The U.S. Treasury said on Wednesday some life insurers have met requirements for government capital investments under an existing rescue plan, clarifying that it is not launching a new bailout for the sector.

There are a number of life insurers that have met requirements for the Capital Purchase Program because of their bank holding company status, said Treasury spokesman Andrew Williams. These are among the hundreds of financial institutions in the CPP pipeline that will be reviewed and funded as appropriate on a rolling basis.

The statement was made in response to a Wall Street Journal story published late on Tuesday saying the Treasury would extend its $700 billion financial bailout program to certain life insurers and would make an announcement in coming days.

Williams said any capital investments in insurers that have bank holding company status would not constitute a new rescue program for the insurance sector.

STOCKS PARE GAINS

The Treasury clarification caused stocks to pare gains, particularly the major insurers which were viewed as the likely benefactors of a widening of the Treasury's financial bailouts. Prudential Financial Inc shares had climbed more than 12 percent at one point in early trade, but by midday were up 7 percent at $23.65, while MetLife's earlier 10 percent gain was chopped back to about 3.3 percent at $24.96.

In recent months, some insurance companies have received approval to acquire banks, paving the way for them to participate in the Capital Purchase Program, which the Treasury has estimated will top out at $218 billion.

As of Tuesday, the program had $198.5 billion invested, leaving $19.5 billion in available funds, according to Treasury documents. A Treasury official said only a small number of life insurers have met the qualifications for the program.

The Treasury estimates it has around $134.5 billion left in the overall bailout fund, but it faces heavy funding demands from additional automaker aid requests and the launch of toxic asset purchase funds and a new program to provide additional capital if necessary to the largest 19 banks following the completion of stress tests at the end of April.

The American Council of Life Insurers, an industry lobbying group, said it expects the Treasury to communicate decisions on capital investments directly to companies that have applied.

As we have argued all along, allowing life insurers to participate in the CPP would be consistent with the stated goals of the program to increase the flow of financing to U.S. businesses and stabilize the credit markets, said Frank Keating, chief executive of the group.

PRESSURE RELIEF

With $5.1 trillion in assets at the end of 2007, life insurers are major investors in corporate bonds. But as markets have fallen, so have the value of life insurance policies used by many Americans as a key savings vehicle. Large numbers of policy redemptions could lead to a cash crunch for some companies.

Funds from the Treasury's Troubled Asset Relief Program could help alleviate some of these pressures, said Bret Howlett, an insurance analyst at Standard & Poor's Equity Research in New York.

We caution that TARP funds will not completely solve the insurers' capital issues and note that some prior recipients of TARP funds have continued to struggle after receiving federal money, he added.

Reuters reported in February that the Treasury was actively considering applications for capital injections from about a dozen insurance companies.

In addition to Met Life and Prudential, other insurers that now have bank holding company status include the Hartford Financial Services Group Inc and Lincoln Financial.

(Additional reporting by Patrick Rucker and Karey Wutkowski in Washington and Elinor Comlay and Lilla Zuill in New York; Editing by James Dalgleish)