy to transact only with investment grade counterparties with a credit rating of A- or better. The Company’s nonperformance risk is also considered and incorporated in the Company’s valuation process. The Company also has certain credit default swaps and options that are priced by third party vendors or by using models that primarily use market observable inputs, but contain inputs that are not observable to market participants, which have been classified as Level 3. The remaining derivative instruments are valued based on market observable inputs and are classified as Level 2.

Guaranteed benefit derivatives: The Company records reserves for annuity contracts containing GMWBL and GMWB riders. The guarantee is an embedded derivative and is required to be accounted for separately from the host variable annuity contract. The fair value of the obligation is calculated based on actuarial and capital market assumptions related to the projected cash flows, including benefits and related contract charges, over the anticipated life of the related contracts. The cash flow estimates are produced by using stochastic techniques under a variety of market return scenarios and other market implied assumptions. These derivatives are classified as Level 3 liabilities in the fair value hierarchy.

The index-crediting feature in the Company's FIA contracts is an embedded derivative that is required to be accounted for separately from the host contract. The fair value of the obligation is calculated based on actuarial and capital market assumptions related to the projected cash flows, including benefits and related contract charges, over the anticipated life of the related contracts for FIAs. The cash flow estimates are produced by market implied assumptions. These derivatives are classified as Level 3 liabilities in the fair value hierarchy.

The Company records reserves for Stabilizer and MCG contracts containing guaranteed credited rates. The guarantee is treated as an embedded derivative or a stand-alone derivative (depending on the underlying product) and is required to be reported at fair value. The estimated fair value is determined based on the present value of projected future claims, minus the present value of future guaranteed premiums. At inception of the contract, the Company projects a guaranteed premium to be equal to the present value of the projected future claims. The income associated with the contracts is projected using relevant actuarial and capital market assumptions, including benefits and related contract charges, over the anticipated life of the related contracts. The cash flow estimates are produced by using stochastic techniques under a variety of risk neutral scenarios and other market implied assumptions. These derivatives are classified as Level 3 liabilities.

The discount rate used to determine the fair value of the Company's GMWBL, GMWB, FIA, and Stabilizer embedded derivative liabilities and the stand-alone derivative for MCG includes an adjustment to reflect the risk that these obligations will not be fulfilled ("nonperformance risk"). The nonperformance risk adjustment incorporates a blend of observable, similarly
rated peer holding company credit spreads, adjusted to reflect the credit quality of the individual insurance subsidiary that issued the guarantee, as well as an adjustment to reflect the non-default spreads and the priority and recovery rates of policyholder claims.

Embedded derivatives on reinsurance: The carrying value of embedded derivatives is estimated based upon the change in the fair value of the assets supporting the funds withheld payable under reinsurance agreements. The fair value of the embedded derivative is based on market observable inputs and is classified as Level 2. The remaining derivative instruments are classified as Level 3 and are estimated using the income approach. The fair value is calculated by estimating future cash flows for a certain discrete projection period, estimating the terminal value, if appropriate, and discounting these amounts to present value at a rate of return that considers the relative risk of the cash flows and the time value of money.

Level 3 Financial Instruments

The fair values of certain assets and liabilities are determined using prices or valuation techniques that require inputs that are both unobservable and significant to the overall fair value measurement (i.e., Level 3 as defined by ASC Topic 820), including but not limited to liquidity spreads for investments within markets deemed not currently active. These valuations, whether derived internally or obtained from a third-party, use critical assumptions that are not widely available to estimate market participant expectations in valuing the asset or liability. In addition, the Company has determined, for certain financial instruments, an active market is such a significant input to determine fair value that the presence of an inactive market may lead to classification in Level 3. In light of the methodologies employed to obtain the fair values of financial assets and liabilities classified as Level 3, additional information is presented below.
The following tables summarize the change in fair value of the Company's Level 3 assets and liabilities and transfers in and out of Level 3 for the periods indicated:
Three Months Ended September 30, 2022
Fair Value as of July 1Realized/Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
Included in:
PurchasesIssuancesSales
Settlements
Transfers
into
Level 3
Transfers
out of
Level 3
Fair Value as of September 30
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Earnings(3)
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
OCI
(3)
Net
Income
OCI
Fixed maturities, including securities pledged:
U.S. corporate public securities$19 $— $(1)$$— $— $(1)$— $(5)$15 $— $— 
U.S. corporate private securities1,780 (2)(94)77 — — (40)22 — 1,743 (2)(95)
Foreign corporate public securities and foreign governments(1)
— — — — — — — (4)— — — 
Foreign corporate private securities(1)
403 (2)(11)22 — — (4)— (4)404 (2)(11)
Residential mortgage-backed securities31 (4)— — — — — (3)26 (4)— 
Other asset-backed securities63 — (2)21 — — (1)— (9)72 (1)(2)
Total fixed maturities, including securities pledged2,300 (8)(108)125 — — (46)22 (25)2,260 (9)(108)
Equity securities, at fair value
203 (8)— — — — — — — 195 (8)— 
Derivatives:
Guaranteed benefit derivatives(2)(5)
(29)(5)— — — — — — (33)— — 
Embedded derivatives on reinsurance(86)(3)— — — — — — — (89)— — 
Assets held in separate accounts(4)
349 (9)— 32 — (16)— — (17)339 — — 
(1) Primarily U.S. dollar denominated.
(2) All gains and losses on Level 3 liabilities are classified as realized gains (losses) for the purpose of this disclosure because it is impracticable to track realized and unrealized gains (losses) separately on a contract by contract basis. These amounts are included in Other net (losses) in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations.
(3) For financial instruments still held as of September 30 amounts are included in Net investment income and Total net gains (losses) in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations or Unrealized gains (losses) on securities in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income.
(4) The investment income and realized gains (losses) and change in unrealized gains (losses) included in net income for separate account assets are offset by an equal amount for separate account liabilities, which results in a net zero impact on Net income (loss) for the Company.
(5) Includes GMWBL, GMWB, FIA, Stabilizer and MCGs.
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2022
Fair Value as of January 1 Realized/Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
Included in:
PurchasesIssuancesSales

Settlements
Transfers
into
Level 3
Transfers
out of
Level 3
Fair Value as of September 30
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Earnings
(3)
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
OCI(3)
Net
Income
OCI
Fixed maturities, including securities pledged:
U.S. corporate public securities$16 $— $(1)$$— $— $(1)$— $(6)$15 $— $(1)
U.S. corporate private securities1,910 (4)(374)235 — — (159)145 (10)1,743 (4)(373)
Foreign corporate private securities(1)
353 (23)(42)115 — — (33)148 (114)404 (6)(42)
Residential mortgage-backed securities43 (19)— — — — — (2)26 (19)— 
Other asset-backed securities44 (1)(6)52 — (10)(7)— — 72 (1)(6)
Total fixed maturities, including securities pledged2,366 (47)(423)413 — (10)(200)293 (132)2,260 (30)(422)
Equity securities, at fair value
203 (35)— 27 — — — — — 195 (35)— 
Derivatives:
Guaranteed benefit derivatives (2)(5)
(48)15 — — (1)— — — (33)— — 
Embedded derivatives on reinsurance(87)(2)— — — — — — — (89)— — 
Cash and cash equivalents, short-term investments and short-term investments under securities loan agreements— — — — — (8)— — — — — 
Assets held in separate accounts(4)
316 (35)— 164 — (20)— (92)339 — — 
(1) Primarily U.S. dollar denominated.
(2) All gains and losses on Level 3 liabilities are classified as realized gains (losses) for the purpose of this disclosure because it is impracticable to track realized and unrealized gains (losses) separately on a contract by contract basis. These amounts are included in Other net (losses) in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations.
(3) For financial instruments still held as of September 30 amounts are included in Net investment income and Total net gains (losses) in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations or Unrealized gains (losses) on securities in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income.
(4) The investment income and realized gains (losses) and change in unrealized gains (losses) included in net income for separate account assets are offset by an equal amount for separate account liabilities, which results in a net zero impact on Net income (loss) for the Company.
(5) Includes GMWBL, GMWB, FIA, Stabilizer and MCGs.
Three Months Ended September 30, 2021
Fair Value as of July 1Realized/Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
Included in:
PurchasesIssuancesSales

Settlements
Transfers
into
Level 3
Transfers
out of
Level 3
Fair Value as of September 30
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Earnings
(3)
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
OCI(3)
Net
Income
OCI
Fixed maturities, including securities pledged:
U.S. corporate public securities$23 $— $$12 $— $— $(1)$— $— $35 $— $
U.S. corporate private securities2,011 10 (13)127 — (22)(142)— (37)1,934 — (11)
Foreign corporate public securities and foreign governments(1)
10 — — 17 — — — — (10)17 — — 
Foreign corporate private securities(1)
352 (15)21 29 — — (6)— — 381 21 
Residential mortgage-backed securities46 (4)— 16 — — — — (2)56 (4)(1)
Commercial mortgage-backed securities— — 10 — — — — — 12 — — 
Other asset-backed securities78 — (1)— — (22)— (14)50 — 
Total fixed maturities, including securities pledged2,522 (9)220 — (22)(171)— (63)2,485 (3)11 
Fixed maturities, trading, at fair value45 — — — — — (40)— — — — 
Equity securities, at fair value
249 — — — — — — — 250 — 
Derivatives:
Guaranteed benefit derivatives (2)(5)
(44)— — (4)— — — (44)— — 
Embedded derivatives on reinsurance(85)(1)— — — — — — — (86)— — 
Assets held in separate accounts(4)
293 — 53 — (6)— — (30)311 — — 
(1) Primarily U.S. dollar denominated.
(2) All gains and losses on Level 3 liabilities are classified as realized gains (losses) for the purpose of this disclosure because it is impracticable to track realized and unrealized gains (losses) separately on a contract by contract basis. These amounts are included in Other net (losses) in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations.
(3) For financial instruments still held as of September 30, amounts are included in Net investment income and Total net gains (losses) in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations or Unrealized gains (losses) on securities in the Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income.
(4) The investment income and realized gains (losses) and change in unrealized gains (losses) included in net income for separate account assets are offset by an equal amount for separate account liabilities, which results in a net zero impact on Net income (loss) for the Company.
(5)Includes GMWBL, GMWB, FIA, Stabilizer and MCGs.
Nine Months Ended September 30, 2021
Fair Value as of January 1Realized/Unrealized
Gains (Losses)
Included in:
PurchasesIssuancesSales

Settlements
Transfers
into
Level 3
Transfers
out of
Level 3
Fair Value as of September 30
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
Earnings
(3)
Change In
Unrealized
Gains
(Losses)
Included in
OCI(3)
Net
Income
OCI
Fixed maturities, including securities pledged:
U.S. corporate public securities$93 $$$12 $— $(25)$(1)$— $(46)$35 $— $
U.S. corporate private securities1,900 50 (108)210 — (340)(198)545 (125)1,934 (1)(107)
Foreign corporate public securities and foreign governments(1)
— — — 17 — — — — — 17 — — 
Foreign corporate private securities(1)
457 (6)19 30 — (81)(38)— — 381 16 
Residential mortgage-backed securities43 (11)(1)30 — (7)— — 56 (11)(1)
Commercial mortgage-backed securities— — — 12 — — — — — 12 — — 
Other asset-backed securities61 (3)19 — (5)(45)22 — 50 — (1)
Total fixed maturities, including securities pledged2,554 35 (92)330 — (458)(282)569 (171)2,485 (9)(92)
Fixed maturities, trading, at fair value— — — 45 — — (40)— — — — 
Equity securities, at fair value
172 14 — 225 — (152)(9)— — 250 (1)— 
Derivatives:
Guaranteed benefit derivatives (2)(5)
(84)41 — — (4)— — — (44)— — 
Other derivatives, net— — — — — (1)— — — (1)— 
Embedded derivatives on reinsurance— — — (89)— — — — (86)— — 
Assets held in separate accounts(4)
222 — 157 — (7)— — (65)311 — — 
For the three and nine months ended September 30, 2022 and 2021, the transfers in and out of Level 3 for fixed maturities were due to the variation in inputs relied upon for valuation each quarter. Securities that are primarily valued using independent broker quotes when prices are not available from one of the commercial pricing services are reflected as transfers into Level 3. When securities are valued using more widely available information, the securities are transferred out of Level 3 and into Level 1 or 2, as appropriate.
Significant Unobservable Inputs

The Company's Level 3 fair value measurements of its fixed maturities, equity securities and equity and credit derivative contracts are primarily based on broker quotes for which the quantitative detail of the unobservable inputs is neither provided nor reasonably corroborated, thus negating the ability to perform a sensitivity analysis. The Company performs a review of broker quotes by performing a monthly price variance comparison and back tests broker quotes to recent trade prices.

Other Financial Instruments

The following disclosures are made in accordance with the requirements of ASC Topic 825 which requires disclosure of fair value information about financial instruments, whether or not recognized at fair value on the Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets.

ASC Topic 825 excludes certain financial instruments, including insurance contracts and all nonfinancial instruments from its disclosure requirements. Accordingly, the aggregate fair value amounts presented do not represent the underlying value of the Company.
The carrying values and estimated fair values of the Company's financial instruments as of the dates indicated:
September 30, 2022December 31, 2021
Carrying
Value
Fair
Value
Carrying
Value
Fair
Value
Assets:
Fixed maturities, including securities pledged$31,039 $31,039 $37,251 $37,251 
Equity securities337 337 240 240 
Mortgage loans on real estate5,408 5,061 5,627 5,982 
Policy loans368 368 392 392 
Cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments and short-term investments under securities loan agreements2,038 2,038 2,607 2,607 
Derivatives495 495 171 171 
Embedded derivative on reinsurance109 109 — — 
Other investments71 71 79 79 
Assets held in separate accounts75,980 75,980 100,433 100,433 
Liabilities:
Investment contract liabilities:
Funding agreements without fixed maturities and deferred annuities(1)
$36,263 $36,488 $35,334 $43,407 
Funding agreements with fixed maturities1,369 1,367 1,460 1,461 
Supplementary contracts, immediate annuities and other746 650 829 775 
Derivatives:
Guaranteed benefit derivatives(2)
33 33 48 48 
Other derivatives383 383 231 231 
Embedded derivative on reinsurance74 74 196 196 
Short-term debt141 142 
Long-term debt2,094 1,932 2,595 2,991 
(1) Certain amounts included in Funding agreements without fixed maturities and deferred annuities are also reflected within the Guaranteed benefit derivatives section of the table above.
(2) Includes GMWBL, GMWB, FIA, Stabilizer and MCGs.

The following table presents the classifications of financial instruments which are not carried at fair value on the Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets:

Financial InstrumentClassification
Mortgage loans on real estateLevel 3
Policy loansLevel 2
Other investmentsLevel 2
Funding agreements without fixed maturities and deferred annuitiesLevel 3
Funding agreements with fixed maturitiesLevel 2
Supplementary contracts and immediate annuitiesLevel 3
Short-term debt and Long-term debtLevel 2