HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE CO
S-2, 1997-06-25
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<PAGE>

   
     As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on June 25, 1997
    
                                                         File No. 333-_________


                          SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                                Washington, DC  20549

                                       FORM S-2
                               REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                          UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
                                           

                           HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
               (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

                                     CONNECTICUT 
            (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

                                         6355
               (Primary Standard Industrial Classification Code Number)

                                      06-094148 
                       (I.R.S. Employer Identification Number)

                                    P.O. BOX 2999
                           HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT 06104-2999
                       (Address of Principal Executive Office)
   
                                MARIANNE O'DOHERTY, ESQ.
                        ITT HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES
                                    P.O. BOX 2999
                           HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT 06104-2999
                                    (860) 843-6733
    
                  (Name, address, including zip code, and telephone 
                  number, including area code, of agent for service)

Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public:  As soon as
practicable after the effective date of this registration statement.

If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on a
delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act of
1933 check the following box.                                             [X]

If the registrant elects to deliver its latest annual report to security
holders, or a complete and legible facsimile thereof, pursuant to Item 11 (a)(1)
of this form, check the following box.                                    [ ]

If this form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant
to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, please check the following box and list
the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective
registration statement for the same offering.  [ ]

If this form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under
the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act
registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement
for the same offer.                            [ ]

<PAGE>

If delivery of the prospectus is expected to be made pursuant to Rule 434,
please check the following box.                [ ]


                           CALCULATION OF REGISTRATION FEE
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

Title of Each Class of                 Amount            Proposed            Proposed          Amount of
Securities to be                       to be          Offering Price        Aggregate        Registration
Registered                           Registered          per Unit         Offering Price         Fee
- -----------------------              -----------      ---------------    ---------------    -------------
<S>                                  <C>              <C>                <C>                <C>
Deferred Annuity                          *                 *               $78,000,000*           NONE**
Contracts & Participating                                                    
Interests Therein
</TABLE>
    

*The maximum aggregate offering price is estimated solely for the purpose of
determining the registration fee.  The amount being registered and the proposed
maximum offering price per unit are not applicable in that these contracts are
not issued in predetermined amounts or units.

   
** ALL OF THE $78,000,000 AGGREGATE OFFERING PRICE WAS PREVIOUSLY REGISTERED 
ON FORM S-1 FILE NUMBER 33-17324 ORIGINALLY FILED ON SEPTEMBER 18, 1987. 
ACCORDINGLY,  THE REGISTRANT HEREBY REMOVES THE REMAINING $78,000,000 IN 
AGGREGATE OFFERING PRICE FROM REGISTRATION UNDER FILE NUMBER 33-17324 AND 
REGISTERS SUCH AMOUNT UNDER THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT AND NO REGISTRATION 
FEE IS DUE UNDER THIS REGISTRATION STATEMENT.
    

The Registrant hereby amends this Registration Statement on such date or 
dated as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrant 
shall file a further amendment which specifically states that this 
Registration Statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with 
Section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 or until the Registration 
Statement shall become effective on such date as the Commission, acting 
pursuant to said Section 8(a) may determine.


<PAGE>


                           HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 
                          Cross Reference Sheet Pursuant to 
                             Regulation S-K, Item 501(b)
                                           
                FORM S-2 ITEM NUMBER AND CAPTION HEADING IN PROSPECTUS
                                           
<TABLE>

<C>  <S>                                               <C>
1.   Forepart of the Registration Statement
     and Outside Front Cover Page of                   Outside Front Cover
     Prospectus                                        Page

2.   Inside Front and Outside Back Cover
     Pages of Prospectus                               Inside Front Cover

3.   Summary Information, Risk Factors and             Summary; General Account
     Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges                Option; Financial Statements

4.   Use of Proceeds                                   Investments by Hartford Life

5.   Determination of Offering Price                   Not Applicable

6.   Dilution                                          Not Applicable

7.   Selling Security Holders                          Not Applicable

8.   Plan of Distribution                              Distribution of Contracts

9.   Description of Securities to be                   The General Account
     Registered                                        Option

10.  Interests and Named Experts and
     Counsel                                           Not Applicable

11.  Information with Respect to the                   The Company;
     Registrant                                        Financial Statements

12.  Incorporation of Certain Information              Incorporation of Certain
     by Reference                                      Information by Reference

13.  Disclosure of Commission Position on
     Indemnification for Securities Act 
     Liabilities                                       Not Applicable
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
 
     HARTFORD
     LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
     THE GENERAL ACCOUNT OPTION
     Under Group Annuity Contracts Issued By
     Hartford Life Insurance Company
     P.O. Box 2999
     Hartford, CT 06104-2999
 
    [LOGO]
 
   This  Prospectus describes the General  Account Option available under group
 variable annuity contracts (hereinafter  the "contract" or "contracts")  which
 are  issued  by  Hartford  Life  Insurance  Company  ("Hartford  Life"  or the
 "Company") with  respect to  DC Variable  Account I  or Separate  Account  Two
 (DC-II)  (individually,  the  "Separate  Account").  This  Prospectus  must be
 accompanied by and read in conjunction with the prospectus for the  applicable
 group variable annuity contract and the Separate Account options thereunder.
 
   During the Accumulation Period under the contracts, net contributions to the
 contract and/or Participants' Individual Account Values under the contract may
 be  allocated, in whole or in part, to the General Account Option or to one or
 more of the Separate Account options. Contract values allocated to the General
 Account Option are  credited with interest  at a  rate at least  equal to  the
 Guaranteed  Interest Rate stated in the  Contract. Rates of interest in excess
 of the applicable Guaranteed  Interest may be declared  by Hartford Life  from
 time  to time (See,  "Guaranteed Interest Rates  and Declared Interest Rates,"
 Page 6).
 
   While the Mortality and Expense Risk  Charges applicable to the values  held
 in  Separate Account options do  not apply to the  General Account Option, all
 other charges,  including the  Annual Policy  Fee, Contingent  Deferred  Sales
 Charges,  Transfer  Charges  and  Premium  Taxes  described  in  the  contract
 prospectus accompanying this Prospectus  apply equally to  values held in  the
 General Account Option.
 
   Distributions  and transfers from  the General Account  Option are generally
 made within  a reasonable  period of  time  after a  request is  received  and
 reflect  the full value of Participants'  Individual Accounts allocated to the
 General Account less any applicable charges. However, under certain conditions
 transfers may be limited or deferred (See, "Transfers from the General Account
 Option," Page 7)  and distributions  may be deferred  or subject  to a  market
 value adjustment. (See, "Surrenders," Page 8.)
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 THESE  SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED  OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
 EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE  SECURITIES
 AND  EXCHANGE COMMISSION  OR ANY STATE  SECURITIES COMMISSION  PASSED UPON THE
 ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS
 A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 PLEASE  READ  THIS  PROSPECTUS  AND  KEEP  IT  FOR  FUTURE  REFERENCE.  IT  IS
 ACCOMPANIED  BY  CURRENT PROSPECTUS  FOR  THE RELATED  GROUP  VARIABLE ANNUITY
 CONTRACT AND THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT OPTIONS THEREUNDER.
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 THESE SECURITIES MAY  BE SUBJECT  TO A  CONTINGENT DEFERRED  SALES CHARGE  AND
 MARKET  VALUE ADJUSTMENT WHICH COULD  RESULT IN YOUR RECEIPT  OF LESS THAN THE
 TOTAL OF YOUR PURCHASE PAYMENT(S). SEE "SURRENDERS," PAGE 8.
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 THE COMPANY CANNOT PREDICT  OR GUARANTEE FUTURE  GUARANTEED INTEREST RATES  OR
 DECLARED INTEREST RATES.
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Prospectus Dated: June   , 1997
<PAGE>
                             AVAILABLE INFORMATION
 
     Hartford  is subject to  the informational requirements  of the Securities
 Exchange Act of 1934 (the "1934 Act"), as amended, and in accordance therewith
 files  reports  and  other  information  with  the  Securities  and   Exchange
 Commission  (the  "Commission"). Such  reports  and other  information  can be
 inspected and copied at the public  reference facilities of the Commission  at
 Room  1024, 450 Fifth  Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  and at the Commission's
 Regional Offices located at 75 Park Place, New York, New York and Northwestern
 Atrium Center, 500 West Madison Street, Suite 1400, Chicago, Illinois.  Copies
 of  such materials also can  be obtained from the  Public Reference Section of
 the  Commission  at  450  Fifth  Street,  N.W.,  Washington,  D.C.  20549,  at
 prescribed  rates. The Commission maintains a  Web Site that contains reports,
 proxy, information statement and  other information regarding Hartford,  which
 files  such  documents electronically  with  the Commission  at  the following
 address: http://www.sec.gov.
 
     The  Company  has  filed  a  registration  statement  (the   "Registration
 Statement")  with the Commission under the  Securities Act of 1933 relating to
 the Contracts offered by this Prospectus. This Prospectus has been filed as  a
 part of the Registration Statement and does not contain all of the information
 set forth in the Registration Statement and exhibits thereto, and reference is
 hereby   made  to  such  Registration   Statement  and  exhibits  for  further
 information relating  to  the  Company and  the  contracts.  The  Registration
 Statement and the exhibits thereto may be inspected and copied, and copies can
 be  obtained at  prescribed rates,  in the manner  set forth  in the preceding
 paragraph.
 
                       INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN DOCUMENTS
                                  BY REFERENCE
 
   
     The Annual Report  on Form  10-K for the  fiscal year  ended December  31,
 1996,  dated March 31, 1997, and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter
 ended March 31, 1997, previously filed  by Hartford with the Commission  under
 the Exchange Act are incorporated herein by reference.
    
 
   
     Hartford will provide without charge to each person to whom a copy of this
 Prospectus  has  been delivered,  upon  the written  or  oral request  of such
 person, a copy of the document  referred to above which has been  incorporated
 by  reference  in  this  Prospectus, other  than  exhibits  to  such document.
 Requests for  such  copies  should  be directed  to  Hartford  Life  Insurance
 Company,   P.O.  Box   5085,  Hartford,   Connecticut  06102-5085,  telephone:
 1-800-528-9009.
    
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           PAGE
                                                                           ----
 <S>                                                                       <C>
 SUMMARY.................................................................    4
 GLOSSARY OF SPECIAL TERMS...............................................    5
 INTRODUCTION............................................................    6
 THE GENERAL ACCOUNT OPTION..............................................    6
   A. The Accumulation Period............................................    6
     1. Contributions....................................................    6
     2. Guaranteed Interest Rates and Declared Interest Rates............    6
     3. Participants' Individual Account Values..........................    7
     4. Transfers from the General Account Option........................    7
     5. Transfers to the General Account Option..........................    8
     6. Surrenders.......................................................    8
       (a) General.......................................................    8
       (b) Payment of Full or Partial Surrenders.........................    8
       (c) Contract Termination..........................................    8
   B. Annuity Period.....................................................    9
 INVESTMENTS BY HARTFORD LIFE............................................    9
 DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACTS...............................................   10
 FEDERAL TAX CONSIDERATIONS..............................................   10
   A. Taxation of Hartford...............................................   10
   B. Information Regarding Deferred Compensation Plans for State and
    Local Governments....................................................   10
 THE COMPANY.............................................................   11
   A. Business of Hartford Life Insurance Company........................   11
   B. Selected Financial Data............................................   12
   C. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
    Results of Operation.................................................   13
     1. Consolidated Results.............................................   13
     2. Business Segment Information.....................................   16
   D. Reinsurance........................................................   16
   E. Reserves...........................................................   16
   F. Investments........................................................   16
   G. Competition........................................................   21
   H. Employees..........................................................   21
   I. Properties.........................................................   21
   J. Regulation.........................................................   21
 LEGAL OPINIONS..........................................................   22
 EXPERTS.................................................................   22
 APPENDIX A (MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT)....................................   23
 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS....................................................  F-1
</TABLE>
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
                                    SUMMARY
 
    This  Prospectus describes the  General Account Option  under group variable
annuity contracts designed  for use  in conjunction  with deferred  compensation
plans  of tax-exempt and governmental employers  under Internal Revenue Code 457
("Deferred Compensation  Plans").  The contracts  are  issued by  Hartford  Life
Insurance Company ("Hartford Life" or the "Company") with respect to DC Variable
Account-I  or Separate Account Two (DC-II) (individually the "Separate Account")
and contributions to  the General Account  Option become a  part of the  General
Account  of Hartford Life. Contributions to  the contracts may also be allocated
to one or more Separate Account options. The contracts and the Separate  Account
options  are  described  in  a  separate  prospectus.  The  prospectus  for  the
applicable contract will always  accompany this Prospectus.  Please read it  and
this Prospectus carefully.
 
    During  the  Accumulation Period  under the  contracts, the  General Account
Option provides for specified Guaranteed Interest  Rates for the first five  (5)
Calendar  Years on Contributions received during  the Calendar Year in which the
contract was issued. Prior to each Calendar Year thereafter, Hartford Life  will
establish   Guaranteed  Interest  Rates  (for   five  (5)  Calendar  Years)  for
contributions received  in the  following year.  At the  end of  each five  year
guarantee  period  for a  particular  year's contribution,  one  year Guaranteed
Interest Rates  are established  annually by  Hartford Life.  Declared  Interest
Rates in excess of any Guaranteed Interest Rates may be established periodically
by  Hartford Life. These rates may apply to  some or all of the values under the
General Account Option  for periods  of time  determined by  Hartford Life.  The
rates  of interest credited will  affect Participants' Individual Account values
(See, "Participants'  Individual  Account  Values,"  Page 7)  and  are  used  to
determine  amounts payable upon termination  of the contracts. (See, "Surrenders
- -- Contract Termination," Page 8).
 
    Generally, Hartford  Life  intends  to invest  the  General  Account  assets
attributable  to the contracts in investment grade securities. Hartford Life has
no specific formula for determining the rates of interest that it will establish
as Declared Interest Rates or Guaranteed Interest Rates in the future.  However,
their  determination will generally be reflective of interest rates available on
the types  of debt  instruments in  which Hartford  Life intends  to invest  the
proceeds  attributable  to the  General  Account Option.  (See,  "Investments by
Hartford Life,"  Page  9.) In  addition,  Hartford Life's  management  may  also
consider  various other factors in  determining Declared and Guaranteed Interest
Rates for  a given  period, including,  regulatory and  tax requirements;  sales
commission  and administrative expenses borne by Hartford Life; general economic
trends; and competitive factors. (See, "Investments by Hartford Life," Page 9.)
 
    The Contract Owner may,  during the Accumulation Period,  allocate all or  a
portion  of  a Participant's  Individual Account  value  held under  the General
Account Option to one or more of the investment options of the Separate Account.
No Contingent  Deferred  Sales  Charges  will be  deducted  on  such  transfers.
However,  there  are restrictions  which may  limit  the amount  that may  be so
allocated and transfers may be deferred in certain cases. (See, "Transfers  from
the  General Account  Option," Page 7.)  Distributions from  the General Account
Option are generally made within a reasonable period of time after a request  is
received  and reflect the full value  of Participants' Individual Account values
less certain  charges,  if applicable,  described  in the  contract  prospectus.
However, under certain conditions, distributions may be deferred or subject to a
market value adjustment. (See, "Surrenders," Page 8.)
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
                           GLOSSARY OF SPECIAL TERMS
 
ACCUMULATION PERIOD: The period before the commencement of annuity payments.
 
ACTIVE  LIFE  FUND:  A  term  used to  describe  the  sum  of  all Participants'
Individual Account value(s) under a contract during the Accumulation Period.
 
ANNUITANT: A Participant on whose behalf Annuity payments are to be made under a
contract.
 
ANNUITY: A series of  payments for life,  or for life with  a minimum number  of
payments  or  a  determinable  sum  guaranteed,  or  for  a  joint  lifetime and
thereafter during the lifetime of the survivor, or for payments for a designated
period.
 
ANNUITY COMMENCEMENT DATE: The date on which Annuity payments are to commence.
 
ANNUITY PERIOD: The period following the commencement of Annuity payments.
 
CALENDAR YEAR: The period of time from January 1 to December 31 of each year.
 
CONTRACT OWNER: The Employer or entity owning the contract.
 
CONTRACT YEAR: A period of 12 months  commencing with the effective date of  the
contract or with any anniversary thereof.
 
CONTRIBUTION(S): The amount(s) paid or transferred to Hartford Life on behalf of
Participants pursuant to the terms of the contracts.
 
DECLARED  INTEREST RATE(S): One or more rates  of interest which may be declared
by Hartford Life. Such rates will  never be less than the applicable  Guaranteed
Interest  Rates and  may apply to  some or all  of the values  under the General
Account option Fund for periods of time determined by Hartford Life.
 
GENERAL ACCOUNT: The General Account of Hartford Life.
 
GUARANTEED INTEREST RATE(S): The minimum rate(s)  of interest to be credited  on
the  General  Account  portion of  the  Active Life  Fund  as set  forth  in the
contract.
 
HARTFORD LIFE: Hartford  Life Insurance  Company (sometimes referred  to as  the
"Company").
 
IN  WRITING: A written  form satisfactory to  us and received  at our offices at
P.O. Box 2999, Hartford, Connecticut 06104-2999.
 
MARKET VALUE LUMP SUM OPTION: At  contract termination a lump sum payment  which
includes the market value of the underlying assets as described on page 9.
 
PARTICIPANT:  A  term used  to describe,  for  recordkeeping purposes  only, any
Employee electing  to  participate in  the  Deferred Compensation  Plan  of  the
Employer/Contract Owner.
 
PARTICIPANT'S  CONTRACT YEAR: A period of twelve (12) months commencing with the
Date  of  Coverage  of  a  Participant  and  each  successive  12  month  period
thereafter.
 
PARTICIPANT'S  INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNT: An account in  which the Contributions of the
Contract Owner  on behalf  of a  Participant under  the contract  are  allocated
during the Accumulation Period.
 
PREMIUM TAX: A tax charged by a state or municipality on premiums, contributions
or contract values.
 
SEPARATE  ACCOUNT:  The  Account  entitled Hartford  Life  Insurance  Company DC
Variable Account-I ("DC-I") and Hartford Life Insurance Company Separate Account
Two (DC-II).
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
                                  INTRODUCTION
 
    This  Prospectus  has  been  designed  to  provide  you  with  the necessary
information to make a  decision on participating in  the General Account  Option
under  contracts issued in  conjunction with a  Deferred Compensation Plan. This
Prospectus describes  only  the elements  of  the contracts  pertaining  to  the
General  Account  Option. The  contracts also  contain various  Separate Account
options. The  contracts and  the Separate  Account options  are described  in  a
separate  prospectus  which must  accompany  this Prospectus.  Please  read that
prospectus and its Glossary of Special Terms prior to reading this Prospectus to
familiarize yourself with  the terms  being used  which, unless  defined in  the
Glossary  of Special Terms to this Prospectus,  have the same meaning as defined
in that prospectus.
 
                           THE GENERAL ACCOUNT OPTION
 
    The  General  Account  Option  is   available  under  contracts  issued   in
conjunction  with a  Deferred Compensation  Plan of  an Employer.  The contracts
provide for  both an  Accumulation  Period and  an  Annuity Period.  During  the
Accumulation  Period, Contributions made by the  Employer to the General Account
Option, and  the values  attributable thereto,  are a  part of  Hartford  Life's
General  Account.  During the  Annuity  Period Participants'  Individual Account
values are used to  purchase Fixed or Variable  Annuities. The operation of  the
contract  during  the Annuity  Period is  described  in the  contract prospectus
accompanying this Prospectus.
 
A. THE ACCUMULATION PERIOD
 
  1. CONTRIBUTIONS
 
    During the Accumulation Period under the contracts, Contributions (less  any
Premium  Taxes)  made  by the  Employer  under the  contract,  and Participants'
Individual Account values, may be allocated, in whole or in part, to the General
Account Option.
 
  2. GUARANTEED INTEREST RATES AND DECLARED INTEREST RATES
 
    The General Account Option provides for specified Guaranteed Interest  Rates
for  the  first five  (5) Calendar  Years on  Contributions received  during the
Calendar Year  in which  the Contract  is issued.  Prior to  each Calendar  Year
thereafter,  Hartford Life will establish Guaranteed Interest Rates (for each of
the next five (5)  Calendar Years) for Contributions  received in the  following
year.  The Guaranteed Interest Rate  for each year during  a five year guarantee
period may not be  the same as  for other years.  At the end  of each five  year
guarantee  period for a  particular year's Contribution(s),  one year Guaranteed
Interest Rates  are  established  annually  by Hartford  Life.  These  one  year
Guaranteed  Interest Rates will automatically commence at the end of a five year
guarantee period and at  the end of each  subsequent one year guarantee  period.
All  Guaranteed Interest Rates and Declared  Interest Rates are effective annual
rates after taking into account daily compounding of interest.
 
    The following  example  is  for  illustrative  purposes  only.  It  contains
hypothetical  rates of interest. Actual rates for  any given time may be more or
less than those illustrated.
 
    EXAMPLE: A contract is issued July 1, 1996. At issue the Guaranteed Interest
Rates for Calendar Years 1996 through 2000 are set as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       GUARANTEED INTEREST RATE
          CALENDAR YEAR           (APPLICABLE TO 1996 CONTRIBUTIONS)
          -------------           ----------------------------------
          <S>                     <C>
              1996                               5.00%
              1997                               4.75%
              1998                               4.50%
              1999                               4.25%
              2000                               4.00%
</TABLE>
 
    Assume that $1,000 in contributions are  received during 1996 and $1,500  in
contributions are received during 1997. The 1996 contributions of $1,000 will be
credited  at least 5.00% (i.e., the Guaranteed Interest Rate for 1996) for 1996.
During 1997 the 1996  contributions, with interest credited  from 1996, will  be
credited  at least 4.75% per year. Similarly  for Calendar Years 1998, 1999, and
2000 the 1996 contributions, with interest
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
credited from prior years, will be credited at least 4.50%, 4.25% and 4.00%  per
year  respectively. At the end of 1999, a one year Guaranteed Interest Rate will
be set for 2001. This procedure of  setting a one year Guaranteed Interest  Rate
will be followed for each subsequent year.
 
    At  the end of  1996 the Guaranteed  Interest Rates for  Calendar Years 1997
through 2001 will be set  for the contributions of  $1,500 received in 1996.  At
the  end of 2001 and annually thereafter one year Guaranteed Interest Rates will
be set for the 1997 contributions of $1,500 and the interest which was  credited
on the $1,500 in prior years.
 
    For  contributions received  in 1998 and  later the same  procedure would be
followed. At the end of each  Calendar Year, Guaranteed Interest Rates for  each
of  the  next  five  Calendar  Years  will  be  set  for  the  following  year's
contributions. At the end of each five years guaranteed period for a  particular
year's  contributions, one  year Guaranteed  Interest Rates  will be established
annually.
 
    Declared Interest Rates in  excess of any Guaranteed  Interest Rates may  be
established  periodically by Hartford Life. These rates may apply to some or all
of the values under the General Account Option for periods of time determined by
Hartford Life. For example, Hartford Life could determine to declare an interest
rate in excess  of the otherwise  applicable Guaranteed Interest  Rate(s) for  a
nine  month period  and which applied  only to  Participants' individual account
values attributable to Contributions received  in a particular time period.  The
rates  of interest credited will  affect Participants' Individual Account Values
(See, "Participants'  Individual  Account  Values,"  Page 7)  and  are  used  to
determine amounts payable upon termination of the contracts (See, "Surrenders --
Contract Termination," Page 8). Notification in writing of the Declared Interest
Rate, and the values to which it will apply, will be provided by Hartford Life.
 
    Hartford  Life has no specific formula  for determining the rate of interest
that it will establish as Declared  Interest Rates or Guaranteed Interest  Rates
in the future. However, their determination will be reflective of interest rates
available  on the types  of debt instruments  in which Hartford  Life intends to
invest  the  proceeds   attributable  to  the   General  Account  Option   (see,
"Investments by Hartford Life," Page 9). In addition, Hartford Life's management
may  also consider various other factors  in determining Declared and Guaranteed
Interest Rates for a given  period, including, regulatory and tax  requirements;
sales  commission and  administrative expenses  borne by  Hartford Life; general
economic trends; and competitive factors.  HARTFORD LIFE'S MANAGEMENT WILL  MAKE
THE  FINAL DETERMINATION  AS TO ANY  DECLARED INTEREST RATES  AND ANY GUARANTEED
INTEREST RATES IN EXCESS OF THE CONTRACTUALLY GUARANTEED RATE. WE CANNOT PREDICT
NOR CAN  WE GUARANTEE  THE  RATES OF  ANY FUTURE  DECLARED  INTEREST OR  OF  ANY
GUARANTEED INTEREST RATES IN EXCESS OF THE CONTRACTUALLY GUARANTEED RATE.
 
  3. PARTICIPANTS' INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNT VALUES
 
    Participants'  Individual  Account  values held  under  the  General Account
Option are credited  with interest  at rates at  least equal  to the  applicable
Guaranteed   Interest  Rates.   Contributions  are   credited  to  Participants'
Individual Accounts, and begin earning interest, the day Hartford Life  receives
the  Contribution  at its  Home Office.  Interest  is credited  to Participants'
Individual Account values daily.
 
  4. TRANSFERS FROM THE GENERAL ACCOUNT OPTION
 
    The Contract Owner  may make transfers  of Participants' Individual  Account
values held in the General Account Option to one or more of the Separate Account
options  under  the contract.  The charges  for transfers  are described  in the
contract prospectus which accompanies this Prospectus. No deduction is made  for
Contingent Deferred Sales Charges when a transfer is made. All transfers will be
made  on a last in, first out basis;  that is, that portion of the Participant's
Individual Account  attributable to  older Contributions  or transfers  will  be
transferred  only after the portion attributable to the most recent Contribution
or transfer has been transferred.
 
    This right to transfer values is  subject to Hartford Life's right to  limit
any  such transfer in any Calendar Year, to one-sixth (1/6) of the Participant's
Individual Account value under the General Account Option under the contract  as
of the end of the preceding Calendar Year. (See also "Surrenders," Page 8.)
 
    Transfers  of assets  presently held in  the General Account,  or which were
held in the General  Account at any  time during the  preceding three (3)  month
period,  to the Money Market Fund Account or to the U.S. Government Money Market
Fund Account are prohibited.  Similarly, transfers of  assets presently held  in
the
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
Money Market Fund Account or U.S. Government Money Market Fund Account, or which
were  held in either of these two (2) Accounts or the General Account during the
preceding three (3) months, to the General Account are prohibited.
 
  5. TRANSFERS TO THE GENERAL ACCOUNT OPTION
 
    Participants' Individual  Account  values  in  a  Separate  Account  may  be
transferred to the General Account Option at any time. The charges for transfers
are  described in the contract prospectus  which accompanies this Prospectus. No
deduction is made for Contingent Deferred Sales Charges when a transfer is made.
Such transfers will be treated like contributions to the General Account  Option
on the date of such transfer.
 
  6. SURRENDERS
 
    (a) GENERAL
 
    Subject  to the termination  provisions described below,  the Contract Owner
may request  a full  or partial  surrender of  Participants' Individual  Account
values at any time. However, if the sum of all surrenders and transfers from the
General  Account Option  in a Calendar  Year, including  the currently requested
surrender, exceeds one-sixth (1/6th) of the aggregate values held in the General
Account Option under  the contract at  the end of  the preceding Calendar  Year,
Hartford  Life reserves the right to defer  surrenders in excess of the limit to
the next  Calendar Year.  At such  time,  unless Hartford  Life is  directed  in
writing  otherwise, deferred  surrenders will  be made  in the  order originally
received up to  the limit, if  applicable. This  method will be  used until  all
surrenders have been satisfied.
 
    (b)  PAYMENT OF FULL OR PARTIAL SURRENDERS (PARTICIPANT'S INDIVIDUAL ACCOUNT
ONLY)
 
    In the event of a partial  surrender of a Participant's Individual  Account,
Hartford  Life  will  pay the  requested  value less  any  applicable Contingent
Deferred Sales  Charge. All  partial surrenders  of a  Participant's  Individual
Account will be made on a last in, first out basis; that is, that portion of the
Participant's  Individual Account  attributable to his  most recent Contribution
(or transfer) will be surrendered first. In  the event of a full surrender of  a
Participant's  Individual Account, Hartford Life will pay the account value less
any applicable Premium Tax  not previously deducted, the  Annual Policy Fee  and
applicable Contingent Deferred Sales Charges.
 
    The  applicable Contingent Deferred Sales Charges, depending on which of the
three separate group variable annuity contracts involved, are as follows: (1)  a
deduction  for the  Contingent Deferred  Sales Charges is  made if  there is any
surrender of contract  values during  the first 15  Participant Contract  Years.
During  the first 8  years, a maximum deduction  of 5% will  be made against the
full amount of the surrender; during the next 7 years, a maximum deduction of 3%
will be made against the full amount  of the surrender, (2) a deduction for  the
Contingent  Deferred Sales Charges is made if there is any surrender of contract
values during the first 12 Participant Contract Years. During the first 6 years,
a maximum deduction of 7% will be made against the full amount of the surrender;
during the next 6 years, a maximum deduction of 5% will be made against the full
amount of  the surrender  and  (3) a  deduction  for Contingent  Deferred  Sales
Charges is made if there is any surrender of contract values during the first 12
Participant  Contract Years. During the first 6 years, a maximum deduction of 5%
will be made against the  full amount of any such  surrender; during the next  2
years,  a maximum deduction  of 4% will be  made against the  full amount of any
such surrender; during the next 2 years, a maximum deduction of 3% will be  made
against  the  full amount  of any  such surrender;  during the  next 2  years, a
maximum deduction  of 2%  will  be made  against the  full  amount of  any  such
surrender.  Such  charges  will in  no  event  exceed 8.5%  where  applied  as a
percentage against the sum  of all Contributions  to a Participant's  Individual
Account.  Please consult the  Prospectus for the  related group variable annuity
contract and  the  Separate Account  for  applicable Contingent  Deferred  Sales
Charges.
 
    (c) CONTRACT TERMINATION (CONTRACT OWNERS ONLY)
 
    If  the Contract Owner requests  a full surrender of  the contract or of all
contract values  held in  the General  Account Option,  the Contract  Owner  may
select one of the two optional methods of payment, as described below. The terms
utilized have the following meanings:
 
     i = the  rate of  interest (expressed as  a percent,  e.g. .05 =  5%) to be
         credited, subject to a minimum rate of 0% and a maximum rate of B%.
 
     A = The weighted average interest rate (expressed  as a decimal, e.g. 1%  =
         .01)  being credited under the General Account Option as of the date of
         termination.
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
    B = The average yield (expressed  as decimal, e.g. 1%  = .01) for the  month
        prior  to the date of termination of  the higher of the Salomon Brothers
        weekly index  of new  Long Term  Public Utilities  rated Aa  by  Moody's
        Investors  Services  and the  Salomon Brothers  weekly Index  of Current
        Coupon 30  year Federal  National  Mortgage Association  Securities,  or
        their equivalents.
 
    (i)  BOOK  VALUE SPREAD  OPTION  (PERIODIC PAYMENT  NOT  TO EXCEED  FIVE (5)
YEARS):
 
    Under this option, Hartford  Life will pay an  amount equal to the  contract
    values held in the General Account Option less applicable Premium Taxes, any
    Annual Policy Fee and applicable Contingent Deferred Sales Charges. Hartford
    Life  reserves the right  to make such payment  in level annual installments
    over a period not to exceed five (5) years from the date of the request,  in
    which  event interest will be  credited on the unpaid  balance at a rate per
    annum produced by the following formula:
 
                             i = (A - 2(B - A)) - .005
 
    Example: If A = 6% and B = 7%, then interest on the unpaid balance would  be
paid at a rate of
    (.06 - 2(.07 - .06)) - .005 or 3.5%
 
    This  formula may result in an interest rate which is less than the weighted
    average interest rate being credited under the General Account Option as  of
    the date of termination.
 
    (ii) MARKET VALUE LUMP SUM OPTION:
 
    Under  this option, Hartford  Life will pay  a lump sum  amount equal to the
    contract values  held in  the General  Account Option,  less any  applicable
    Contingent  Deferred  Sales Charges,  Annual Policy  Fee, and  Premium Taxes
    multiplied by the  appropriate market  value factor. The  amount payable  on
    surrender   may  be  adjusted  down  by  application  of  the  market  value
    adjustment. This market value factor is determined as follows:
 
    (a) if B is greater than A, the market value factor equals 1 - (6 (B-A)) or,
 
    (b) if A is greater than B, the market value factors equals 1.00
 
    Example: If A = 7% and B = 9%, then the market value factor would be 1 -  (6
    (.09 - .07)) = .88.
 
    Under this option, it is possible that the amount payable on surrender would
    be more or less than your contribution(s).
 
    Additional  examples of  both optional methods  of payment  are contained in
    Appendix A, Page 23.
 
B. ANNUITY PERIOD
 
    Annuity payments will normally  be made within  fifteen business days  after
the  receipt of  claim for  settlement or  any other  later specified  date, and
subsequent payments will be made periodically on the anniversaries of the  first
payment.
 
    The  prospectus for the contract and  the Separate Account options describes
more fully the Annuity Period and annuity options under the contracts. It should
be noted, however, that once fixed Annuity payments have commenced, no surrender
of the annuity  benefit can  be made  for the purpose  of receiving  a lump  sum
settlement in lieu thereof.
 
                          INVESTMENTS BY HARTFORD LIFE
 
    General  Account assets of Hartford Life must be invested in accordance with
the requirements established by applicable  state laws regarding the nature  and
quality  of investments  that may  be made by  life insurance  companies and the
percentage of  their assets  that may  be committed  to any  particular type  of
investment.  In general, these laws  permit investments, within specified limits
and  subject  to  certain  qualifications,  in  federal,  state,  and  municipal
obligations,   corporate  bonds,  preferred  and   common  stocks,  real  estate
mortgages,  real  estate  and  certain  other  investments.  (See  page  11  for
percentage  breakdown  of  recent  investments of  Hartford  Life.)  All General
Account assets  of Hartford  Life would  be available  to meet  Hartford  Life's
guarantee  under  the  General Account  Option.  The proceeds  from  the General
Account Option  will become  part  of Hartford  Life's  general assets  and  are
available to fund the claims of all classes of customers of Hartford Life.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
    In  establishing  Guaranteed  and  Declared  Interest  Rates,  Hartford Life
intends to take into account the yields available on the instruments in which it
intends to invest the  assets attributable to  the contracts. (See,  "Guaranteed
Interest Rates and Declared Interest Rates," Page 6.) Hartford Life's investment
strategy  with respect to the assets  attributable to the General Account Option
under the  contracts  will  generally  be to  invest  in  investment-grade  debt
instruments including:
 
    Securities  issued  by  the  United States  Government  or  its  agencies or
instrumentalities, which  issues may  or may  not be  guaranteed by  the  United
States Government.
 
    Debt securities which have investment grade, at the time of purchase, within
the four highest grades assigned by Moody's Investors Services, Inc. (Aaa, Aa, A
or  Baa),  Standard  & Poor's  Corporation  (AAA, AA,  A  or BBB)  or  any other
nationally recognized rating service.
 
    Other  debt  instruments,  including  but  not  limited  to,  issues  of  or
guaranteed  by  banks  or  bank holding  companies  and  of  corporations, which
obligations, although not rated by Moody's  or Standard & Poor's, are deemed  by
Hartford   Life's  management  to  have  an  investment  quality  comparable  to
securities which may be purchased as stated above.
 
    WHILE THE FOREGOING GENERALLY DESCRIBES OUR INVESTMENT STRATEGY, WE ARE  NOT
OBLIGATED  TO INVEST THE  ASSETS ATTRIBUTABLE TO THE  CONTRACTS ACCORDING TO ANY
PARTICULAR STRATEGY, EXCEPT AS  MAY BE REQUIRED BY  CONNECTICUT AND OTHER  STATE
INSURANCE LAWS AND WE HAVE THE RIGHT TO ALTER THIS EXPECTED STRATEGY, CONSISTENT
WITH APPLICABLE LAW.
 
                           DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACTS
 
    Hartford  Securities Distribution Company, Inc.  ("HSD") serves as Principal
Underwriter for  the  securities issued  with  respect to  the  General  Account
Option.  HSD  is  a  wholly-owned subsidiary  of  Hartford  Life.  The principal
business address of HSD is the same as Hartford Life Insurance Company.
 
    The securities will be sold by  salespersons of HSD, who represent  Hartford
Life   as  insurance  and  Variable  Annuity   agents  and  who  are  registered
representatives or Broker-Dealers who have entered into distribution  agreements
with HSD.
 
    HSD  is registered with the Commission under the Securities and Exchange Act
of 1934  as a  Broker-Dealer and  is a  member of  the National  Association  of
Securities Dealers, Inc.
 
                       FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
A. TAXATION OF HARTFORD
 
    Hartford  is taxed  as a life  insurance company under  the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"). The assets underlying the General Account
Option under the contracts will be owned by Hartford. The income earned on  such
assets will be Hartford's income.
 
B. INFORMATION REGARDING DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLANS FOR STATE AND LOCAL
GOVERNMENTS
 
    The tax treatment of contributions and distributions is briefly described in
the accompanying prospectus for the contract.
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
                                  THE COMPANY
 
A. BUSINESS OF HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
  ORGANIZATION
 
   
    Hartford Life Insurance Company (the "Company") was organized in 1902 and is
incorporated under the laws of the State of Connecticut. The Company is a direct
subsidiary   of  Hartford  Life  and   Accident  Insurance  Company  ("HLA"),  a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Hartford Life, Inc. ("Hartford Life"). Hartford Life,
an indirect  subsidiary of  The Hartford  Financial Services  Group, Inc.  ("The
Hartford")  (formerly ITT Hartford Group, Inc,  a wholly-owned subsidiary of ITT
Corporation), is a  holding company  which owns  substantially all  of the  life
insurance  operations of The Hartford. The Company is the parent of ITT Hartford
Life  and  Annuity  Insurance  Company  ("ILA"),  formerly  ITT  Life  Insurance
Corporation,   and  ITT  Hartford  International  Life  Reassurance  Corporation
("HLRe"), formerly  American Skandia  Life  Reinsurance Corporation,  which  was
acquired  in 1993. On December 19, 1995,  ITT Corporation distributed all of the
outstanding shares  of the  common  stock of  The  Hartford to  ITT  Corporation
shareholders  of record in  an action known  herein as the  "Distribution". As a
result of the Distribution, The Hartford became an independent, publicly  traded
company.  On February 10, 1997, The Hartford  announced its intention to sell up
to 20% of the common stock of  Hartford Life during the second quarter of  1997.
On  May  22, 1997,  Hartford  Life became  a  publicly traded  company  with The
Hartford retaining 81.4% of its stock.
    
 
    The Company provides for the insurance  and retirement needs of millions  of
individuals  and  has  been  among  the  fastest  growing  major  life insurance
companies in  the United  States for  the  past several  years, as  measured  by
assets. At December 31, 1996, the Company's total assets of $78 billion included
18%  of  fixed  maturities  and  64% of  separate  accounts  with  the remainder
representing equity securities, cash, mortgage loans, policy loans,  reinsurance
recoverable, deferred policy acquisition costs and other assets.
 
    The reportable segments of the Company and its subsidiaries are:
 
    Investment Products
    Individual Life Insurance
    Employee Benefits
    Corporate operations
    Runoff operations
 
    Revenue,  income before income tax expense  and assets by reportable segment
are set forth in Note 7 in Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
  BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF REPORTABLE SEGMENTS
 
    The  Company  operates  in  three  principal  market  segments:   Investment
Products,  Individual Life Insurance and Employee  Benefits. During the past two
years, each  segment has  grown significantly  in revenues  and net  income.  In
addition,  the Company maintains  a Corporate operation in  which it reports net
investment income on  assets representing  surplus not  assigned to  any of  its
business  segments  and certain  other  revenues and  expenses  not specifically
allocable to any of its business  segments. The Company also classifies  certain
of its business as Runoff operations.
 
  INVESTMENT PRODUCTS
 
    The  Investment Products segment focuses on the savings and retirement needs
of the growing number  of individuals who are  preparing for retirement or  have
already  retired.  The Investment  Products  segment offers  fixed  market value
adjusted ("MVA") and variable annuities, deferred compensation plan services for
municipal governments  and  corporations, structured  settlement  contracts  and
other  special purpose  annuity contracts,  mutual funds,  investment management
contracts and certain  other financial products.  Investment Products  accounted
for $150 million of the total segment earnings of the Company for the year ended
December 31, 1996. Growth in the Company's assets has been driven by its sale of
variable  annuities. For the year  ended December 31, 1996,  the Company was the
largest writer of both individual  annuities and individual variable  annuities.
New  sales  of individual  annuities were  approximately  $9.8 billion  in 1996,
bringing total individual annuity account value to $41.7 billion as of  December
31,  1996. Of the total annuity account value, $32.4 billion relates to variable
annuities and $9.0  billion relates to  fixed MVA annuities  held in  guaranteed
separate  accounts.  Of the  Company's $32.4  billion  in variable  annuities in
force, $29.9 billion, or 92%, are  held in non-guaranteed separate accounts,  as
of   December  31,  1996.  In  contrast,   the  next  nine  largest  writers  in
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
the United States of variable annuities held an average of 68% of their variable
annuities in force in non-guaranteed separate accounts, as of December 31, 1996,
based on the Company's analysis of information compiled by Variable Annuity  and
Research Data Service ("VARDS").
 
    The  Company has  distribution arrangements  to sell  its individual annuity
products with approximately 1,350 national  and regional broker-dealers and  200
banks.  Management  believes  that  it  has  established  a  strong distribution
franchise through its long-standing relationships  with the members of its  bank
and broker-dealer network and is committed both to expanding sales through these
established  channels of distribution and promoting new distributors for all its
products and services.
 
  INDIVIDUAL LIFE INSURANCE
 
    The  Individual  Life  Insurance  segment  focuses  on  individuals'   needs
regarding  the transfer of wealth between generations, as well as the protection
of individuals and their  families against lost  earnings resulting from  death.
The chief products sold in this market include both variable and fixed universal
life-type contracts (including interest-sensitive whole life), as well as single
premium variable life and term life products. Individual life insurance in force
has increased from $45.2 billion in 1994 to $52.1 billion in 1996, of which $4.4
billion  was derived  from acquisitions.  The Company's  growth in  insurance in
force, together with favorable mortality results and a declining expense  ratio,
has  resulted in  increased segment  earnings from  $25 million  in 1994  to $44
million in 1996.
 
    The Individual  Life  Insurance  segment distributes  its  products  through
insurance  agents, broker-dealers and financial institutions, typically assisted
by a  dedicated  group  of  Company  employees.  The  Company  has  distribution
arrangements  to sell  its individual  life products  in the  United States with
approximately 137,000 licensed life insurance agents.
 
  EMPLOYEE BENEFITS
 
    The Employee  Benefits  segment  focuses  on  the  needs  of  employers  and
associations to purchase group insurance products. The group life, long-term and
short-term  disability, stop-loss  and supplementary  medical coverages  sold in
this segment  are  reinsured  to  HLA.  This  segment  also  contains  specialty
businesses  such  as corporate  owned  life insurance  ("COLI")  and life/health
reinsurance. Together  with HLA,  the Company  is the  largest writer  of  group
short-term  disability  benefit plans  and the  second  largest writer  of group
long-term disability insurance, as  well as the fourth  largest writer of  group
life  insurance based  on full-year  1995 new  premium and  premium equivalents,
according to information compiled by the Employee Benefits Plan Review ("EBPR").
Management believes that, as  a result of The  Hartford's name recognition,  the
value-added  nature  of  the  Company's  managed  disability  products  and  its
effective claims administration, it is one of the leading sellers in the  "large
case" group market (companies with over 1,000 employees) and that further growth
opportunities  exist in the "small case"  and "medium case" group markets. Sales
of COLI have resulted  in an increase  in segment earnings  from $18 million  in
1994 to $29 million in 1996.
 
    The Employee Benefits segment uses an experienced group of Company employees
to  distribute its products through a variety of distribution outlets, including
insurance agents, brokers, associations and third-party administrators.
 
B. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
 
    The following selected  financial data  for Hartford,  its subsidiaries  and
affiliated  companies  should  be  read  in  conjunction  with  the consolidated
financial statements and notes thereto included in this Prospectus beginning  on
page F-1.
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
                        HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                              STATEMENT OF INCOME
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                      -----------------------------------------------------
                                                                        1996       1995       1994       1993       1992
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                   <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
REVENUES
  Premiums and other considerations.................................  $   1,705  $   1,487  $   1,100  $     747  $     259
  Net investment income.............................................      1,397      1,328      1,292      1,051        907
  Net realized (losses) gains.......................................       (213)       (11)         7         16          5
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
    Total Revenues..................................................      2,889      2,804      2,399      1,814      1,171
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
BENEFITS, CLAIMS AND EXPENSES
  Benefits, claims and claim adjustment expenses....................      1,535      1,422      1,405      1,046        797
  Amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs.................        234        199        145        113         55
  Dividends to policyholders........................................        635        675        419        227         47
  Other insurance expenses..........................................        427        317        227        210        138
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
    Total Benefits, Claims and Expenses.............................      2,831      2,613      2,196      1,596      1,037
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
INCOME BEFORE INCOME TAX EXPENSE....................................         58        191        203        218        134
  Income tax expense................................................         20         62         65         75         45
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
  Income before cumulative effect of changes in accounting
   principles.......................................................         38        129        138        143         89
  Cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles net of tax
   benefits of $7...................................................          0          0          0          0        (13)
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
NET INCOME..........................................................  $      38  $     129  $     138  $     143  $      76
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                      ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
C. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF
OPERATION
  (DOLLAR AMOUNTS IN MILLIONS)
 
  1. CONSOLIDATED RESULTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                FOR THE YEAR
                                                                   ENDED
                                                               --------------
                                                                1996    1995
                                                               ------  ------
 <S>                                                           <C>     <C>
 Revenues....................................................  $2,889  $2,804
 Expenses....................................................   2,851   2,675
                                                               ------  ------
 Net income..................................................  $   38  $  129
                                                               ------  ------
                                                               ------  ------
</TABLE>
 
    Revenues  increased $85 million,  or 3%, to  $2.9 billion in  1996 from $2.8
billion in 1995. This increase in  revenues was primarily a result of  increased
maintenance  and expense fees, in the Investment Products segment, from a larger
block of separate account assets, which  resulted from strong annuity sales  and
market  appreciation partially offset by a decrease in net investment income and
net realized capital gains (losses) of $133 mainly due to losses associated with
sales and  an  other than  temporary  impairment of  Closed  Book GRC,  see  "--
Runoff".  Expenses increased $176 million,  or 7%, to $2.9  billion in 1996 from
$2.7 billion  in  1995. This  increase  in expenses  is  primarily a  result  of
increased  interest  credited, amortization  of  deferred acquisition  costs and
other insurance expenses  due to increased  sales and higher  account values  of
individual  annuity and individual life contracts which were partially offset by
a decrease in benefits, claims and claim adjustment expenses of Closed Book  GRC
and a decrease in policyholder dividends as a result of the elimination of sales
of leveraged COLI as a result of the enactment of the HIPA Act of 1996.
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
INVESTMENT PRODUCTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                FOR THE YEAR
                                                                   ENDED
                                                               --------------
                                                                1996    1995
                                                               ------  ------
 <S>                                                           <C>     <C>
 Revenues....................................................  $1,013  $  759
 Expenses....................................................     863     643
                                                               ------  ------
 Net income..................................................  $  150  $  116
                                                               ------  ------
                                                               ------  ------
</TABLE>
 
    Revenues  increased $254 million,  or 33%, to  $1 billion in  1996 from $759
million in 1995. This increase in revenues was principally the result of a  $217
million   increase  in  premiums  and  other  considerations  which  reflects  a
substantial increase in aggregate fees earned due to the Company's growing block
of separate account assets. The average separate account assets in this  segment
increased  to $37.5 billion in 1996 from  $26.3 billion in 1995 primarily due to
sales of individual annuities of $9.8 billion in 1996 and $7 billion in 1995, as
well as  strong market  appreciation in  both 1996  and 1995.  In addition,  the
average  general account assets of this  segment increased to approximately $7.7
billion in 1996 from $6.5 billion in 1995  largely as a result of growth in  the
general  account  portion of  the individual  variable  annuity products  of the
Company. The growth in this  segment is also reflected  in an increase in  total
expenses  of $220  million, primarily  as a result  of an  increase in benefits,
claims and claim adjustment expenses of $102 million, or 29%, to $451 million in
1996 from $349 million in 1995. The 38% growth in average account value in 1996,
coupled with an overall reduction in individual annuity expenses as a percentage
of total individual annuity  account value to  28 basis points  in 1996 from  31
basis  points in 1995, has contributed to the growth in earnings of $34 million,
or 29%, to $150 million in 1996 from $116 million in 1995.
 
INDIVIDUAL LIFE INSURANCE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                FOR THE YEAR
                                                                   ENDED
                                                               --------------
                                                                1996    1995
                                                               ------  ------
 <S>                                                           <C>     <C>
 Revenues....................................................  $  440  $  383
 Expenses....................................................     396     347
                                                               ------  ------
 Net income..................................................  $   44  $   36
                                                               ------  ------
                                                               ------  ------
</TABLE>
 
    Revenues increased $57 million,  or 15%, to $440  million in 1996 from  $383
million  in 1995.  This increase in  revenues was  chiefly due to  a $41 million
increase in premiums and other considerations, reflecting the cost of  insurance
charges  and  variable life  fees  applied to  a  larger block  of  business, as
insurance in force  increased to  $52.1 billion in  1996 from  $48.3 billion  in
1995.  Total expenses  increased by  $49 million,  primarily as  a result  of an
increase in benefits, claims  and claim adjustment expenses  of $43 million,  or
21%,  to  $245 million  in  1996 from  $202 million  in  1995. This  increase in
expenses also reflects the  increase in the block  of individual life  insurance
business  offset partially  by favorable  mortality results.  The combination of
business growth and favorable  mortality experience resulted  in an increase  in
segment  earnings of $8 million, or 22%, to $44 million in 1996 from $36 million
in 1995.
 
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                FOR THE YEAR
                                                                   ENDED
                                                               --------------
                                                                1996    1995
                                                               ------  ------
 <S>                                                           <C>     <C>
 Revenues....................................................  $1,366  $1,273
 Expenses....................................................   1,337   1,248
                                                               ------  ------
 Net income..................................................  $   29  $   25
                                                               ------  ------
                                                               ------  ------
</TABLE>
 
    Revenues increased $93  million, or 7%,  to $1.4 billion  in 1996 from  $1.3
billion  in  1995. This  increase in  revenues was  largely a  result of  a $134
million increase in net  investment income primarily due  to an increase in  the
Company's  COLI account values, partially offset  by a decline in leveraged COLI
premiums primarily in response to the enactment  of the HIPA Act of 1996.  Total
expenses increased $89 million, primarily due to an increase in benefits, claims
and  claim adjustment expenses of $122 million,  or 29%, to $545 million in 1996
from $423  million  in 1995  partially  offset  by a  decrease  in  policyholder
dividends of $40 million due to the
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
elimination  of the  sales of  leveraged COLI.  This increase  in total expenses
generally reflected an  increase in the  COLI block of  business. These  factors
resulted  in  an increase  in segment  earnings of  $4 million,  or 16%,  to $29
million in 1996 from $25 million in 1995.
 
RUNOFF OPERATIONS
 
    Runoff consists of the  Company's closed book  of guaranteed rate  contracts
("Closed Book GRC") (and the related realized gains and losses) and are products
that would be reported as a component of the Investment Products segment if they
were  part of ongoing operations. The Company also includes in Runoff operations
the effects of an insurance guaranty fund adjustment of $10 million in 1995 made
to  reflect  lower  than  expected  insolvencies  in  the  insurance   industry.
Substantially all of the products included in Closed Book GRC are contracts with
guaranteed  fixed or indexed  rates for a specific  period, constituting all GRC
written by  the  Company prior  to  1995. The  Company  continues to  write  GRC
Products  only as an accommodation to existing customers or to customers who are
purchasing a range  of services. Closed  Book GRC results  have been  negatively
affected  by  lower  investment rates  and  earnings in  the  related investment
portfolio (principally composed of mortgage backed securities and collateralized
mortgage obligations) due to prepayments experienced in excess of assumed levels
in years prior to 1995.  Closed Book GRC was also  affected by an interest  rate
rise  in 1994  which caused  the duration  of the  Company's assets  to lengthen
relative to that of its liabilities. Due to the reduced investment earnings  and
the  duration mismatch, the portfolio had  insufficient assets to fully fund its
liability commitments. During the third quarter of 1996, the Company transferred
assets in the amount of $200 million  to adequately fund the Closed Book GRC  so
that future cash infusions would be minimal.
 
    Although  the Closed Book GRC asset portfolio as a whole is duration matched
with its liabilities,  certain investments  continue to have  a longer  maturity
than  their corresponding  liabilities and will  need to be  liquidated prior to
maturity in order  to meet the  specific liability commitments.  To protect  the
existing  value of these investments, the  Company entered into various interest
rate swap, cap and floor transactions in late September 1996 with the  objective
of  offsetting  the market  price  sensitivity of  hedged  assets to  changes in
interest rates. As a result of  the hedge, the Company substantially  eliminated
further  fluctuation in the fair value of these investments due to interest rate
changes, thereby substantially reducing  the likelihood of  any further loss  on
the assets due to such changes.
 
    The  Company's accounting  policy for impairment  recognition of investments
requires recognition of an other than temporary impairment charge on a  security
if  it is determined that the Company is unable to recover all amounts due under
the contractual  obligations  of the  security.  In addition,  the  Company  has
established  specific criteria  to be  used in  the impairment  evaluation of an
individual portfolio of assets. Specifically, if the asset portfolio supports  a
runoff  operation and  is expected  to be liquidated  prior to  maturity to meet
liability commitments and has a fair  value below amortized cost which will  not
materially  fluctuate as a result of future interest rate changes, then an other
than temporary impairment condition has  been determined to have occurred.  Each
individual  security within this portfolio is  evaluated to determine whether or
not it is  impaired. Once an  impairment charge has  been recorded, the  Company
then continues to review the impaired securities for appropriate valuation on an
ongoing basis.
 
    The  following table sets forth the after-tax losses incurred by the Company
in respect of Closed Book GRC for the two years ended December 31, 1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                FOR THE YEAR
                                                                   ENDED
                                                                DECEMBER 31,
                                                               --------------
                                                                1996    1995
                                                               ------  ------
 <S>                                                           <C>     <C>
 Runoff losses...............................................  $  (51) $  (68)
 Other than temporary impairment charges.....................     (88)     --
 Net realized capital losses.................................     (55)     --
 Other charges...............................................     (32)     --
                                                               ------  ------
 Net loss....................................................  $ (226) $  (68)
                                                               ------  ------
                                                               ------  ------
</TABLE>
 
    During 1996, Closed  Book GRC  incurred a  $51 million  after-tax loss  from
operations  as  a  result  of  negative interest  spread,  as  compared  with an
after-tax loss from operations  of $68 million in  1995. With the initiation  of
the  hedge transactions discussed  above, which eliminated  the possibility that
the fair value  of Closed Book  GRC investments would  recover to their  current
amortized cost, an other than temporary
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
impairment  loss of $82 million, after-tax,  was determined to have occurred and
was recorded in September  1996. An additional  other than temporary  impairment
loss  of $6 million, after-tax, occurred in the fourth quarter of 1996, bringing
the total impairment  to $88 million.  Also, during the  third quarter of  1996,
Closed  Book GRC  had asset  sales resulting  in proceeds  of approximately $500
million and a  realized loss  of $55 million,  after-tax. The  asset sales  were
undertaken  as a result  of liquidity needs and  favorable market conditions for
certain securities. Other charges of $32 million, after-tax, were also  incurred
in the third quarter of 1996.
 
    In  response  to the  losses associated  with Closed  Book GRC,  the Company
instituted an improved risk management process. Management expects that the  net
income  (loss) from  Closed Book  GRC in  the years  subsequent to  1996 will be
immaterial based on the Company's current projections for the performance of the
assets  and  liabilities  associated  with   Closed  Book  GRC,  the   Company's
expectations regarding future sales of assets from the Closed Book GRC portfolio
from time to time in order to make the necessary payment on maturing Closed Book
GRC  liabilities  and  the  stabilizing effect  of  the  hedge  transactions. In
determining the projected  Closed Book  GRC net  income in  years subsequent  to
1996,  the Company assumed that yield spreads implicit in market values would be
consistent with historic  trends. In  addition, the Company  assumed that  there
would  be no material credit losses in  respect of assets supporting Closed Book
GRC. However,  no  assurance can  be  given that,  under  certain  unanticipated
economic  circumstances,  which  result  in  the  Company's  assumptions proving
inaccurate, further losses in respect of Closed  Book GRC will not occur in  the
future.  To  date, such  asset  sales have  been  consistent with  the Company's
expectations.
 
    As of December 31, 1996, Closed Book GRC had general account assets of  $3.6
billion  and general account liabilities of $3.6 billion. Closed Book GRC assets
consisted of $2.7 billion of fixed maturity securities (including $21 million of
MBSs and $1.03 billion of CMOs),  a $471 million market-neutral portfolio  based
on London interbank offered quotations for U.S. dollar deposits and $432 million
of  cash  or short-term  instruments. Of  the  $3.6 billion  in Closed  Book GRC
liabilities remaining as of  December 31, 1996, the  scheduled maturity of  such
guaranteed  rate contracts  are as  follows: $1.2 billion  or 33%  in 1997, $1.1
billion or 31%  in 1998, $0.8  billion or 22%  in 1999 and  $0.5 billion or  14%
thereafter.
 
  2. BUSINESS SEGMENT INFORMATION
 
    For  business  segment  information, see  Note  7 to  Notes  to Consolidated
Financial Statements
 
D. REINSURANCE
 
    Hartford cedes insurance to  non-affiliated insurers in  order to limit  its
maximum  loss. Such transfer does not relieve Hartford of its primary liability.
Hartford also  assumes insurance  from  other insurers.  Group life  and  health
insurance is substantially reinsured to affiliated companies.
 
E. RESERVES
 
    In  accordance with  applicable insurance  regulations, Hartford establishes
and carries as liabilities actuarially determined reserves which are  calculated
to meet its future obligations. The reserves are based on actuarially recognized
methods  using prescribed morbidity  and mortality tables in  general use in the
United States, which are modified  to reflect Hartford's actual experience  when
appropriate.  These reserves are  computed at amounts  that, with additions from
premiums to be received and with  interest on such reserves compounded  annually
at  certain  assumed rates,  are expected  to be  sufficient to  meet Hartford's
policy obligations at their  maturities or in the  event of an insured's  death.
Reserves  include unearned premiums,  premium deposits, claims  reported but not
yet paid,  claims  incurred  but not  reported  and  claims in  the  process  of
settlement.  Hartford's reserves for  assumed reinsurance are  computed on bases
essentially comparable to direct insurance reserves.
 
F. INVESTMENTS
 
  INVESTMENT OPERATIONS
 
    The Company's investment operations are  managed by its investment  strategy
group which reports directly to senior management of the Company and consists of
a  risk management unit and portfolio  management unit. The risk management unit
is responsible for monitoring and managing the Company's asset/liability profile
and establishing  investment  objectives  and  guidelines;  and,  the  portfolio
management unit is responsible for determining, within specified risk tolerances
and investment guidelines, the general
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
asset  allocation,  duration  and  convexity and  other  characteristics  of the
Company's general account and guaranteed separate account investment portfolios.
The investment staff of the Company executes the strategic investment  decisions
of  the portfolio management unit, including  the identification and purchase of
securities that fulfill the objectives of the investment strategy group.
 
    The primary investment objective of the Company for its general account  and
guaranteed  separate accounts is  to maximize after-tax  returns consistent with
acceptable  risk  parameters   (including  the  management   of  interest   rate
sensitivity of invested assets to that of policyholder obligations). The Company
is  exposed to two primary sources of  investment risk: credit risk, relating to
the uncertainty associated with the continued ability of a given obligor to make
timely payments of principal and interest,  and interest rate risk, relating  to
the  market price and/or cash flow variability associated with changes in market
yield curves.  The  Company manages  credit  risk through  industry  and  issuer
diversification  and asset allocation. The Company manages interest rate risk as
part of its asset/liability management strategies, including the use of  certain
hedging techniques (which may include the use of certain financial derivatives),
product  design, such  as the  use of  MVA features  and surrender  charges, and
proactive monitoring and  management of certain  non-guaranteed elements of  the
Company's  products (such as  resetting of credited  interest rates for policies
that permit such adjustments).
 
  INVESTED ASSET CHARACTERISTICS AND DERIVATIVE STRATEGIES
 
    Invested assets totaled approximately $17.6 billion at December 31, 1996 and
were  comprised  of   asset-backed  securities,   including  government   agency
collateralized  mortgage  obligations  ("CMOs") and  mortgage  backed securities
("MBSs") of  $5.2 billion,  bonds and  notes and  short-term investments  of  $8
billion,  inverse  floating securities  of $352  million, and  other investments
(primarily policy loans)  of $4  billion. Policy  loans of  $3.8 billion,  which
carry  a weighted average interest rate of  11.9%, are secured by the cash value
of the life insurance policy. These loans do not mature in a conventional  sense
but  expire in  conjunction with the  related policy  liabilities. The estimated
maturities of  these  fixed  and  variable  rate  investments,  along  with  the
respective  yields  at  December  31, 1996,  are  reflected  below. Asset-backed
securities (including  Government  Agency, CMOs  and  MBSs) are  distributed  to
maturity  year based on the Company's estimate of the rate of future prepayments
of principal over  the remaining  life of  the securities.  These estimates  are
developed  using broker consensus prepayment  speeds. Expected maturities differ
from contractual maturities due to call or prepayment provisions.
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
                  FIXED MATURITY INVESTMENTS MATURITY SCHEDULE
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       ESTIMATED MATURITY
                                             -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              1997      1998      1999      2000      2001     THEREAFTER    TOTAL
                                             -------   -------   -------   -------   -------   ----------   --------
<S>                                          <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>          <C>
ABS, MBS, CMOS (1)
Variable Rate (2)
  Amortized Cost...........................  $   156   $   100   $    68   $   198   $   142     $  791     $  1,455
  Market Value.............................      154       120       159       192       134        754        1,513
  Pre-tax yield (3)........................     5.76%     6.69%     6.32%     6.51%     6.56%      7.23%        7.08%
Fixed Rate
  Amortized Cost...........................  $   787   $   575   $   688   $   649   $   430     $  985     $  4,114
  Market Value.............................      787       570       678       646       425        977        4,083
  Pre-tax yield (3)........................     6.24%     6.58%     6.33%     6.55%     6.52%      6.84%        6.52%
BONDS AND NOTES
Variable Rate (2)
  Amortized Cost...........................  $   171   $    72   $   113   $    90   $     7     $  209     $    662
  Market Value.............................      169        76        90        94         8        211          648
  Pre-tax yield (3)........................     3.20%     5.74%     3.03%     5.97%     6.10%      6.48%        5.34%
Fixed Rate
  Amortized Cost...........................  $ 1,518   $   636   $   798   $   663   $   642     $3,091     $  7,348
  Market Value.............................    1,532       632       797       667       640      3,112        7,380
  Pre-tax yield (3)........................     6.37%     6.47%     6.42%     6.72%     6.85%      7.16%        6.79%
TOTAL FIXED MATURITIES
  Amortized Cost...........................  $ 2,632   $ 1,383   $ 1,667   $ 1,600   $ 1,221     $5,076     $ 13,579
  Market Value.............................    2,642     1,398     1,724     1,599     1,207      5,054       13,624
  Pre-tax yield (3)........................     6.09%     6.49%     6.15%     6.58%     6.70%      7.08%        6.67%
</TABLE>
 
(1) With respect to the ABS, MBS and  CMO portfolio of the Company, a 100  basis
    point  increase  in  interest  rates would  decrease  the  duration  of such
    portfolio from 3.6  to 3.4;  a 100 basis  point decrease  in interest  rates
    would  increase  the  duration  of  such  portfolio  from  3.6  to  3.7. The
    maturities noted in this table  would be significantly impacted if  interest
    rates  were to decrease by 100 basis  points or increase by 300 basis points
    from December 31, 1996 levels.
(2) Variable rate securities  are instruments  for which the  coupon rates  move
    directly with or based upon an index rate. Includes interest-only securities
    and  inverse floaters, which represent less  than 1% and 2.5%, respectively,
    of the Company's invested assets.  Interest-only securities, for which  cost
    approximates  market, have an average life of  5.1 years and earn an average
    yield of 13.9%. Inverse floaters,  for which cost approximates market,  have
    an  average life of  4.8 years and  earn an average  yield of 6.48%. Average
    yields are based upon estimated cash flows using prepayment speeds  reported
    in broker consensus data.
(3) Pre-tax  yield does  not reflect  yields on  derivative instruments although
    derivative adjustments are  included in  fixed maturity  amortized cost  and
    market value.
 
    ASSET-LIABILITY MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES
 
    Derivatives  play  an  important  role  in  facilitating  the  management of
interest  rate  risk,  creating   opportunities  to  fund  product   obligations
efficiently,  hedge against risks  that affect the  value of certain liabilities
and  adjusting  broad  investment  risk  characteristics  as  a  result  of  any
significant  changes in market risks. As an end user of derivatives, the Company
uses a  variety of  derivatives, including  swaps, caps,  floors, forwards,  and
exchange-traded  financial futures  and options, in  order to  hedge exposure to
price, foreign currency  and/ or  interest rate risk  on anticipated  investment
purchases   or  existing  assets  and   liabilities.  The  notional  amounts  of
derivatives contracts represent the basis upon which pay and receive amounts are
calculated and  are not  reflective of  credit risk  for derivatives  contracts.
Credit risk for derivatives contracts is limited to the amounts calculated to be
due  to the Company on such contracts. The Company believes it maintains prudent
policies regarding  the financial  stability and  credit standing  of its  major
counterparties  and typically requires credit  enhancement provisions to further
limit its  credit  risk.  Many  of these  derivatives  contracts  are  bilateral
agreements  that  are  not  assignable  without  the  consent  of  the  relevant
counterparty. Notional amounts pertaining  to derivatives financial  instruments
of  the Company totaled $9.9 billion at December 31, 1996 ($7.4 billion of which
related to life insurance investments and $2.5 billion of which related to  life
insurance
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
liabilities). Management believes that the use of derivatives allows the Company
to sell more innovative products, capitalize on market opportunities and execute
a  more  flexible investment  strategy for  its  general account  portfolio. The
strategies described below are used by the Company to manage the  aforementioned
risks associated with its obligations.
 
  ANTICIPATORY HEDGING
 
    For  certain liabilities,  the Company commits  to the price  of the product
prior to receipt  of the associated  premium or deposit.  The Company  routinely
executes anticipatory hedges to offset the impact of any changes in asset prices
arising from interest rate changes pending the receipt of the premium or deposit
payment  and the resulting purchase  of an asset. These  hedges involve taking a
long position in interest  rate futures or entering  into an interest rate  swap
with  duration  characteristics  equivalent to  the  associated  liabilities and
anticipated  investments.   The  notional   amount  of   derivatives  used   for
anticipatory  hedges totaled $132 million and  $238 million at December 31, 1996
and 1995, respectively.
 
  LIABILITY HEDGING
 
    Several products obligate  the Company to  credit a return  to the  contract
holder  which is indexed  to a market  rate. In order  to hedge risks associated
with these products, the  Company typically enters into  interest rate swaps  to
convert the contract rate into a rate that trades in a more liquid and efficient
market.  This hedging strategy  enables the Company  to customize contract terms
and  conditions   to   customer   objectives   and   satisfies   the   Company's
asset/liability  matching policy. Additionally, interest  rate swaps are used to
convert certain fixed contract rates into floating rates, thereby allowing  them
to be appropriately matched against floating rate assets. The notional amount of
derivatives  used for liability hedging totaled $2.5 billion and $1.7 billion at
December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively.
 
  ASSET HEDGING
 
    To  meet  the  various  policyholder  obligations  and  to  provide  prudent
investment  risk diversification, the Company may combine two or more derivative
financial instruments to achieve the  investment characteristics that match  the
associated  liability.  The  use  of  derivatives  in  this  regard  effectively
transfers unwanted investment risks  or attributes to  others. The selection  of
the  appropriate derivatives depends  on the investment  risk, the liquidity and
efficiency of  the  market and  the  asset and  liability  characteristics.  The
notional  amount  of  asset hedges  totaled  $2.1  billion and  $3.0  billion at
December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively.
 
  PORTFOLIO HEDGING
 
    The  Company  periodically  compares  the  duration  and  convexity  of  its
portfolios  of  assets  to  their  corresponding  liabilities  and  enters  into
portfolio hedges to reduce certain  differences to acceptable levels.  Portfolio
hedges  reduce  the  mismatch  between assets  and  liabilities  and  offset the
potential cash flow impact caused by interest rate changes. The notional  amount
of  portfolio hedges totaled $5.2 billion and  $3.9 billion at December 31, 1996
and 1995, respectively.
 
    The  Company  is   committed  to  maintaining   effective  risk   management
discipline.  Derivatives used by  the Company must  support at least  one of the
following objectives: to manage  the risk arising from  price, interest rate  or
foreign  currency  volatility, to  manage  liquidity or  to  control transaction
costs. The Company has established credit limits, diversification standards  and
review   procedures  for   all  credit   risk,  whether   borrower,  issuer,  or
counterparty.
 
    For a discussion of (i) the  investments of the Company segregated by  major
category,  (ii) the types of  derivatives related to the  type of investment and
their respective notional amounts and (iii) the accounting policies utilized  by
the  Company  for derivative  financial instruments,  see Notes  to Consolidated
Financial Statements.
 
  INSURANCE LIABILITY CHARACTERISTICS
 
    Insurance liabilities, other than non-guaranteed separate accounts,  totaled
$28.5  billion (net of ceded reinsurance) at  December 31, 1996, and were backed
by $38  billion  in  total  assets (including  investments  of  $27.8  billion).
Matching  of  the  duration  of  the  investments  with  respective policyholder
obligations is an explicit objective  of the Company's management strategy.  The
Company's  insurance policy  liabilities, along with  estimated duration periods
based upon internal actuarial assumptions, can be summarized based on investment
needs in the five categories described below at December 31, 1996.
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
                          ESTIMATED DURATION YEARS (1)
                                 (IN BILLIONS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     BALANCE AT
                                                    DECEMBER 31,                                                        OVER
DESCRIPTION                                             1996         LESS THAN 1 YEAR     1-5 YEARS    6-10 YEARS     10 YEARS
- -------------------------------------------------  ---------------  -------------------  -----------  -------------  -----------
<S>                                                <C>              <C>                  <C>          <C>            <C>
Fixed rate asset accumulation vehicles...........     $    13.8          $     1.9        $     8.2     $     3.7     $      --
Indexed asset accumulation vehicles..............            .2                 .2               --            --            --
Interest credited asset accumulation vehicles....          13.6                4.2              5.1           3.7            .6
Long-term payout liabilities.....................            .9                 --               .1            .1            .7
Short-term payout liabilities....................            --                 --               --            --            --
                                                          -----                ---            -----           ---           ---
  Total..........................................     $    28.5          $     6.3        $    13.4     $     7.5     $     1.3
                                                          -----                ---            -----           ---           ---
                                                          -----                ---            -----           ---           ---
</TABLE>
 
(1) The duration of liabilities reflects  management's assessment of the  market
    price  sensitivity of the  liabilities to changes  in market interest rates,
    and is not necessarily reflective  of the projected liabilities' cash  flows
    under any specific scenario.
 
  FIXED RATE ASSET ACCUMULATION VEHICLES
 
    Products  in this  category require the  Company to  pay a fixed  rate for a
certain period of time. The cash  flows are not interest rate sensitive  because
the products are written with an MVA feature and the liabilities have protection
against  the early  withdrawal of funds  through surrender  charges. The primary
risk associated with these products is that the spread between investment return
and credited rate may not be  sufficient to earn the Company's targeted  return.
Product examples include fixed rate annuities with an MVA feature and fixed rate
guaranteed  investment contracts.  Contract duration  is reflected  above and is
dependent on the policyholder's choice of guarantee period. The weighted average
credited policyholder  rate  for these  policyholder  liabilities was  6.71%  at
December 31, 1996.
 
  INDEXED ASSET ACCUMULATION VEHICLES
 
    Products  in this category are similar  to the fixed rate asset accumulation
vehicles, but  require the  Company  to pay  a rate  that  is determined  by  an
external index. The amount and/or timing of cash flows will therefore vary based
on  the  level of  the particular  index.  The primary  risks inherent  in these
products are similar  to the  fixed rate  asset accumulation  vehicles, with  an
additional  risk that changes  in the index  may adversely affect profitability.
Product  examples  include  indexed-guaranteed  investment  contracts  with   an
estimated  duration of up to  two years. The weighted  average credited rate for
these contracts was 5.78% at December 31, 1996.
 
  INTEREST CREDITED ASSET ACCUMULATION VEHICLES
 
    Products in  this  category credit  interest  to policyholders,  subject  to
market  conditions and minimum  guarantees. Policyholders may  surrender at book
value but are subject  to surrender charges for  an initial period. The  primary
risks  vary  depending  on the  degree  of  insurance element  contained  in the
product. Product  examples  include universal  life  contracts and  the  general
account  portion of the Company's  variable annuity products. Liability duration
is short to intermediate-term and is  reflected in the table above. The  average
credited  rate for these  liabilities was 5.52% at  December 31, 1996, excluding
policy loans.
 
  LONG-TERM PAYOUT LIABILITIES
 
    Products  in  this  category  are  long-term  in  nature  and  may   contain
significant  actuarial (including  mortality and  morbidity) pricing  risks. The
cash flows are  not interest  sensitive, but  do vary  based on  the timing  and
amount of benefit payments. The primary risks associated with these products are
that  the benefits will exceed expected  actuarial pricing and/or the investment
return  will  be  lower  than  assumed  in  pricing.  Product  examples  include
structured  settlement contracts,  on-benefit annuities (i.e.,  the annuitant is
currently  receiving  benefits  thereon)  and  long-term  disability  contracts.
Contract  duration is generally six  to ten years but,  at times, exceeds thirty
years. Policy liabilities under these contracts are not interest rate sensitive.
 
  SHORT-TERM PAYOUT LIABILITIES
 
    These liabilities are short-term in nature with a duration of less than  one
year.  The primary  risks associated with  these products are  determined by the
non-investment contingencies such  as mortality  or morbidity.  Liquidity is  of
greater  concern  than for  the long-term  payout liabilities.  Products include
individual and group term life insurance contracts.
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
  SEPARATE ACCOUNT PRODUCTS
 
    The Company's separate accounts reflect  two categories of risk  assumption:
non-guaranteed separate accounts totaling $39.4 billion as of December 31, 1996,
wherein  the policyholder assumes substantially all  of the risk and reward, and
guaranteed separate accounts  totaling $10.3  billion as of  December 31,  1996,
wherein  the Company contractually guarantees either a minimum return or account
value to  the policyholder.  The  investment strategy  followed varies  by  fund
choice,  as outlined in the applicable  fund prospectus or separate account plan
of operations. Non-guaranteed products  include variable annuities and  variable
life  contracts.  The  funds  underlying  such  contracts  are  managed  by  the
investment staff of The  Hartford and a variety  of independent money  managers,
including  Wellington Management  Company, LLP, Putnam  Financial Services, Inc.
and  Dean  Witter  InterCapital,  Inc.  Guaranteed  separate  account   products
primarily  consist  of  modified  guaranteed  individual  annuity  and  modified
guaranteed life insurance, and  generally include MVA  features to mitigate  the
disintermediation  risk  upon surrenders.  Virtually all  of  the assets  in the
guaranteed separate accounts are fixed  maturity securities and, as of  December
31,  1996, $10.2 billion, or approximately 99%, of the fixed maturity securities
portfolio within  the  guaranteed separate  accounts  were investment  grade  or
better.  Additional investment  risk is  hedged using  a variety  of derivatives
which totaled  $0.1 billion  in  carrying value  and  $2.4 billion  in  notional
amounts at December 31, 1996.
 
G. COMPETITION
 
    The  Company is engaged in a business  that is highly competitive due to the
large number of  stock and mutual  life insurance companies  and other  entities
marketing  insurance products. There are  approximately 2,000 stock, mutual, and
other types of  insurers in the  life insurance business  in the United  States.
According  to A.M. Best,  Hartford Life is the  eighth largest consolidated life
insurance company in the United States based on statutory admitted assets as  of
December 31, 1995. As of December 31, 1996, A.M. Best assigned Hartford Life its
second highest ranking classification, A+.
 
H. EMPLOYEES
 
    As  of January 27,  1997, the Company and  HLA have a  total of 3,669 direct
employees,  2,109  of  whom  are  employed  at  the  home  office  in  Simsbury,
Connecticut, and 1,560 of whom are employed at various branch offices throughout
the United States, Canada and elsewhere.
 
I. PROPERTIES
 
    The Company occupies office space leased from a third party by Hartford Fire
Insurance  Company ("Hartford  Fire"), an  indirect subsidiary  of The Hartford.
Expenses associated with these  offices are allocated on  a direct and  indirect
basis to Hartford Life and its subsidiaries by Hartford Fire.
 
J. REGULATION
 
    The  insurance business of the Company is subject to comprehensive state and
federal regulation and supervision throughout the United States. The purpose  of
such regulation is primarily to provide safeguards for policyholders rather than
to  protect  the  interests  of  the stockholders.  The  laws  of  various state
jurisdictions establish supervisory  agencies with  broad administrative  powers
with  respect to, among other things, licensing to transact business, admittance
of assets, regulating premium rates,  approving policy forms, regulating  unfair
trade  and  claims  practices, establishing  reserve  requirements  and solvency
standards, fixing  maximum interest  rates on  life insurance  policy loans  and
minimum   rates  for  accumulation  of  surrender  values,  restricting  certain
transactions between affiliates and regulating the type, amount and valuation of
investments permitted. State insurance  regulators and the National  Association
of  Insurance Commissioners  ("NAIC") continually  re-examine existing  laws and
regulations.
 
    The NAIC has established  solvency laws that  relate an insurance  company's
capital  requirements to  the risks  inherent in  its overall  operations. These
rules are known  as risk based  capital ("RBC").  As of December  31, 1996,  the
Company's RBC ratio was in excess of 200% of its RBC.
 
    Each  insurance company  is required  to file  detailed annual  reports with
supervisory agencies in each of the jurisdictions in which it does business  and
its  operations  and accounts  are subject  to examination  by such  agencies at
regular intervals. The  Company prepares its  statutory financial statements  in
accordance  with accounting  practices prescribed or  permitted by  the State of
Connecticut Insurance  Department.  Prescribed  statutory  accounting  practices
include  publications  of the  NAIC,  as well  as  state laws,  regulations, and
general
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
administrative rules.  In accordance  with the  insurance laws  and  regulations
under  which the  Company operates, it  is obligated  to carry on  its books, as
liabilities, actuarially  determined reserves  to meet  its obligations  on  its
outstanding   life  insurance  contracts  and   universal  life  and  investment
contracts. Reserves  for life  insurance contracts  are based  on mortality  and
morbidity tables in general use in the United States, modified to reflect actual
experience.  These reserves  are computed at  amounts that,  with additions from
premiums to be received, and with interest on such reserves compounded  annually
at  certain assumed rates, are  expected to be sufficient  to meet the Company's
policy obligations at their  maturities or in the  event of an insured's  death.
Reserves  for universal life insurance  and investment products represent policy
account balances  before  applicable  surrender  charges.  In  the  accompanying
consolidated  financial statements, these life insurance reserves are determined
in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, which may vary from
statutory requirements.
 
    The Health Insurance Portability and  Accountability Act of 1996 ("the  HIPA
Act  of 1996") phases  out the deductibility  of interest on  policy loans under
COLI by 1998, thus eliminating all future sales of leveraged COLI. The Company's
leveraged COLI product has been an important contributor to its profitability in
recent years and will continue to contribute to the profitability of the Company
(although such contribution will be reduced in the future due to the effects  of
this  legislation). As a result of the  elimination of leveraged COLI sales, net
income contributed by  COLI may be  lower in the  future (particularly 1999  and
later years).
 
                                 LEGAL OPINIONS
 
    The validity of the the Contract described in this Prospectus will be passed
upon  for Hartford by  Lynda Godkin, Senior Vice  President, General Counsel and
Corporate Secretary of Hartford.
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
    The  audited  consolidated  financial  statements  and  financial  statement
schedules  included  in  this  Prospectus  and  elsewhere  in  the  registration
statement  have  been  audited  by  Arthur  Andersen  LLP,  independent   public
accountants, as indicated in their report with respect thereto, and are included
herein  in reliance upon  the authority of  said firm as  experts in giving said
report.  Reference  is  made  to  said  report  on  the  consolidated  financial
statements  of Hartford  Life Insurance  Company, which  includes an explanatory
paragraph with respect to the change in method of accounting for debt and equity
securities as  of  January  1,  1994,  as  discussed  in  Note  2  of  Notes  to
Consolidated  Financial  Statements. The  principal  business address  of Arthur
Andersen LLP is One Financial Plaza, Hartford, Connecticut 06103.
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
                                   APPENDIX A
                          MARKET VALUE LUMP SUM OPTION
 
    If A is greater than B, the Market Value Adjustment factor equals 1.
 
    If  B  is greater  than A,  the Market  Value Adjustment  factor equals  1 -
(6(B-A))
 
    WHERE:
 
      A = The weighted average interest rate (expressed as a decimal, e.g., 1% =
      .01) being credited  under the General  Account Option as  of the date  of
      termination.
 
      B  = The  average yield (expressed  as a decimal,  e.g. 1% =  .01) for the
      month prior  to the  date of  termination  of the  higher of  the  Salomon
      Brothers  weekly  index of  new  Long Term  Public  Utilities rated  Aa by
      Moody's Investors Service and the Salomon Brothers weekly Index of Current
      Coupon 30 year Federal National Mortgage Association Securities, or  their
      equivalents.
 
BOOK VALUE SPREAD OPTION
 
    Interest  to be credited on unpaid balance ("i") equals (A - 2(B-A)) - .005,
where A and B are defined as above.
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <C>
Examples of Contract Termination:              (Assuming a 5% Contingent Deferred Sales
                                               Charge, and no Policy Fees or Premium Taxes
                                               are applicable)
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       INTEREST RATE CREDITED TO         ACTIVE LIFE FUND ATTRIBUTABLE
                                                        CONTRIBUTIONS DEPOSITED          TO CONTRIBUTIONS DEPOSITED IN
                                                           IN THE GIVEN YEAR                     THE GIVEN YEAR
                                                   ---------------------------------  ------------------------------------
<S>                                                <C>                                <C>
1992                                                                6.00%                        $      300,000
1993                                                                6.50%                               600,000
1994                                                                7.00%                               700,000
                                                                     ---                            -----------
TOTAL                                                               6.63%*                       $    1,600,000
</TABLE>
 
      *Total = the weighted average interest rate being credited on the date  of
      termination ("A"). It is calculated as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                           <C>
300,000 x .06 + 600,000 x .065 + 700,000 x
 .07
300,000 + 600,000 + 700,000                    = .0663 = 6.63%
</TABLE>
 
    At  termination the book value of the  General Account Option portion of the
Active Life Fund would be $1,600,000. This amount is reduced by Contingent Sales
Charges of  5%, or  $80,000. The  remaining $1,520,000  would be  payable  under
either  Option 1 (Book Value  Spread Option) or Option  2 (Market Value Lump Sum
Option.)
 
EXAMPLE 1
 
    B = .09
 
    If the Book Value Spread Option is selected, then the Book Value Spread rate
of interest would equal (.0663 -  2 (.09 - .0663)) -  .005 = .0139 or 1.39%  and
the Contract Owner would receive six (6) annual payments (beginning immediately)
of $262,153.80.
 
    If  the Market  Value Lump  Sum Option  is selected,  then the  Market Value
Factor is 1  - (6(.09 -  .0663)) = .8578  and the payout  would be $1,520,000  x
 .8578 = $1,303,856.
 
EXAMPLE 2
 
    B = .07
 
    If the Book Value Spread Option is selected, then the Book Value Spread rate
of interest would equal 7% (the maximum value of i) and the Contract Owner would
receive six (6) annual payments (beginning immediately) of $298,027.68.
 
    If  the Market  Value Lump  Sum Option  is selected,  then the  Market Value
factor would be 1 and the payment would be $1,520,000.
 
    The assessment of Policy Fees, if any, will reduce the amount of the payment
on contract termination.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
                  THIS PAGE HAS BEEN LEFT BLANK INTENTIONALLY
<PAGE>
   
           INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS, SCHEDULES, AND
                          INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                                 <C>
Report of Management..............................................................           F-1
Report of Independent Public Accountants..........................................           F-2
Consolidated Statements of Income for the three years ended December 31, 1996.....           F-3
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 1996 and 1995......................           F-4
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders Equity for the three years ended
 December 31, 1996................................................................           F-5
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the three years ended December 31,
 1996.............................................................................           F-6
                                                                                        F-7 thru
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements........................................          F-21
Schedule I -- Summary of Investments -- Other than Investments in Affiliates as of
 December 31, 1996................................................................           S-1
Schedule III -- Supplementary Insurance Information for the three years ended
 December 31, 1996................................................................           S-2
Schedule IV -- Reinsurance for the three years ended December 31, 1996............           S-3
Interim Financial Statements......................................................           I-1
Management's Narrative Analysis of Results of Operations..........................           I-4
Notes to Interim Financial Statements.............................................           I-6
</TABLE>
    
 
    All schedules  not listed  above  have been  omitted  because they  are  not
applicable  or the amounts are insignificant,  immaterial or the information has
been otherwise supplied in the financial statements or notes thereto.
<PAGE>
                  THIS PAGE HAS BEEN LEFT BLANK INTENTIONALLY
<PAGE>
                              REPORT OF MANAGEMENT
 
    The management of  Hartford Life  Insurance Company  and subsidiaries  ("the
Company")  is responsible for  the preparation and  integrity of the information
contained in  the  accompanying  consolidated  financial  statements  and  other
sections  of  the  Annual  Report.  The  consolidated  financial  statements are
prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and, where
necessary, include amounts that are based on management's informed judgments and
estimates. Management  believes these  statements present  fairly the  Company's
financial  position and results  of operations, and,  that any other information
contained in the Annual Report is consistent with the financial statements.
 
    Management has made  available the Company's  financial records and  related
data  to Arthur Andersen LLP, independent  public accountants, in order for them
to perform an audit  of the Company's  consolidated financial statements.  Their
report appears on Page F-2.
 
    An  essential element in meeting  management's financial responsibilities is
the Company's  system  of  internal  controls.  These  controls,  which  include
accounting  controls and the internal auditing  program, are designed to provide
reasonable assurance that assets are safeguarded, and transactions are  properly
authorized,  executed  and  recorded.  The controls,  which  are  documented and
communicated to employees in the form  of written codes of conduct and  policies
and  procedures,  provide  for  the  careful  selection  of  personnel  and  for
appropriate division  of  responsibility. Management  continually  monitors  for
compliance,  while  the  Company's internal  auditors  independently  assess the
effectiveness of the  controls and make  recommendations for improvement.  Also,
Arthur  Andersen LLP  took into consideration  the Company's  system of internal
controls in determining the nature, timing and extent of its audit tests.
 
    Another important element is management's recognition of its  responsibility
for  fostering a  strong, ethical climate,  thereby ensuring  that the Company's
affairs are  transacted  according to  the  highest standards  of  personal  and
professional conduct. The Company has a long-standing reputation of integrity in
business  conduct and utilizes communication and education to create and fortify
a strong compliance culture.
 
    The Audit Committee of the Board  of Directors of The Hartford, composed  of
non-employee  directors,  meets  periodically  with  the  external  and internal
auditors to  evaluate  the  effectiveness  of the  work  performed  by  them  in
discharging  their respective responsibilities and  to ensure their independence
and free access to the Committee.
 
                                      F-1
<PAGE>
                    REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
 
To Hartford Life Insurance Company and Subsidiaries:
 
    We have audited  the accompanying  consolidated balance  sheets of  Hartford
Life Insurance Company (a Connecticut corporation and wholly-owned subsidiary of
Hartford  Life and Accident  Insurance Company) and  subsidiaries as of December
31,  1996  and  1995,  and  the  related  consolidated  statements  of   income,
stockholder's  equity and cash flows  for each of the  three years in the period
ended December  31,  1996.  These  consolidated  financial  statements  and  the
schedules  referred to below  are the responsibility  of Hartford Life Insurance
Company's management.  Our responsibility  is  to express  an opinion  on  these
consolidated financial statements and schedules based on our audits.
 
    We  conducted  our audits  in  accordance with  generally  accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to  obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also  includes
assessing  the  accounting principles  used  and significant  estimates  made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement  presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
    In  our  opinion, the  consolidated financial  statements referred  to above
present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated financial position of
Hartford Life Insurance  Company and subsidiaries  as of December  31, 1996  and
1995,  and the results of their operations and  their cash flows for each of the
three years in the period ended  December 31, 1996 in conformity with  generally
accepted accounting principles.
 
    As  discussed  in  Note 2  of  Notes to  Consolidated  Financial Statements,
Hartford Life Insurance Company adopted a new accounting standard promulgated by
the Financial Accounting Standards Board, changing its method of accounting,  as
of January 1, 1994, for debt and equity securities.
 
    Our  audits were  made for the  purpose of  forming an opinion  on the basic
consolidated financial statements taken as a whole. The schedules listed in  the
Index  to  Consolidated Financial  Statements  and Schedules  are  presented for
purposes of complying with  the Securities and  Exchange Commission's rules  and
are  not a required  part of the basic  consolidated financial statements. These
schedules have been subjected to the  auditing procedures applied in the  audits
of the basic consolidated financial statements and, in our opinion, fairly state
in  all material respects the financial data required to be set forth therein in
relation to the basic consolidated financial statements taken as a whole.
 
                                             ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP
 
Hartford, Connecticut
February 10, 1997
 
                                      F-2
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                       CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                           -------------------------------
                                                                                             1996       1995       1994
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                        <C>        <C>        <C>
REVENUES
Premiums and other considerations........................................................  $   1,705  $   1,487  $   1,100
Net investment income....................................................................      1,397      1,328      1,292
Net realized capital (losses) gains......................................................       (213)       (11)         7
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
    Total revenues.......................................................................      2,889      2,804      2,399
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
BENEFITS, CLAIMS AND EXPENSES
Benefits, claims and claim adjustment expenses...........................................      1,535      1,422      1,405
Amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs........................................        234        199        145
Dividends to policyholders...............................................................        635        675        419
Other insurance expenses.................................................................        427        317        227
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
    Total benefits, claims and expenses..................................................      2,831      2,613      2,196
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
Income before income tax expense.........................................................         58        191        203
Income tax expense.......................................................................         20         62         65
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
Net income...............................................................................  $      38  $     129  $     138
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
       The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an
                     integral part of the above statements.
 
                                      F-3
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                      (IN MILLIONS EXCEPT FOR SHARE DATA)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   AS OF DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                                ------------------------
                                                                                                   1996         1995
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                                             <C>          <C>
                                            ASSETS
Investments
Fixed maturities, available for sale, at fair value (amortized cost $13,579 and $14,440)......  $    13,624  $    14,400
Equity securities, available for sale, at fair value..........................................          119           63
Policy loans, at outstanding balance..........................................................        3,836        3,381
Mortgage loans, at outstanding balance........................................................            2          265
Other investments, at cost....................................................................           54          156
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
    Total investments.........................................................................       17,635       18,265
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
Cash..........................................................................................           43           46
Premiums and amounts receivable...............................................................          137          165
Accrued investment income.....................................................................          407          394
Reinsurance recoverable.......................................................................        6,066        6,221
Deferred policy acquisition costs.............................................................        2,760        2,188
Deferred income tax...........................................................................          474          420
Other assets..................................................................................          357          234
Separate account assets.......................................................................       49,690       36,264
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
    Total assets..............................................................................  $    77,569  $    64,197
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                         LIABILITIES
Future policy benefits........................................................................  $     2,281  $     2,373
Other policyholder funds......................................................................       22,134       22,598
Other liabilities.............................................................................        1,572        1,233
Separate account liabilities..................................................................       49,690       36,264
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
    Total liabilities.........................................................................       75,677       62,468
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                     STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
Common stock, $5,690 par value, 1,000 shares authorized, issued and outstanding...............            6            6
Capital surplus...............................................................................        1,045        1,007
Net unrealized capital gain (loss) on investments, net of tax.................................           30          (57)
Retained earnings.............................................................................          811          773
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
    Total stockholder's equity................................................................        1,892        1,729
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
    Total liabilities and stockholder's equity................................................  $    77,569  $    64,197
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                                                                                -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
       The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an
                     integral part of the above statements.
 
                                      F-4
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  NET UNREALIZED
                                                                                    GAIN (LOSS)
                                                                                        ON                           TOTAL
                                                                       CAPITAL      INVESTMENTS      RETAINED    STOCKHOLDER'S
                                                       COMMON STOCK    SURPLUS      NET OF TAX       EARNINGS        EQUITY
                                                       -------------  ---------  -----------------  -----------  --------------
<S>                                                    <C>            <C>        <C>                <C>          <C>
Balance, December 31, 1993...........................    $       6    $     676      $      (5)      $     516     $    1,193
  Net income.........................................           --           --             --             138            138
  Dividends declared on common stock.................           --           --             --             (10)           (10)
  Capital contribution...............................           --          150             --              --            150
  Change in net unrealized capital loss on
   investments, net of tax (1).......................           --           --           (649)             --           (649)
                                                                --
                                                                      ---------         ------           -----        -------
Balance, December 31, 1994...........................            6          826           (654)            644            822
  Net income.........................................           --           --             --             129            129
  Capital contribution...............................           --          181             --              --            181
  Change in net unrealized capital gain on
   investments, net of tax...........................           --           --            597              --            597
                                                                --
                                                                      ---------         ------           -----        -------
Balance, December 31, 1995...........................            6        1,007            (57)            773          1,729
  Net income.........................................           --           --             --              38             38
  Capital contribution...............................           --           38             --              --             38
  Change in net unrealized capital gain on
   investments, net of tax...........................           --           --             87              --             87
                                                                --
                                                                      ---------         ------           -----        -------
Balance, December 31, 1996...........................    $       6    $   1,045      $      30       $     811     $    1,892
                                                                --
                                                                --
                                                                      ---------         ------           -----        -------
                                                                      ---------         ------           -----        -------
</TABLE>
 
- ---------
(1) The 1994 change in net unrealized  capital loss on investments, net of  tax,
    includes  a gain of $91 due to the  adoption of SFAS No. 115 as discussed in
    Note 2(b) of Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
 
       The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an
                     integral part of the above statements.
 
                                      F-5
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                              FOR THE YEAR ENDED
                                                                                                 DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                        -------------------------------
                                                                                          1996       1995       1994
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                     <C>        <C>        <C>
OPERATING ACTIVITIES
  Net income..........................................................................  $      38  $     129  $     138
  Adjustments to net income:
  Net realized capital losses (gains) on sale of investments..........................        213         11         (7)
  Net amortization of premium on fixed maturities.....................................         14         21         41
  Increase in deferred income taxes...................................................       (102)      (172)      (128)
  Increase in deferred policy acquisition costs.......................................       (572)      (379)      (441)
  Decrease (increase) in premiums and amounts receivable..............................         10        (81)        10
  Increase in accrued investment income...............................................        (13)       (16)      (106)
  (Increase) decrease in other assets.................................................       (132)      (177)       101
  Decrease (increase) in reinsurance recoverable......................................        179        (35)        75
  (Decrease) increase in liability for future policy benefits.........................        (92)       483        224
  Increase in other liabilities.......................................................        477        281        191
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
    Cash provided by operating activities.............................................         20         65         98
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Purchases of fixed maturity investments.............................................     (5,747)    (6,228)    (9,127)
  Sales of fixed maturity investments.................................................      3,459      4,845      5,713
  Maturities and principal paydowns of fixed maturity investments.....................      2,693      1,741      1,931
  Net purchase of other investments...................................................       (107)      (871)    (1,338)
  Net sales (purchases) of short-term investments.....................................         84        (24)       135
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
    Cash provided by (used for) investing activities..................................        382       (537)    (2,686)
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Capital contribution................................................................         38         --        150
  Dividends paid......................................................................         --         --        (10)
  Net (disbursements for) receipts from investment and universal life-type contracts
   (charged from) credited to policyholder accounts...................................       (443)       498      2,467
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
    Cash (used for) provided by financing activities..................................       (405)       498      2,607
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
  Net(decrease) increase in cash......................................................         (3)        26         19
  Cash -- beginning of year...........................................................         46         20          1
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
  Cash -- end of year.................................................................  $      43  $      46  $      20
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                        ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
       The accompanying Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are an
                     integral part of the above statements.
 
                                      F-6
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
 
1.  ORGANIZATION AND DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS
    These consolidated  financial  statements include  Hartford  Life  Insurance
Company and its wholly-owned subsidiaries (the "Company"), ITT Hartford Life and
Annuity   Insurance  Company   ("ILA")  and  ITT   Hartford  International  Life
Reassurance Corporation  ("HLRe"), formerly  American Skandia  Life  Reinsurance
Corporation.  The  Company is  a wholly-owned  subsidiary  of Hartford  Life and
Accident Insurance Company ("HLA"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hartford  Life,
Inc.  ("Hartford Life"), a direct subsidiary  of Hartford Accident and Indemnity
Company, an indirect subsidiary  of ITT Hartford  Group, Inc. ("The  Hartford").
Hartford  Life was formed on  December 13, 1996 and  capitalized on December 16,
1996 with  the contribution  of all  the  outstanding common  stock of  HLA.  On
February 10, 1997, The Hartford, the ultimate parent of Hartford Life, announced
its  intention to sell up  to 20% of Hartford Life  during the second quarter of
1997. Management believes that this transaction will not have a material  impact
on the operations of the Company (See Note 11).
 
    On  December  19,  1995,  ITT Industries,  Inc.  (formerly  ITT Corporation)
("ITT") distributed all the outstanding shares of capital stock of The  Hartford
to  ITT stockholders of record  on such date (the  transactions relating to such
distribution are referred to herein as the  "ITT Spin-off"). As a result of  the
ITT Spin-off, The Hartford became an independent, publicly traded company.
 
    The  Company is  a leading  insurance and  financial services  company which
provides: (a)  investment products  such as  individual variable  annuities  and
fixed  market value adjusted annuities,  deferred compensation plan services and
mutual funds for  savings and retirement  needs; (b) life  insurance for  income
protection  and  estate planning;  and (c)  employee  benefits products  such as
corporate owned life insurance.
 
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 (A) BASIS OF PRESENTATION
 
    These financial  statements  present  the  financial  position,  results  of
operations  and  cash  flows  of  the  Company,  and  all  material intercompany
transactions and  balances  between  Hartford Life  Insurance  Company  and  its
subsidiaries  have been  eliminated. The  consolidated financial  statements are
prepared on a  basis of  generally accepted accounting  principles which  differ
materially  from  the  statutory  accounting  prescribed  by  various  insurance
regulatory authorities.
 
    The preparation  of  financial  statements,  in  conformity  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles,  requires  management  to  make  estimates and
assumptions that  affect the  reported  amounts of  assets and  liabilities  and
disclosure  of contingent  assets and liabilities  at the date  of the financial
statements and  the  reported  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during  the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
 (B) CHANGES IN ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES
 
    On  November 14,  1996, the  Emerging Issues  Task Force  ("EITF") reached a
consensus on Issue No. 96-12, "Recognition of Interest Income and Balance  Sheet
Classification  of Structured  Notes". This  Issue requires  companies to record
income on certain structured securities on a retrospective interest method.  The
Company adopted EITF No. 96-12 for structured securities acquired after November
14,  1996. Adoption  of EITF  No. 96-12 did  not have  a material  effect on the
Company's financial condition or results of operations.
 
    In June  1996,  the Financial  Accounting  Standards Board  ("FASB")  issued
Statement  of Financial Accounting  Standards ("SFAS") No.  125, "Accounting for
Transfers and Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishment of  Liabilities".
This  statement established criteria for  determining whether transferred assets
should be  accounted  for  as  sales or  secured  borrowings.  Subsequently,  in
December  1996, the  FASB issued  SFAS No. 127,  "Deferral of  Effective Date of
Certain Provisions of FASB Statement No.  125", which defers the effective  date
of  certain provisions of SFAS No. 125 for one year. Adoption of SFAS No. 125 is
not expected to have a material  effect on the Company's financial condition  or
results of operations.
 
    In  October 1995, the FASB issued  SFAS No. 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based
Compensation", which is  effective in 1996.  As permitted by  SFAS No. 123,  the
Company  continues to measure compensation costs  of employee stock option plans
(relating to options on common stock of The Hartford) using the intrinsic  value
method  prescribed by Accounting Principles Board Opinion No. 25. As of February
10, 1997, the Company
 
                                      F-7
<PAGE>
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
had not adopted  an employee stock  compensation plan. Certain  officers of  the
Company  participate  in The  Hartford's stock  option plan.  Compensation costs
allocated by The  Hartford to  the Company, as  well as  pro forma  compensation
costs  as  determined under  SFAS No.  123,  were immaterial  to the  results of
operations for 1996 and 1995.
 
    Effective January 1, 1994, the Company adopted SFAS No. 115, "Accounting for
Certain Investments in Debt and  Equity Securities". The new standard  requires,
among  other  things,  that  securities  be  classified  as  "held-to-maturity",
"available-for-sale" or "trading" based on the Company's intentions with respect
to the ultimate  disposition of  the security and  its ability  to effect  those
intentions.  The classification  determines the  appropriate accounting carrying
value (cost basis or  fair value) and,  in the case of  fair value, whether  the
fair  value  difference  from cost,  net  of tax,  impacts  stockholder's equity
directly or is reflected in  the Consolidated Statements of Income.  Investments
in  equity securities had  previously been and  continue to be  recorded at fair
value with the corresponding after-tax impact included in stockholder's  equity.
Under  SFAS No. 115, the Company's  fixed maturity investments are classified as
"available-for-sale" and, accordingly, these  investments are reflected at  fair
value  with the  corresponding impact included  as a  component of stockholder's
equity designated as "Net unrealized capital gain (loss) on investments, net  of
tax."  As with the underlying investment  security, unrealized capital gains and
losses on derivative  financial instruments  are considered  in determining  the
fair  value  of  the portfolios.  The  impact  of adoption  was  an  increase to
stockholder's equity of $91million. The  Company's cash flows were not  impacted
by this change in accounting principle.
 
 (C) REVENUE RECOGNITION
 
    Revenues  for  universal life  policies and  investment products  consist of
policy charges for the  cost of insurance,  policy administration and  surrender
charges  assessed to policy account balances and are recognized in the period in
which services are  provided. Premiums for  traditional life insurance  policies
are recognized as revenues when they are due from policyholders.
 
 (D) FUTURE POLICY BENEFITS AND OTHER POLICYHOLDER FUNDS
 
    Liabilities for future policy benefits are computed by the net level premium
method using interest rate assumptions varying from 3% to 11% and withdrawal and
mortality  assumptions  appropriate  at  the  time  the  policies  were  issued.
Liabilities for  universal  life-type and  investment  contracts are  stated  at
policyholder account values before surrender charges.
 
 (E) DEFERRED POLICY ACQUISITION COSTS
 
    Policy  acquisition  costs, including  commissions and  certain underwriting
expenses associated with acquiring business, are deferred and amortized over the
estimated lives of  the contracts,  generally 20  years. Generally,  acquisition
costs  are deferred and amortized using  the retrospective deposit method. Under
the retrospective deposit method, acquisition costs are amortized in  proportion
to  the  present  value  of  expected  gross  profits  from  surrender  charges,
investment, mortality and expense  margins. Actual gross  profits can vary  from
management's  estimates  resulting  in increases  or  decreases in  the  rate of
amortization. Management periodically updates these estimates, when appropriate,
and evaluates the recoverability  of the deferred  acquisition cost asset.  When
appropriate,  management revises its assumptions  on the estimated gross profits
of these contracts and the cumulative amortization for the books of business are
reestimated and readjusted by a cumulative charge or credit to income.
 
 (F) POLICYHOLDER REALIZED CAPITAL GAINS AND LOSSES
 
    Realized capital gains and losses  on security transactions associated  with
the  Company's immediate  participation guaranteed  contracts are  excluded from
revenues and deferred, since under the terms of the contracts the realized gains
and losses  will  be credited  to  policyholders in  future  years as  they  are
entitled to receive them.
 
 (G) FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSLATION
 
    Foreign currency translation gains and losses are reflected in stockholder's
equity. Balance sheet accounts are translated at the exchange rates in effect at
each  year end and income statement accounts are translated at the average rates
of exchange prevailing during the year. The national currencies of international
operations are generally their functional currencies.
 
                                      F-8
<PAGE>
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
 (H) INVESTMENTS
 
    The Company's  investments in  fixed  maturities include  bonds,  redeemable
preferred    stock   and    commercial   paper    which   are    classified   as
"available-for-sale"  and  accordingly  are  carried  at  fair  value  with  the
after-tax  difference from cost reflected as a component of stockholder's equity
designated as "Net unrealized capital gain  (loss) on investments, net of  tax".
Equity securities, which include common and non-redeemable preferred stocks, are
carried  at  fair value  with the  after-tax difference  from cost  reflected in
stockholder's equity.  Policy  and mortgage  loans  are each  carried  at  their
outstanding  balance which approximates fair  value. Investments in partnerships
and trusts  are carried  at cost.  Net realized  capital gains  (losses),  after
deducting  the policyholders' share, are reported  as a component of revenue and
are determined on a specific identification basis.
 
    The  Company's  accounting  policy   for  impairment  recognition   requires
recognition  of an other than temporary impairment charge on a security if it is
determined that  the Company  is unable  to recover  all amounts  due under  the
contractual   obligations  of  the  security.   In  addition,  the  Company  has
established specific criteria  to be  used in  the impairment  evaluation of  an
individual  portfolio  of  assets.  Specifically,  if  the  asset  portfolio  is
supporting a runoff operation, is forced  to be liquidated prior to maturity  to
meet  liability commitments, and has fair value below amortized cost, which will
not materially fluctuate as  a result of future  interest rate changes, then  an
other  than temporary impairment condition has been determined to have occurred.
Each individual security within that portfolio is evaluated to determine whether
or not it is impaired. Once an impairment charge has been recorded, the  Company
then  continues  to review  the individual  impaired securities  for appropriate
valuation on an ongoing basis.
 
    During 1996, it was determined that certain individual securities within the
investment portfolio supporting  the Company's closed  block of guaranteed  rate
contracts  ("Closed Book  GRC") were  impaired. With  the initiation  of certain
hedge transactions, which eliminated the possibility that the fair value of  the
Closed  Book GRC investments  would recover to their  current amortized cost, an
other than temporary  impairment loss of  $88 after tax  was determined to  have
occurred and was recorded.
 
 (I) DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
    The  Company uses  a variety  of derivative  financial instruments including
swaps, caps, floors, forwards and exchange traded financial futures and  options
as  part of an overall risk management strategy. These instruments are used as a
means of hedging exposure to price,  foreign currency and/or interest rate  risk
on  anticipated  investment purchases  or existing  assets and  liabilities. The
Company does  not hold  or issue  derivative financial  instruments for  trading
purposes.  The Company's accounting for derivative financial instruments used to
manage risk  is in  accordance with  the concepts  established in  SFAS No.  80,
"Accounting for Futures Contracts," SFAS No. 52, "Foreign Currency Translation",
American  Institute of Certified Public  Accountants Statement of Position 86-2,
"Accounting for Options", and various EITF pronouncements. Written options  are,
in  all cases, used in conjunction with  other assets and derivatives as part of
the Company's asset/liability management strategies. Derivative instruments  are
carried  at  values  consistent  with  the  asset  or  liability  being  hedged.
Derivatives used to hedge fixed maturities or equities are carried at fair value
with the  after-tax  difference from  cost  reflected in  stockholder's  equity.
Derivatives  used to hedge  other invested assets or  liabilities are carried at
cost.
 
    Derivatives must be  designated at  inception as  a hedge  and measured  for
effectiveness  both at inception and on  an ongoing basis. The Company's minimum
correlation threshold for  hedge designation  is 80%. If  correlation, which  is
assessed  monthly and  measured based  on a  rolling three  month average, falls
below 80%, hedge  accounting will be  terminated. Derivatives used  to create  a
synthetic asset must meet synthetic accounting criteria including designation at
inception  and consistency  of terms  between the  synthetic and  the instrument
being replicated. Interest rate swaps are  the primary type of derivatives  used
to  convert  London  interbank  offered  quotations  for  U.S.  dollar  deposits
("LIBOR") based variable rate instruments  to fixed rate instruments.  Synthetic
instrument  accounting,  consistent with  industry  practice, provides  that the
synthetic asset is accounted for like the financial instrument it is intended to
replicate. Derivatives which fail to meet risk management criteria are marked to
market with the impact reflected in the Consolidated Statements of Income.
 
    Gains or losses on financial futures contracts entered into in  anticipation
of the future receipt of product cash flows are deferred and, at the time of the
ultimate   purchase,   reflected   as   an   adjustment   to   the   cost  basis
 
                                      F-9
<PAGE>
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
of the purchased asset. Gains or losses  on futures used in invested asset  risk
management  are deferred and  adjusted into the  cost basis of  the hedged asset
when the  futures contracts  are closed,  except for  futures used  in  duration
hedging  which are deferred and are adjusted  into the cost basis on a quarterly
basis. The adjustments to  the cost basis are  amortized into investment  income
over the remaining asset life.
 
    Open forward commitment contracts are marked to market through stockholder's
equity.  Such contracts are recorded at  settlement by recording the purchase of
the specified  securities at  the previously  committed price.  Gains or  losses
resulting  from the termination  of the forward  commitment contracts before the
delivery of  the  securities  are recognized  immediately  in  the  Consolidated
Statements of Income as a component of net investment income.
 
    The  cost of purchased  options and/or premiums  received on covered written
options, entered into as part of an asset/liability management strategy,  is/are
adjusted  into the cost basis of the underlying asset or liability and amortized
over the  remaining  life  of  the  hedge. Gains  or  losses  on  expiration  or
termination  of the hedge are adjusted into the basis of the underlying asset or
liability and  amortized over  the  remaining asset  life.  The Company  had  no
written options as of December 31, 1996 and 1995.
 
    Interest  rate swaps involve  the periodic exchange  of payments without the
exchange of underlying principal or  notional amounts. Net receipts or  payments
are  accrued and recognized over the life of the swap agreement as an adjustment
to income. Should the swap be terminated, the gain or loss is adjusted into  the
basis  of the asset or  liability and amortized over  the remaining life. Should
the hedged asset be  sold or liability terminated  without terminating the  swap
position,  any  swap gains  or losses  are  immediately recognized  in earnings.
Interest  rate  swaps  purchased  in  anticipation  of  an  asset  purchase  (an
"anticipatory  transaction") are recognized consistent with the underlying asset
components such that the settlement component is recognized in the  Consolidated
Statements  of  Income while  the change  in  market value  is recognized  as an
unrealized gain or loss.
 
    Premiums paid on purchased floor or cap agreements and the premium  received
on  issued floor or cap agreements (used  for risk management) are adjusted into
the basis of the applicable  asset and amortized over  the asset life. Gains  or
losses on termination of such positions are adjusted into the basis of the asset
or  liability  and amortized  over the  remaining asset  life. Net  payments are
recognized as an adjustment to income or basis adjusted and amortized  depending
on the specific hedge strategy.
 
    Forward  exchange contracts and foreign currency  swaps are accounted for in
accordance with SFAS No. 52.
 
 (J) RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
    Transactions of the Company with  HLA and its affiliates relate  principally
to tax settlements, reinsurance, insurance coverage, rental and service fees and
payment  of dividends and capital contributions. In addition, certain affiliated
insurance companies purchased group annuity  contracts from the Company to  fund
pension  costs and claim annuities to  settle casualty claims. Substantially all
general insurance expenses related to  the Company, including rent and  employee
benefit plan expenses, are initially paid by Hartford Fire Insurance Company, an
indirect  subsidiary  of The  Hartford  ("Hartford Fire").  Direct  expenses are
allocated to the  Company using specific  identification, and indirect  expenses
are  allocated using other  applicable methods. Indirect  expenses include those
for corporate areas which, depending on the type, are allocated based on  either
a  percentage of direct expenses or  on utilization. Indirect expenses allocated
to the Company by Hartford  Fire were $40, $45 and  $41 in 1996, 1995 and  1994,
respectively.  Management  of the  Company believes  that  the methods  used are
reasonable. In addition, the Company was charged its share of costs allocated to
The Hartford by ITT prior to the ITT Spin-off, which were immaterial in 1995 and
1994. The Company had a receivable from The Hartford of $1 and a payable to  The
Hartford of $2 at December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively.
 
    In  1996,  the  Company  ceded approximately  $33.3  billion  of  group life
insurance in force  and $318 million  of disability premium  to HLA and  assumed
$8.5 billion of individual life insurance in force from HLA.
 
    On  June  30,  1995,  the  ownership of  ITT  Lyndon  Insurance  Company was
transferred  to  the  Company  via  a  capital  contribution  of  $181  million,
representing  the net assets of the company. Also, in 1996, the Company received
a capital contribution of $37.5 million from its parent HLA.
 
                                      F-10
<PAGE>
2.  SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
 (K) DIVIDENDS TO POLICYHOLDERS
 
    Certain life  insurance policies  contain dividend  payment provisions  that
enable  the policyholder  to participate in  the earnings of  the life insurance
subsidiaries of the Company. The participating insurance in force accounted  for
44%, 41%, and 43% in 1996, 1995, and 1994, respectively, of total life insurance
in force.
 
3.  INVESTMENTS
 (A) COMPONENTS OF NET INVESTMENT INCOME
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                 -------------------------------
                                                                                   1996       1995       1994
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>        <C>
Interest income................................................................  $   1,452  $   1,338  $   1,247
(Losses) income from other investments.........................................        (42)         1         54
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Gross investment income........................................................      1,410      1,339      1,301
Less: Investment expenses......................................................         13         11          9
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Net investment income..........................................................  $   1,397  $   1,328  $   1,292
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
 (B) COMPONENTS OF NET REALIZED CAPITAL GAINS (LOSSES)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                 -------------------------------
                                                                                   1996       1995       1994
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>        <C>
Fixed maturities...............................................................  $    (201) $      23  $     (34)
Equity securities..............................................................          2         (6)       (11)
Real estate and other..........................................................         (4)       (25)        47
Less: (Increase) decrease in liability to policyholders for realized capital
 gains (losses)................................................................        (10)        (3)         5
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Net realized capital (losses) gains............................................  $    (213) $     (11) $       7
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
 (C) NET UNREALIZED CAPITAL GAINS (LOSSES) ON EQUITY SECURITIES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                 -------------------------------
                                                                                   1996       1995       1994
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>        <C>
Gross unrealized gains.........................................................  $      13  $       4  $       2
Gross unrealized losses........................................................         (1)        (2)       (11)
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Net unrealized capital gains (losses)..........................................         12          2         (9)
Deferred income tax liability (asset)..........................................          4          1         (3)
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Net unrealized capital gains (losses), after tax...............................          8          1         (6)
Balance beginning of year......................................................          1         (6)        (5)
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Change in net unrealized capital gains (losses) on investments.................  $       7  $       7  $      (1)
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
 (D) NET UNREALIZED CAPITAL GAINS (LOSSES) ON FIXED MATURITIES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                 -------------------------------
                                                                                   1996       1995       1994
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>        <C>
Gross unrealized gains.........................................................  $     386  $     529  $     150
Gross unrealized losses........................................................       (341)      (569)    (1,185)
Unrealized (gains) losses credited to policyholders............................        (11)       (52)        37
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Net unrealized capital gains (losses)..........................................         34        (92)      (998)
Deferred income tax liability (asset)..........................................         12        (34)      (350)
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Net unrealized capital gains (losses), after tax...............................         22        (58)      (648)
Balance beginning of year......................................................        (58)      (648)       161
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
Change in net unrealized capital gains (losses) on investments.................  $      80  $     590  $    (809)
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-11
<PAGE>
3.  INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
 (E) COMPONENTS OF FIXED MATURITIES INVESTMENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1996
                                                                                ------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                 GROSS UNREALIZED
                                                                                 AMORTIZED   ------------------------    FAIR
                                                                                   COST         GAINS       LOSSES       VALUE
                                                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------
<S>                                                                             <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
U.S. government and government agencies and authorities (guaranteed and
 sponsored)...................................................................   $     166    $      12    $      (3)  $     175
U.S. government and government agencies and authorities (guaranteed and
 sponsored) -- asset-backed...................................................       1,970          161         (128)      2,003
States, municipalities and political subdivisions.............................         373            6          (11)        368
International governments.....................................................         281           12           (4)        289
Public utilities..............................................................         877           12           (8)        881
All other corporate including international...................................       4,656          120         (107)      4,669
All other corporate -- asset-backed...........................................       3,601           49          (59)      3,591
Short-term investments........................................................       1,655           14          (21)      1,648
                                                                                -----------       -----   -----------  ---------
Total fixed maturities........................................................   $  13,579    $     386    $    (341)  $  13,624
                                                                                -----------       -----   -----------  ---------
                                                                                -----------       -----   -----------  ---------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                                            AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1996
                                                                                ------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                 GROSS UNREALIZED
                                                                                 AMORTIZED   ------------------------    FAIR
                                                                                   COST         GAINS       LOSSES       VALUE
                                                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  ---------
<S>                                                                             <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
U.S. government and government agencies and authorities (guaranteed and
 sponsored)...................................................................   $     502    $       4    $      (9)  $     497
U.S. government and government agencies and authorities (guaranteed and
 sponsored) -- asset-backed...................................................       3,568          210         (387)      3,391
States, municipalities and political subdivisions.............................         201            4           (3)        202
International governments.....................................................         291           19           (4)        306
Public utilities..............................................................         949           29           (2)        976
All other corporate including international...................................       3,065           76          (55)      3,086
All other corporate -- asset-backed...........................................       5,056          187         (109)      5,134
Short-term investments........................................................         808           --           --         808
                                                                                -----------       -----   -----------  ---------
Total fixed maturities........................................................   $  14,440    $     529    $    (569)  $  14,400
                                                                                -----------       -----   -----------  ---------
                                                                                -----------       -----   -----------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    The  amortized cost and fair value of fixed maturities at December 31, 1996,
by maturity, are shown below. Asset-backed securities, including mortgage-backed
securities and collateralized mortgage obligations, are distributed to  maturity
year  based on  the Company's  estimates of  the rate  of future  prepayments of
principal over  the remaining  lives  of such  securities. These  estimates  are
developed  using prepayment speeds reported in  broker consensus data and can be
expected to  vary  from  actual  experience.  Expected  maturities  differ  from
contractual maturities due to call or prepayment provisions.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
MATURITY                                                                                    AMORTIZED COST   FAIR VALUE
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------------  -----------
<S>                                                                                         <C>              <C>
One year or less..........................................................................          2,632         2,642
Over one year through five years..........................................................          5,871         5,928
Over five years through ten years.........................................................          3,320         3,311
Over ten years............................................................................          1,756         1,743
                                                                                            ---------------  -----------
Total.....................................................................................         13,579        13,624
                                                                                            ---------------  -----------
                                                                                            ---------------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
    Sales  of  fixed maturities  excluding short-term  fixed maturities  for the
years ended December  31, 1996, 1995  and 1994 resulted  in proceeds of  $3,459,
$4,848  and $5,708, respectively,  resulting in gross  realized capital gains of
$87, $91 and  $71, respectively,  and gross realized  capital losses  (including
investment  writedowns)  of  $298,  $72 and  $100,  respectively,  not including
policyholder gains and losses.  Sales of equity securities  for the years  ended
December  31, 1996,  1995 and 1994  resulted in  proceeds of $74,  $64 and $159,
respectively, resulting  in gross  realized capital  gains of  $2, $28  and  $3,
respectively,   and  gross  realized   capital  losses  of   $0,  $59  and  $14,
respectively, not including policyholder gains and losses.
 
                                      F-12
<PAGE>
3.  INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
 (F) CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK
 
    As of December 31, 1996, the  Company had a reinsurance recoverable of  $3.8
billion  from  Mutual  Benefit Life  Assurance  Corporation  ("Mutual Benefit"),
supported by assets in a security trust of $3.8 billion (including policy  loans
of  $3.3 billion). The risk of Mutual Benefit becoming insolvent is mitigated by
the reinsurance agreement's requirement  that the assets be  kept in a  security
trust  with  the  Company as  sole  beneficiary. Excluding  investments  in U.S.
government and agencies, the Company has no other significant concentrations  of
credit risk in fixed maturities.
 
 (G) DERIVATIVE INVESTMENTS
 
    Derivatives  play  an  important  role  in  facilitating  the  management of
interest rate risk, creating opportunities  to fund product obligations  hedging
against  indexation  risks  that affect  the  value of  certain  liabilities and
adjusting broad  investment risk  characteristics when  dictated by  significant
changes  in market  risks. As  an end  user of  derivatives, the  Company uses a
variety of  derivative financial  instruments,  including swaps,  caps,  floors,
forwards  and exchange  traded financial futures  and options in  order to hedge
exposure to price,  foreign currency  and/or interest rate  risk on  anticipated
investment purchases or existing assets and liabilities. The notional amounts of
derivative  contracts represent the basis upon which pay and receive amounts are
calculated and  are not  reflective  of credit  risk for  derivative  contracts.
Credit  risk for derivative contracts is limited to the amounts calculated to be
due to the Company on such contracts. The Company believes it maintains  prudent
policies  regarding the  financial stability  and credit  standing of  its major
counterparties and typically requires  credit enhancement provisions to  further
limit  its  credit  risk.  Many  of  these  derivative  contracts  are bilateral
agreements  that  are  not  assignable  without  the  consent  of  the  relevant
counterparty.  Notional amounts  pertaining to  derivative financial instruments
totaled  $9.9  billion  and  $8.8  billion  at  December  31,  1996  and   1995,
respectively   ($7.4  billion  and  $7.1   billion  related  to  life  insurance
investments and  $2.5  billion  and  $1.7  billion  related  to  life  insurance
liabilities at December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively).
 
                                      F-13
<PAGE>
3.  INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
    The  following  table summarizes  the  Company's derivatives,  segregated by
major categories, as of December 31, 1996 and 1995:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                           AMOUNTS HEDGED (NOTIONAL AMOUNTS) (EXCLUDING LIABILITY HEDGES)
                                                   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
                                                                            PURCHASED
                                                     TOTAL    ISSUED CAPS   OPTIONS,                    INTEREST       FOREIGN
                                                   CARRYING    & FLOORS      CAPS &                    RATE SWAPS     CURRENCY
1996                                                 VALUE        (C)      FLOORS (D)    FUTURES (E)       (H)        SWAPS (F)
- -------------------------------------------------  ---------  -----------  -----------  -------------  -----------  -------------
Asset-backed securities (excluding inverse
 floaters and anticipatory)......................  $   5,242   $     500    $   2,454     $      --     $     941     $      --
Inverse floaters (A).............................        352          98          856            --           346            --
Anticipatory (G).................................         --          --           --           132            --            --
Other bonds and notes............................      7,369         425          440             5         1,079           125
Short-term investments...........................        661          --           --            --            --            --
                                                   ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
  Total fixed maturities.........................     13,624       1,023        3,750           137         2,366           125
Equity securities, policy loans and other
 investments.....................................      4,011          --           --            --            19            --
                                                   ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
  Total investments..............................  $  17,635   $   1,023    $   3,750     $     137     $   2,385     $     125
                                                   ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
                                                   ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
  Total derivatives -- fair value (B)............              $     (10)   $      35     $      --     $     (25)    $      (9)
                                                              -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
                                                              -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
 
<CAPTION>
 
<S>                                                <C>
 
                                                      TOTAL
                                                    NOTIONAL
1996                                                 AMOUNT
- -------------------------------------------------  -----------
Asset-backed securities (excluding inverse
 floaters and anticipatory)......................   $   3,895
Inverse floaters (A).............................       1,300
Anticipatory (G).................................         132
Other bonds and notes............................       2,074
Short-term investments...........................          --
                                                   -----------
  Total fixed maturities.........................       7,401
Equity securities, policy loans and other
 investments.....................................          19
                                                   -----------
  Total investments..............................   $   7,420
                                                   -----------
                                                   -----------
  Total derivatives -- fair value (B)............   $      (9)
                                                   -----------
                                                   -----------
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
1995
- --------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                 <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>            <C>          <C>
Asset-backed securities (excluding inverse
 floaters and anticipatory).......................  $   5,764   $     118    $   3,133     $     322     $     290     $      --
Inverse floaters (A)..............................        711         560          354             6           681            --
Anticipatory (G)..................................         --          --           --           213            25            --
Other bonds and notes.............................      7,118          33           66           322           757           187
Short-term investments............................        807          --           --            --             0            --
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
  Total fixed maturities..........................     14,400         711        3,553           863         1,753           187
Equity securities, policy loans and other
 investments......................................      3,865          --           --            --            18            --
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
  Total investments...............................  $  18,265   $     711    $   3,553     $     863     $   1,771     $     187
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
                                                    ---------  -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
  Total derivatives -- fair value (B).............              $     (32)   $      46     $      --     $    (108)    $     (24)
                                                               -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
                                                               -----------  -----------        -----    -----------        -----
 
<CAPTION>
1995
- --------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                 <C>
Asset-backed securities (excluding inverse
 floaters and anticipatory).......................   $   3,863
Inverse floaters (A)..............................       1,601
Anticipatory (G)..................................         238
Other bonds and notes.............................       1,365
Short-term investments............................          --
                                                    -----------
  Total fixed maturities..........................       7,067
Equity securities, policy loans and other
 investments......................................          18
                                                    -----------
  Total investments...............................   $   7,085
                                                    -----------
                                                    -----------
  Total derivatives -- fair value (B).............   $    (118)
                                                    -----------
                                                    -----------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(A) Inverse floaters  are  variations  of  collateralized  mortgage  obligations
    ("CMOs")  for which the coupon rates move  inversely with an index rate such
    as LIBOR. The risk to principal  is considered negligible as the  underlying
    collateral  for  the securities  is  guaranteed or  sponsored  by government
    agencies. To address the volatility risk created by the coupon  variability,
    the  Company uses  a variety  of derivative  instruments, primarily interest
    rate swaps and purchased caps and floors.
 
(B) The fair  value of  derivative instruments  including swaps,  caps,  floors,
    futures,  options and  forward commitments,  was determined  using a pricing
    model which  is  validated through  quarterly  comparison to  dealer  quoted
    market prices, for 1996 and dealer quoted prices for 1995.
 
(C) The  1996 data includes issued  caps of $433 with  a weighted average strike
    rate of 8.21%  (ranging from 7.0%  to 9.5%)  and over 93%  maturing in  2000
    through  2005.  In  addition, issued  floors  totaled $590,  had  a weighted
    average strike rate of 5.17% (ranging from 5.00% to 7.85%) with all of  them
    maturing by the end of 2005. The 1995 data includes issued caps of $475 with
    a weighted average strike rate of 8.5% (ranging from 7.0% to 10.4%) and over
    85%  maturing in 2000 through 2004. In addition, issued floors totaled $236,
    had a weighted average strike rate of 8.1% (ranging from 5.3% to 10.9%)  and
    mature through 2007, with 76% maturing by 2004.
 
(D) The  1996 data includes purchased floors  of $2.4 billion and purchased caps
    of $1.3 billion.  The floors  had a weighted  average strike  rate of  5.84%
    (ranging  from 3.70% to 7.85%) and over 87% mature in 1997 through 1999. The
    options mature in 1997. The caps had a weighted average strike rate of 7.59%
    (ranging from 4.40% to  10.125%) and over 76%  mature in 1997 through  2001.
    The  1995 data includes purchased floors  of $1.8 billion and purchased caps
    of $1.7 billion. The floors had a weighted average
 
                                      F-14
<PAGE>
3.  INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
    strike price of 5.8% (ranging from 3.7% to 6.8%) and over 85% mature in 1997
    through 1999. The caps had a weighted average strike price of 7.5%  (ranging
    from 4.5% and 10.1%) and over 82% mature in 1997 through 1999.
 
(E) As  of December 31,  1996 and 1995,  over 39% and  95%, respectively, of the
    notional futures contracts, expire within one year.
 
(F) As of December 31,  1996 and 1995,  over 42% and  25%, respectively, of  the
    Company's foreign currency swaps, expire within one year; the balance mature
    over the succeeding 4 to 5 years.
 
(G) Deferred  gains and losses on anticipatory  transactions are included in the
    carrying value of bond  investments in the  Consolidated Balance Sheets.  At
    the  time of the ultimate purchase, they are reflected as a basis adjustment
    to the purchased asset. At December 31, 1996, the Company had $1 million  in
    net  deferred gains for futures, interest  rate swaps and purchased options.
    The Company expects  to basis  adjust $1 million  of the  deferred gains  in
    1997.  At December 31,  1995, the Company  had $5.3 million  in net deferred
    gains for futures, interest rate swaps and purchased options.
 
(H) The following table summarizes the maturities by notional value of  interest
    rate  swaps  outstanding at  December  31, 1996  and  1995, and  the related
    weighted   average    interest   pay    rate    or   receive    rate.    The
 
                                      F-15
<PAGE>
3.  INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
    variable rates represent spot rates (primarily 90 day LIBOR), as of December
    31,  1996 and 1995.  Such variable rates have  been calculated assuming that
    the spot rates  remain unchanged throughout  the life of  the interest  rate
    swaps.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                1997         1998         1999         2000         2001       THEREAFTER
                                             -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -------------
<S>                                          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Pay Fixed/Receive Variable
  Notional Value                                    $--         $50          $125          $35         $125          $170
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          --          5.7 %        5.9 %        5.5 %        5.5 %         5.7 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      --          3.2 %         --          6.5 %        6.4 %         6.9 %
Pay Variable/Receive Fixed
  Notional Value                                    $86          $25         $486          $74         $582          $349
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                         7.5 %         --          6.4 %        6.7 %        7.0 %         6.9 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                     5.6 %         --          5.6 %        5.7 %        6.2 %         5.9 %
Pay Variable/Receive Different Variable
  Notional Value                                    $19          $15          $--         $200          $--           $44
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                         5.9 %        5.7 %         --          6.4 %         --          12.9 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                     3.7 %        5.5 %         --          5.0 %         --           6.4 %
  Total Interest Rate Swaps                        $105          $90         $611         $309         $707          $563
  Total Weighted Average Pay Rate                   7.2 %        5.7 %        6.3 %        6.4 %        6.7 %         7.0 %
  Total Weighted Average Receive Rate               5.2 %        3.8 %        4.3 %        5.4 %        6.3 %         6.3 %
 
<CAPTION>
                                                              LAST
                                                TOTAL       MATURITY
                                             -----------  ------------
<S>                                          <C>          <C>
Pay Fixed/Receive Variable
  Notional Value                                   $505          2003
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                         5.7 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                     4.7 %
Pay Variable/Receive Fixed
  Notional Value                                 $1,602          2007
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                         6.8 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                     5.9 %
Pay Variable/Receive Different Variable
  Notional Value                                   $278          2003
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                         7.4 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                     5.2 %
  Total Interest Rate Swaps                      $2,385          2007
  Total Weighted Average Pay Rate                   6.6 %
  Total Weighted Average Receive Rate               5.5 %
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                 1996         1997         1998         1999         2000       THEREAFTER
                                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -------------
<S>                                           <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Pay Fixed/Receive Variable
  Notional Value                                     $15         $50            $0         $453          $31          $229
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          5.0 %        7.2 %        0.0 %        8.1 %        7.1 %         7.8 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      5.8 %        5.9 %        0.0 %        5.8 %        5.7 %         5.9 %
Pay Variable/Receive Fixed
  Notional Value                                    $100          $68          $25          $25          $35          $190
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          5.9 %        8.6 %        5.9 %        0.0 %        5.9 %         5.4 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      2.4 %        7.9 %        4.0 %        0.0 %        6.5 %         6.9 %
Pay Variable/Receive Different Variable
  Notional Value                                     $50          $18          $36          $12         $200          $234
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          5.8 %        0.0 %        3.7 %        3.5 %        4.5 %        16.3 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      5.4 %        0.0 %        5.6 %        5.2 %        6.8 %         5.9 %
  Total Interest Rate Swaps                         $165         $136          $61         $490         $266          $653
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          5.8 %        7.8 %        4.6 %        7.6 %        5.0 %         7.3 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      3.6 %        7.2 %        4.9 %        5.4 %        6.6 %         6.3 %
 
<CAPTION>
                                                               LAST
                                                 TOTAL       MATURITY
                                              -----------  ------------
<S>                                           <C>          <C>
Pay Fixed/Receive Variable
  Notional Value                                    $778          2004
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          7.8 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      5.9 %
Pay Variable/Receive Fixed
  Notional Value                                    $443          2007
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          5.4 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      6.9 %
Pay Variable/Receive Different Variable
  Notional Value                                    $550          2004
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          5.7 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      6.4 %
  Total Interest Rate Swaps                       $1,771          2007
  Weighted Average Pay Rate                          6.9 %
  Weighted Average Receive Rate                      5.8 %
</TABLE>
 
    In  addition, interest rate sensitivity related to certain Company insurance
liabilities was altered  primarily through  interest rate  swap agreements.  The
notional  amount of the liability agreements in which the Company generally pays
one variable rate in exchange for another  was $2.4 billion and $1.7 billion  at
December  31, 1996 and 1995, respectively. As of December 31, 1996, the weighted
average pay rate was 5.6% and the weighted average receive rate was 6.5%.  These
agreements mature at various times through 2001.
 
                                      F-16
<PAGE>
3.  INVESTMENTS (CONTINUED)
    A  reconciliation between notional amounts at  December 31, 1995 and 1996 by
derivative type and strategy is as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                BY DERIVATIVE TYPE
                                                         ----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             12/31/95                     MATURITIES/       12/31/96
                                                          NOTIONAL AMOUNT    ADDITIONS   TERMINATIONS    NOTIONAL AMOUNT
                                                         -----------------  -----------  -------------  -----------------
<S>                                                      <C>                <C>          <C>            <C>
Caps...................................................      $   2,184       $   1,286     $   1,715        $   1,755
Floors.................................................          2,180           2,053         1,065            3,168
Options................................................             --              10            --               10
Swaps/Forwards.........................................          3,566           3,989         2,694            4,861
Futures................................................            863           2,092         2,818              137
                                                               -------      -----------  -------------        -------
Total..................................................      $   8,793       $   9,430     $   8,292        $   9,931
                                                               -------      -----------  -------------        -------
                                                               -------      -----------  -------------        -------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                                   BY STRATEGY
                                                         ----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             12/31/95                     MATURITIES/       12/31/96
                                                          NOTIONAL AMOUNT    ADDITIONS   TERMINATIONS    NOTIONAL AMOUNT
                                                         -----------------  -----------  -------------  -----------------
<S>                                                      <C>                <C>          <C>            <C>
Liability..............................................      $   1,708       $   1,940     $   1,137        $   2,511
Anticipatory...........................................            238             516           622              132
Asset..................................................          2,984           1,265         2,137            2,112
Portfolio..............................................          3,863           5,709         4,396            5,176
                                                               -------      -----------  -------------        -------
Total..................................................      $   8,793       $   9,430     $   8,292        $   9,931
                                                               -------      -----------  -------------        -------
                                                               -------      -----------  -------------        -------
</TABLE>
 
 (H) FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            AS OF DECEMBER 31,    AS OF DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                   1996                  1995
                                                                           --------------------  --------------------
                                                                           CARRYING     FAIR     CARRYING     FAIR
                                                                            AMOUNT      VALUE     AMOUNT      VALUE
                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
Assets
  Fixed maturities.......................................................  $  13,624  $  13,624  $  14,400  $  14,400
  Equity securities......................................................        119        119         63         63
  Policy loans...........................................................      3,836      3,836      3,381      3,381
  Mortgage loans.........................................................          2          2        265        265
  Investments in partnerships and trust..................................         48         48         94         97
  Other..................................................................          6         56         62         62
Liabilities
  Other policy benefits..................................................  $  11,707  $  11,469  $  12,727  $  12,767
</TABLE>
 
    The following methods and assumptions were  used to estimate the fair  value
of  each  class of  financial instrument:  fair value  for fixed  maturities and
equity securities  approximate those  quotations published  by applicable  stock
exchanges  or received  from other  reliable sources;  policy and  mortgage loan
carrying amounts approximate fair value; investments in partnerships and  trusts
are  based on external market valuations from partnership and trust managements;
fair value of  derivative instruments, including  swaps, caps, floors,  futures,
and  forward  commitments,  is determined  by  using  a pricing  model  which is
validated through quarterly comparison to dealer quoted market prices; and other
policy  benefits  payable  for  investment  type  contracts  are  determined  by
estimating future cash flows discounted at the year end market rate.
 
4.  INCOME TAX
    Hartford  Life and  The Hartford have  entered into a  tax sharing agreement
under which each member, including the Company, in the consolidated U.S. federal
income tax return will make payments between them such that, with respect to any
period, the amount of taxes to be paid by Hartford Life for the Company, subject
to certain adjustments, generally will be determined as though the Company  were
to file separate federal, state and local income tax returns.
 
    As  long  as  The  Hartford  continues  to  beneficially  own,  directly  or
indirectly, at least 80% of  the combined voting power and  80% of the value  of
the outstanding capital stock of Hartford Life, the Company will be included for
federal  income tax purposes in the consolidated  group of which The Hartford is
the common  parent.  It  is  the  current intention  of  The  Hartford  and  its
subsidiaries to continue to file a consolidated federal
 
                                      F-17
<PAGE>
4.  INCOME TAX (CONTINUED)
income  tax return.  The Company  will continue to  remit to  (receive from) The
Hartford a current income  tax provision (benefit)  computed in accordance  with
such  tax sharing agreement. The  Company's effective tax rate  was 35%, 32% and
32% in 1996, 1995 and 1994, respectively.
 
    Income tax expense was as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                               -------------------------------
                                                                                                 1996       1995       1994
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                            <C>        <C>        <C>
Current......................................................................................  $     122  $     211  $     185
Deferred.....................................................................................       (102)      (149)      (120)
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
Total........................................................................................  $      20  $      62  $      65
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    A reconciliation of the tax provision at the U.S. federal statutory rate  to
the provision for income taxes was as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                               -------------------------------
                                                                                                 1996       1995       1994
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                            <C>        <C>        <C>
Tax provision at U.S. statutory rate.........................................................  $      20  $      67  $      71
Tax-exempt income............................................................................         --         (3)        (3)
Foreign tax credit...........................................................................         --         (4)        (1)
Other........................................................................................         --          2         (2)
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
Total........................................................................................  $      20  $      62  $      65
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                               ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    Income  taxes  paid  were  $189,  $162 and  $244  in  1996,  1995  and 1994,
respectively. The current tax  refund due from The  Hartford to the Company  was
$72 and $8 as of December 31, 1996 and 1995, respectively.
 
    Deferred tax assets (liabilities) included the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                         AS OF DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                                        --------------------
                                                                                                          1996       1995
                                                                                                        ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                                     <C>        <C>
Tax return deferred acquisition costs.................................................................  $     514  $     410
Financial statement deferred acquisition costs and reserves...........................................       (242)       138
Employee benefits.....................................................................................          8          8
Unrealized (gain) loss on investments.................................................................        (16)        32
Investments and other.................................................................................        210       (168)
                                                                                                        ---------  ---------
Total.................................................................................................  $     474  $     420
                                                                                                        ---------  ---------
                                                                                                        ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    Prior  to the Tax Reform Act of  1984, the Life Insurance Company Income Tax
Act of  1959 permitted  the deferral  from taxation  of a  portion of  statutory
income  under certain circumstances. In  such circumstances, the deferred income
was accumulated in a "Policyholders' Surplus Account" and will be taxable in the
future only under conditions which management considers to be remote; therefore,
no Federal income taxes have been provided on this deferred income. The  balance
for tax return purposes of the Policyholders' Surplus Account as of December 31,
1996 was $37.
 
5.  REINSURANCE
    The Company cedes insurance to non-affiliated insurers in order to limit its
maximum  loss.  Such  transfer  does  not relieve  the  Company  of  its primary
liability. The Company also assumes insurance from other insurers.
 
    Life insurance net retained premiums were comprised of the following:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER
                                                                                                         31,
                                                                                           -------------------------------
                                                                                             1996       1995       1994
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                        <C>        <C>        <C>
Gross premiums...........................................................................  $   1,834  $   1,545  $   1,316
Insurance assumed........................................................................        173        591        299
Insurance ceded..........................................................................       (302)      (649)      (515)
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
Total....................................................................................  $   1,705  $   1,487  $   1,100
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                           ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-18
<PAGE>
5.  REINSURANCE (CONTINUED)
    Life reinsurance recoveries, which reduced death and other benefits, for the
years ended December 31, 1996, 1995  and 1994 approximated $140, $220 and  $164,
respectively.
 
    In  December  1994, the  Company  ceded to  a  third party  $1.0  billion in
individual fixed  and variable  annuities on  a modified  coinsurance basis.  In
December  1995,  the  Company  ceded approximately  $1.2  billion  in individual
variable annuities  on a  modified coinsurance  basis to  a third  party.  These
transactions did not have a material impact on consolidated net income.
 
    In  May  1994,  the Company  assumed  the  life insurance  policies  and the
individual annuities of  Pacific Standard  with reserves and  account values  of
approximately  $434  million. The  Company  received cash  and  investment grade
assets to support the life insurance and individual annuity contract obligations
assumed.
 
6.  PENSION PLANS AND OTHER POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS
    The Company's  employees are  included  in Hartford  Fire's  noncontributory
defined  benefit pension  plans. These plans  provide pension  benefits that are
based on years of  service and the employee's  compensation during the last  ten
years  of employment. The Company's funding  policy is to contribute annually an
amount between  the  minimum funding  requirements  set forth  in  the  Employee
Retirement  Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, and the maximum amount that
can be deducted for  Federal income tax purposes.  Generally, pension costs  are
funded  through the purchase of the  Company's group pension contracts. The cost
to the  Company  was  approximately $5,  $2  and  $2 in  1996,  1995  and  1994,
respectively.
 
    The  Company also provides,  through Hartford Fire,  certain health care and
life insurance benefits for eligible retired employees. A substantial portion of
the Company's employees may become eligible for these benefits upon  retirement.
The Company's contribution for health care benefits will depend on the retiree's
date  of retirement and  years of service.  In addition, the  plan has a defined
dollar cap which limits average Company contributions. The Company has prefunded
a portion of the health care and life insurance obligations through trust  funds
where   such  prefunding  can   be  accomplished  on   a  tax  effective  basis.
Postretirement health care and life insurance benefits expense, allocated by The
Hartford, was immaterial for 1996, 1995 and 1994, respectively.
 
    The assumed rate of future increases in  the per capita cost of health  care
(the  health care trend rate)  was 9.3% for 1996,  decreasing ratably to 6.0% in
the year 2001. Increasing the  health care trend rates  by one percent per  year
would  have  an  immaterial  impact on  the  accumulated  postretirement benefit
obligation and the  annual expense.  To the  extent that  the actual  experience
differs  from the  inherent assumptions, the  effect will be  amortized over the
average future service of the covered employees.
 
7.  BUSINESS SEGMENT INFORMATION
    The Company sells financial products  such as fixed and variable  annuities,
retirement  plan services, and life insurance on  both an individual and a group
basis. The Company divides its  core businesses into three segments:  Investment
Products,  Individual  Life Insurance  and Employee  Benefits. In  addition, the
Company also maintains a corporate operation and also classifies certain of  its
business as Runoff operations. The Investment Products segment offers individual
variable   annuities  and  fixed  market   value  adjusted  annuities,  deferred
compensation and retirement plan  services, mutual funds, investment  management
services  and other  financial products.  The Individual  Life Insurance segment
sells a variety of individual life insurance products, including variable  life,
universal  life,  and  interest-sensitive  whole  life  policies.  The  Employee
Benefits segment sells  corporate owned  life insurance.  Through its  corporate
operation,  the  Company reports  net investment  income on  assets representing
surplus not assigned to any of its business segments and certain other  revenues
and  expenses not  specifically allocable to  any of its  business segments. The
Company's
 
                                      F-19
<PAGE>
7.  BUSINESS SEGMENT INFORMATION (CONTINUED)
Runoff operations are comprised of Closed Book GRC. With the exception of Closed
Book GRC, net realized capital gains and losses are recognized in the period  of
realization but are allocated to the segments utilizing durations of the segment
portfolios.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                           YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                                                       -------------------------------
                                                                                         1996       1995       1994
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                    <C>        <C>        <C>
Revenues
  Investment Products................................................................  $   1,013  $     759  $     594
  Individual Life Insurance..........................................................        440        383        375
  Employee Benefits..................................................................      1,366      1,273        919
  Corporate operations...............................................................         81         52         30
  Runoff operations..................................................................        (11)       337        481
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
  Total revenues.....................................................................  $   2,889  $   2,804  $   2,399
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                                           YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                                                       -------------------------------
                                                                                         1996       1995       1994
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                    <C>        <C>        <C>
Income before income tax expense
  Investment Products................................................................  $     230  $     172  $     127
  Individual Life Insurance..........................................................         68         56         39
  Employee Benefits..................................................................         43         37         27
  Corporate operations...............................................................         65         16          8
  Runoff operations..................................................................       (348)       (90)         2
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
  Income before income tax expense...................................................  $      58  $     191  $     203
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
<CAPTION>
 
                                                                                           YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                                                       -------------------------------
                                                                                         1996       1995       1994
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                    <C>        <C>        <C>
Assets
  Investment Products................................................................  $  53,743  $  40,624  $  29,115
  Individual Life Insurance..........................................................      3,753      3,173      2,808
  Employee Benefits..................................................................     14,515     13,494      7,847
  Corporate operations...............................................................      1,891      1,729        822
  Runoff operations..................................................................      3,667      5,177      7,257
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
  Total assets.......................................................................  $  77,569  $  64,197  $  47,849
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                       ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
8.  STATUTORY NET INCOME AND SURPLUS
    A   significant  percentage   of  the  consolidated   statutory  surplus  is
permanently reinvested or  is subject to  various state regulatory  restrictions
which limit the payment of dividends without prior approval. The total amount of
statutory  dividends  which may  be paid  by the  insurance subsidiaries  of the
Company in  1997, without  prior  approval, is  estimated  to be  $121  million.
Statutory net income and surplus as of and for the years ended December 31 were:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               1996       1995       1994
                                                                                             ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                          <C>        <C>        <C>
Statutory net income.......................................................................  $     144  $     112  $      58
                                                                                             ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                             ---------  ---------  ---------
Statutory surplus..........................................................................  $   1,207  $   1,125  $     941
                                                                                             ---------  ---------  ---------
                                                                                             ---------  ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
 
    The  insurance subsidiaries of the Company prepare their statutory financial
statements in accordance with  accounting practices prescribed  by the State  of
Connecticut  Insurance  Department.  Prescribed  statutory  accounting practices
include publications  of the  National  Association of  Insurance  Commissioners
("NAIC"), as well as state laws, regulations, and general administrative rules.
 
9.  SEPARATE ACCOUNTS
    The  Company  maintained separate  account  assets and  liabilities totaling
$49.7 billion and  $36.3 billion at  December 31, 1996  and 1995,  respectively,
which  are reported at  fair value. Separate account  assets are segregated from
other investments, and investment income and gains and losses accrue directly to
the policyholder. Separate accounts reflect  two categories of risk  assumption:
non-guaranteed separate
 
                                      F-20
<PAGE>
9.  SEPARATE ACCOUNTS (CONTINUED)
accounts totaling $39.4 billion and $25.9 billion at December 31, 1996 and 1995,
respectively,   wherein  the  policyholder  assumes  the  investment  risk,  and
guaranteed separate account assets totaling  $10.3 billion at December 31,  1996
and  1995, wherein the Company contractually  guarantees either a minimum return
or account value to  the policyholder. Included  in the non-guaranteed  category
are policy loans totaling $2.0 billion and $1.7 billion at December 31, 1996 and
1995,  respectively. Investment  income (including investment  gains and losses)
and interest  credited  to policyholders  on  separate account  assets  are  not
reflected  in the Consolidated Statements of Income. Separate account management
fees, net of  minimum guarantees, were  $538, $387  and $256 in  1996, 1995  and
1994, respectively.
 
    The  guaranteed  separate  accounts include  modified  guaranteed individual
annuity and modified  guaranteed life insurance.  The average credited  interest
rate  on these contracts was 6.53% at December 31, 1996. The assets that support
these liabilities  were  comprised  of  $10.2 billion  in  fixed  maturities  at
December  31, 1996. The portfolios are segregated from other investments and are
managed so as to minimize liquidity and interest rate risk. To minimize the risk
of disintermediation associated with  early withdrawals, individual annuity  and
modified  guaranteed life insurance contracts carry a graded surrender charge as
well as a market value adjustment. Additional investment risk is hedged using  a
variety  of derivatives  which totaled $0.1  billion in carrying  value and $2.4
billion in notional amounts at December 31, 1996.
 
10. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
    Under insurance guaranty fund laws existing  in each state, the District  of
Columbia  and Puerto Rico, insurers  licensed to do business  can be assessed by
state insurance  guaranty  associations  for certain  obligations  of  insolvent
insurance  companies to  policyholders and claimants.  Recent regulatory actions
against certain  large  life  insurers encountering  financial  difficulty  have
prompted  various state insurance guaranty  associations to begin assessing life
insurance companies  for the  deemed  losses. Most  of  these laws  do  provide,
however,  that an assessment may be excused  or deferred if it would threaten an
insurer's solvency  and further  provide annual  limits on  such assessments.  A
large  part  of the  assessments paid  by  the Company's  insurance subsidiaries
pursuant to these laws  may be used  as credits for a  portion of the  Company's
insurance   subsidiaries'  premium   taxes.  The  Company   paid  guaranty  fund
assessments  of  approximately  $11,  $10  and  $8  in  1996,  1995  and   1994,
respectively,  of which $5,  $6 and $4  were estimated to  be creditable against
premium taxes.
 
    The Company  is a  defendant in  various lawsuits  arising in  the  ordinary
course  of  business. In  the  opinion of  management,  the resolution  of these
matters is  not expected  to have  a material  adverse effect  on the  Company's
business, financial position, or results of operations.
 
    The  rent paid to Hartford Fire for the space occupied by the Company was $3
in 1996, 1995, and 1994. The Company expects  to pay annual rent of $7 in  1997,
1998, and 1999, respectively, $12 in 2000 and 2001, and $96 thereafter, over the
remaining  term  of the  sublease, which  expires on  December 31,  2009. Rental
expense is  recognized on  a  level basis  over the  term  of the  sublease  and
amounted to approximately $8 in 1996, 1995 and 1994.
 
11. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
    On  February 10, 1997, Hartford Life filed a registration statement with the
Securities and  Exchange  Commission  relating to  the  U.S.  and  international
offerings  of  shares  of  Class  A  common  stock  (  the  "Equity  Offerings")
representing up  to 20%  ownership of  Hartford Life.  After completion  of  the
Equity  Offerings, The Hartford  would own all  of the shares  of Class B Common
Stock (after  reclassification of  Hartford  Life's common  stock into  Class  B
Common  Stock  prior  to March  31,  1997).  Hartford Life  intends  to  use the
estimated net proceeds of the Equity Offerings to make a capital contribution to
its insurance subsidiaries, to reduce its third-party indebtedness and for other
general corporate purposes.
 
    The Hartford has advised the Company that its current intent is to  continue
to  beneficially  own  at  least  80%  of Hartford  Life,  but  it  is  under no
contractual obligation to do so, except for a limited period. Provided that  The
Hartford continues to beneficially own at least 80% of the combined voting power
or  the value of the  outstanding capital stock of  Hartford Life, Hartford Life
will be included  for federal  income tax purposes  in the  controlled group  of
which  The Hartford is the  common parent. Each member  of a controlled group is
jointly and  severally  liable  for  pension  funding  and  pension  termination
liabilities  of each other  member of the  controlled group, as  well as certain
benefit plan  taxes.  Accordingly,  the  Company could  be  liable  for  pension
 
                                      F-21
<PAGE>
11. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS (CONTINUED)
funding,  pension  termination  liabilities and  certain  other  pension related
excise taxes as well as other taxes of another member of The Hartford controlled
group in the event any such liability  is incurred, and not discharged, by  such
other member.
 
    In  connection with  the proposed Equity  Offerings, Hartford  Life plans to
enter  into  formal  agreements,  including  a  master  intercompany  agreement,
investment  management  agreements and  a new  tax  sharing agreement,  with The
Hartford covering  such  matters  as corporate  services,  approval  of  certain
corporate activities, registration rights, owned and leased space, allocation of
expenses, taxes and liabilities, investment advisory services, use of trademarks
and  certain  other  corporate  matters.  As  part  of  the  master intercompany
agreement, Hartford Life would agree to remit to The Hartford 30% of any  shared
liabilities  for  which  The  Hartford  is responsible  in  respect  of  the ITT
Spin-off, 30% of any taxes which may be assessed to The Hartford relating to the
ITT Spin-Off and will indemnify The Hartford for certain other tax  liabilities.
As  of December 31,  1996 there was  no known liability  associated with the ITT
Spin-off. Such  agreements  are  meant  to  maintain  the  relationship  between
Hartford  Life and The Hartford in a  manner consistent in all material respects
with past practice. As a result, management believes these agreements should not
have a material impact on the results of operations of the Company.
 
    In addition,  under  insurance  company  holding  laws,  agreements  between
Hartford  Life's  insurance  subsidiaries  and The  Hartford  must  be  fair and
reasonable  and  may  be  subject  to  the  approval  of  applicable   insurance
commissioners.  The  agreements will  be intended  to maintain  the relationship
between Hartford Life  and The Hartford  in a manner  generally consistent  with
past   practices.  However,  none   of  these  arrangements   will  result  from
arm's-length negotiations and,  therefore, the prices  charged to Hartford  Life
and  its  subsidiaries for  services provided  under  these arrangements  may be
higher or lower than prices that may be charged by third parties.
 
                                      F-22
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                   SCHEDULE I
         SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS -- OTHER THAN INVESTMENTS IN AFFILIATES
                            AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1996
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      AMOUNT AT WHICH
                                                                                         ESTIMATED    SHOWN ON BALANCE
TYPE OF INVESTMENT                                                             COST     FAIR VALUE         SHEET
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------  -----------  ------------------
<S>                                                                          <C>        <C>          <C>
Fixed Maturities
  Bonds and Notes
    U.S. government and government agencies and authorities (guaranteed and
     sponsored)............................................................  $     166   $     175       $      175
    U.S. government and government agencies and authorities (guaranteed and
     sponsored) -- asset-backed............................................      1,970       2,003            2,003
  States, municipalities and political subdivisions........................        373         368              368
  International governments................................................        281         289              289
  Public utilities.........................................................        877         881              881
  All other corporate including international..............................      4,656       4,669            4,669
  All other corporate -- asset-backed......................................      3,601       3,591            3,591
  Short-term investments...................................................      1,655       1,648            1,648
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
      Total fixed maturities...............................................     13,579      13,624           13,624
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
Equity Securities
  Common Stocks -- industrial, miscellaneous, and all other................        110         119              119
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
      Total fixed maturities and equity securities.........................     13,689      13,743           13,743
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
Other investments
  Policy loans.............................................................      3,836       3,836            3,836
  Mortgage loans...........................................................          2           2                2
  Investments in partnerships and trusts...................................         48          48               48
  Futures, options, and miscellaneous......................................          6          56                6
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
      Total other investments..............................................      3,892       3,942            3,892
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
      Total investments....................................................  $  17,581   $  17,685       $   17,635
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
                                                                             ---------  -----------        --------
</TABLE>
 
Note: The fair values for short-term investments approximate cost.
 
                                      S-1
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                  SCHEDULE III
                      SUPPLEMENTARY INSURANCE INFORMATION
              FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996, 1995 AND 1994
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                     FUTURE POLICY
                                                       BENEFITS,        OTHER
                                        DEFERRED     UNPAID CLAIMS     POLICY                                          MET
                                         POLICY        AND CLAIM     CLAIMS AND      PREMIUMS          NET          REALIZED
                                       ACQUISITION    ADJUSTMENT      BENEFITS       AND OTHER     INVESTMENT        CAPITAL
SEGMENT 1996                              COSTS        EXPENSES        PAYABLE    CONSIDERATIONS     INCOME      (LOSSES) GAINS
- -------------------------------------  -----------  ---------------  -----------  ---------------  -----------  -----------------
<S>                                    <C>          <C>              <C>          <C>              <C>          <C>
Investment Products..................   $   2,030      $   1,554      $   6,599      $     536      $     477       $      --
Individual Life Insurance............         730            346          2,160            287            153              --
Employee Benefits....................          --            381          9,834            881            485              --
Corporate operations.................          --             --             --             --             75               6
Runoff operations....................          --             --          3,541              1            207            (219)
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
Consolidated Operations..............   $   2,760          2,281         22,134          1,705          1,397            (213)
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
 
1995
Investment Products..................   $   1,561      $   1,314      $   6,204      $     319      $     436       $      --
Individual Life Insurance............         615            706          1,932            246            137              --
Employee Benefits....................          12            325          9,285            922            351              --
Corporate operations.................          --             --             --             --             67             (11)
Runoff operations....................          --             28          5,177             --            337              --
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
Consolidated Operations..............   $   2,188      $   2,373      $  22,598      $   1,487      $   1,328       $     (11)
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
 
1994
Investment Products..................   $   1,244      $     895      $   4,617      $     263      $     330       $      --
Individual Life Insurance............         565            582          2,543            268            108              --
Employee Benefits....................          --            369          6,911            569            350              --
Corporate operations.................          --             --             --             --             23               7
Runoff operations....................          --             44          7,257             --            481              --
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
Consolidated Operations..............   $   1,809      $   1,890      $  21,328      $   1,100      $   1,292       $       7
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
                                       -----------       -------     -----------       -------     -----------         ------
 
<CAPTION>
 
                                        BENEFITS     AMORTIZATION
                                         CLAIMS,      OF DEFERRED
                                        AND CLAIM       POLICY         DIVIDENDS
                                       ADJUSTMENT     ACQUISITION         TO           OTHER
SEGMENT 1996                            EXPENSES         COSTS       POLICYHOLDERS   EXPENSES
- -------------------------------------  -----------  ---------------  -------------  -----------
<S>                                    <C>          <C>              <C>            <C>
Investment Products..................   $     451      $     175       $      --     $     156
Individual Life Insurance............         245             59              --            68
Employee Benefits....................         546             --             635           143
Corporate operations.................          --             --              --            16
Runoff operations....................         293             --              --            44
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
Consolidated Operations..............       1,535            234             635           427
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
1995
Investment Products..................   $     349      $     117       $      --     $     115
Individual Life Insurance............         127             70              --            55
Employee Benefits....................         496             --             675           138
Corporate operations.................          33             --              --            11
Runoff operations....................         417             12              --            (2)
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
Consolidated Operations..............   $   1,422      $     199       $     675     $     317
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
1994
Investment Products..................   $     383      $      90       $      --     $     (31)
Individual Life Insurance............         179             51              --           107
Employee Benefits....................         376             --             419           100
Corporate operations.................          --             --              --            43
Runoff operations....................         467              4              --             8
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
Consolidated Operations..............   $   1,405      $     145       $     419     $     227
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
                                       -----------         -----     -------------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
                                      S-2
<PAGE>
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                  SCHEDULE IV
                                  REINSURANCE
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                           PERCENTAGE
                                                                     CEDED TO      ASSUMED                  OF AMOUNT
                                                          GROSS        OTHER     FROM OTHER       NET        ASSUMED
                                                         AMOUNT      COMPANIES    COMPANIES     AMOUNT       TO NET
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
<S>                                                    <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1996
  Life insurance in force............................  $   177,094   $ 106,146    $  31,957   $   102,905       31.1%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
INSURANCE REVENUES
  Life insurance and annuities.......................  $     1,801   $     298    $     169   $     1,672       10.1%
  Accident and health insurance......................           33           4            4            33       12.1%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
  Total..............................................  $     1,834   $     302    $     173   $     1,705       10.1%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1995
  Life insurance in force............................  $   182,716   $ 112,774    $  26,996   $    96,938       27.8%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
INSURANCE REVENUES
  Life insurance and annuities.......................  $     1,232   $     325    $     574   $     1,481       38.8%
  Accident and health insurance......................          313         324           17             6      283.3%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
  Total..............................................  $     1,545   $     649    $     591   $     1,487       39.7%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994
  Life insurance in force............................  $   136,929   $  87,553    $  35,016   $    84,392       41.5%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
INSURANCE REVENUES
  Life insurance and annuities.......................  $     1,008   $     211    $     294   $     1,091       26.9%
  Accident and health insurance......................          308         304            5             9       55.6%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
  Total..............................................  $     1,316   $     515    $     299   $     1,100       27.2%
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                       -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
                                      S-3
<PAGE>
   
                          INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    
 
   
    The  following  unaudited financial  statements reflect,  in the  opinion of
management, all adjustments which  are of normal  recurring nature necessary  to
present  fairly the financial  position, the results of  operations and the cash
flows for the periods presented. Certain reclassifications of prior year results
were made to conform to current presentation. Interim results are not indicative
of the results which may  be expected for any other  interim period or the  full
year.  Certain  of the  statements contained  herein  (other than  statements of
historical fact) are forward-looking statements. Forward looking statements  are
made   based  upon  management's  expectations   and  belief  concerning  future
developments and their  potential effect  upon Hartford  Life Insurance  Company
("Hartford Life"). There can be no assurance that future developments will be in
accordance   with  management's  expectation  or   that  the  effect  of  future
developments on Hartford Life  will be those  anticipated by management.  Actual
results  could differ materially from those expected by Hartford Life, depending
on  the  outcome  of  certain  factors,  including  those  described  with   the
forward-looking statements. For a description of accounting policies, see Note 1
to Consolidated Financial Statements.
    
 
   
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                       CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF INCOME
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                     THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                                                                         MARCH 31,
                                                                                                    --------------------
                                                                                                      1997       1996
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                                        (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                                                                                 <C>        <C>
Revenues
  Premiums and other considerations...............................................................  $     319  $     644
  Net investment income...........................................................................        337        333
  Net realized capital gains......................................................................          4         --
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
    Total Revenues................................................................................        660        977
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
Benefits, Claims and Expenses
  Benefits, claims and claim adjustment expenses..................................................        351        396
  Amortization of deferred policy acquisition costs...............................................         81         66
  Dividends to policyholders......................................................................         54        286
  Other insurance expense.........................................................................         73        164
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
    Total Benefits, Claims and Expenses...........................................................        559        912
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
  Income before income tax expense................................................................        101         65
  Income tax expense..............................................................................         38         22
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
Net Income........................................................................................  $      63  $      43
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                                      I-1
    
<PAGE>
   
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                        (IN MILLIONS EXCEPT SHARE DATA)
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                       MARCH    DECEMBER
                                                        31,     31,
                                                       1997      1996
                                                      -------   -------
 <S>                                                  <C>       <C>
                                                      (UNAUDITED)
 Assets
   Investments
   Fixed maturities, available for sale, at fair
    value (amortized cost $13,599 and $13,579).....   $13,496   $13,624
   Equity securities, available for sale, at fair
    value..........................................      107       119
   Mortgage loans, at outstanding balance..........       --         2
   Policy loans, at outstanding balance............    3,754     3,836
   Other investments, at cost......................       47        54
                                                      -------   -------
     Total investments.............................   17,404    17,635
   Cash............................................       73        43
   Premiums and amounts receivable.................      101       137
   Reinsurance recoverable.........................    6,200     6,259
   Accrued investment income.......................      330       407
   Deferred policy acquisition costs...............    2,888     2,760
   Deferred income tax.............................      510       474
   Other assets....................................      332       357
   Separate account assets.........................   51,312    49,690
                                                      -------   -------
     Total assets..................................   $79,170   $77,762
                                                      -------   -------
                                                      -------   -------
 Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity
   Future policy benefits..........................   $2,632    $2,474
   Other policyholder funds........................   21,498    22,134
   Other liabilities...............................    1,860     1,572
   Separate account liabilities....................   51,312    49,690
                                                      -------   -------
     Total liabilities.............................   77,302    75,870
                                                      -------   -------
   Common stock -- authorized 1,000 shares, $5,690
    par value, issued and outstanding, 1,000
    shares.........................................        6         6
   Additional paid-in capital......................    1,045     1,045
   Unrealized (loss) gain on investments, net of
    tax............................................      (57 )      30
   Retained earnings...............................      874       811
                                                      -------   -------
     Total stockholders' equity....................    1,868     1,892
                                                      -------   -------
   Total liabilities and stockholders' equity......   $79,170   $77,762
                                                      -------   -------
                                                      -------   -------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                                      I-2
    
<PAGE>
   
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                             THREE MONTHS ENDED
                                                 MARCH 31,
                                            --------------------
                                              1997        1996
                                            --------    --------
 <S>                                        <C>         <C>
                                                (UNAUDITED)
 Operating Activities
   Net income............................   $     63    $     43
   Adjustments to net income:
   Realized losses on investments........         (4)         --
   Net increase in deferred policy
    acquisition costs....................       (128)        (95)
   Net amortization of premium on fixed
    maturities...........................          5           7
   Increase (decrease) in deferred income
    tax benefit..........................         21         (40)
   Decrease in premiums and amounts
    receivable...........................         32          43
   Decrease (increase) in other assets...         25         (12)
   Increase in reinsurance recoverable...       (112)        (12)
   Increase in liability for future
    policy benefits......................        158         (89)
   Increase in other liabilities.........        349         262
   Decrease in accrued investment
    income...............................         57          60
                                            --------    --------
     Cash provided by operating
      activities.........................        466         167
                                            --------    --------
 Investing Activities
   Purchases of fixed maturities
    investments..........................     (1,525)     (1,382)
   Proceeds from sales of fixed
    maturities investments...............        985         701
   Maturities and principal paydowns of
    fixed maturities investments.........        664         640
   Net sales (purchases) of other
    investments..........................        111        (238)
   Net purchases of short-term
    investments..........................       (224)        (70)
                                            --------    --------
     Cash provided by (used for)
      investing activities...............         11        (349)
                                            --------    --------
 Financing Activities
   Net (disbursements for) receipts from
    investment and universal life-type
    contracts
    (charged from) credited to
    policyholder accounts................       (447)        188
                                            --------    --------
     Cash (used for) provided by
      financing activities...............       (447)        188
                                            --------    --------
   Net increase in cash..................         30           6
   Cash at beginning of period...........         43          46
                                            --------    --------
 Cash at end of period...................   $     73    $     52
                                            --------    --------
                                            --------    --------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
                                      I-3
    
<PAGE>
   
                       MANAGEMENT'S NARRATIVE ANALYSIS OF
                             RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
                                 (IN MILLIONS)
    
 
   
SEGMENT RESULTS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      FOR THE THREE MONTHS
                                                                                                        ENDED MARCH 31,
                                                                                                     ----------------------
                                                                                                        1997        1996
                                                                                                        -----     ---------
<S>                                                                                                  <C>          <C>
Annuity............................................................................................   $      43   $      33
Individual Life Insurance..........................................................................          11           9
Employee Benefits..................................................................................           6           8
Guaranteed Investment Contracts....................................................................          --         (15)
Corporate Operation................................................................................           3           8
                                                                                                            ---         ---
Net Income.........................................................................................   $      63   $      43
                                                                                                            ---         ---
                                                                                                            ---         ---
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    Net income increased $20 or 47% to $63 in the first quarter of 1997 from $43
in  the first quarter of  1996. This increase is  reflective of continued, solid
growth in both the Annuity and Individual Life Insurance reported segments.  Net
income  in the Annuity segment  grew $10 or 30% over  the same period last year.
Net income in  the Individual Life  Insurance segment  grew $2 or  22% over  the
first  three months of 1996. Guaranteed Contracts  reported no net income in the
first quarter of 1997, as compared with a $15 loss in the first quarter of  1996
consistent  with management's  expectations that  net income  subsequent to 1996
will be immaterial.
    
 
   
ANNUITY
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                    FOR THE THREE MONTHS
                                                                                                      ENDED MARCH 31,
                                                                                                    --------------------
                                                                                                      1997       1996
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                                 <C>        <C>
Revenues..........................................................................................  $     280  $     234
Expenses..........................................................................................        237        201
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
Net Income........................................................................................  $      43  $      33
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    Revenues, which are primarily comprised of investment income and  management
and maintenance fees, grew 20% to $280 in the first quarter of 1997 from $234 in
1996.  This growth resulted from a 32%  increase in the average account value to
$52 billion in 1997, as well as an increase in new sales of $495 or 21% over the
same period last  year. Growth in  the assets under  management by this  segment
also  resulted in increased expenses of $36 or  18% to $237 in 1997 from $201 in
1996. Net income increased $10 or 30% to $43 in 1997 from $33 in 1996.
    
 
   
INDIVIDUAL LIFE INSURANCE
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                    FOR THE THREE MONTHS
                                                                                                      ENDED MARCH 31,
                                                                                                    --------------------
                                                                                                      1997       1996
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                                 <C>        <C>
Revenues..........................................................................................  $     111  $     115
Expenses..........................................................................................        100        106
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
Net Income........................................................................................  $      11  $       9
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    Revenues decreased $4 or  4% to $111 in  1997 from $115 in  1996 due to  the
assumption  of traditional life  premium from Investor's Equity  Life of $9 into
segment operations in 1996.  Sales increased $2  or 9% in  the first quarter  of
1997  over  the first  quarter  of 1996  and  insurance in-force  increased $3.7
billion or 8% in the first quarter of  1997 as compared to the first quarter  of
1996.  Expenses in this segment declined  6% or $6 to $100  in 1997 from $106 in
1996 due to  the one  time assumption  of Investor's  Equity Life  in 1996.  Net
income increased $2 or 22% to $11 in 1997 from $9 in 1996.
    
 
   
                                      I-4
    
<PAGE>
   
EMPLOYEE BENEFITS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                    FOR THE THREE MONTHS
                                                                                                      ENDED MARCH 31,
                                                                                                    --------------------
                                                                                                      1997       1996
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
<S>                                                                                                 <C>        <C>
Revenues..........................................................................................  $     179  $     544
Expenses..........................................................................................        173        536
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
Net Income........................................................................................  $       6  $       8
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
                                                                                                    ---------  ---------
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    Revenues declined $365 or 67% to $179 in the first quarter of 1997 from $544
in  the first quarter of 1996. This decline  is mainly related to the passage of
the HIPA Act of 1996, which effectively eliminated all future sales of leveraged
COLI. Accordingly, expenses in  this segment declined $363  or 68% for the  same
time period. Net income decreased 25% or $2 to $6 in 1997 from $8 in 1996.
    
 
   
GUARANTEED INVESTMENT CONTRACTS
    
 
   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      FOR THE THREE MONTHS
                                                                                                        ENDED MARCH 31,
                                                                                                     ----------------------
                                                                                                        1997        1996
                                                                                                        -----     ---------
<S>                                                                                                  <C>          <C>
Revenues...........................................................................................   $      72   $      73
Expenses...........................................................................................          72          88
                                                                                                            ---         ---
Net Income.........................................................................................   $      --   $     (15)
                                                                                                            ---         ---
                                                                                                            ---         ---
</TABLE>
    
 
   
    This  segment had no  net income in  the first quarter  of 1997, as compared
with a  $15 loss  in the  first quarter  of 1996,  consistent with  management's
expectations that net income (loss) from Closed Book CRC in the years subsequent
to  1996 will be immaterial  based on the Company's  current projections for the
performance of the assets and liabilities associated with Closed Book GRC.
    
 
   
                                      I-5
    
<PAGE>
   
                HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
                     NOTES TO INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
    
 
   
HARTFORD LIFE INCORPORATED INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERING
    
 
   
    On  February  10,   1997,  Hartford  Life   Incorporated  ("HLI")  filed   a
registration  statement with the Securities  and Exchange Commission relating to
an initial public offering of up to 20% of HLI common stock. HLI is the  holding
company  parent  of  The  Hartford's  significant  life  insurance  and  related
subsidiaries. Management intends to use the proceeds from the offering to reduce
certain debt  outstanding, to  fund growth  initiatives, and  for other  general
corporate  purposes. Management of  The Hartford Financial  Services Group, Inc.
believes  the  offering  will  strengthen  Hartford  Life  Insurance   Company's
financial  position and flexibility. If and  when the offering is completed, The
Hartford's current intent  is to continue  to beneficially own  at least 80%  of
HLI,  but  it is  under  no contractual  obligation to  do  so. The  offering is
expected to be completed in the second quarter of 1997.
    
 
   
HARTFORD LIFE INCORPORATED DEBT OFFERING
    
 
   
    On February  14, 1997,  HLI filed  a shelf  registration statement  for  the
issuance  and  sale  of up  to  $1.0 billion  in  the aggregate  of  senior debt
securities, subordinated debt securities and preferred stock of HLI.  Management
intends  to  use the  proceeds  from any  offering  for the  repayment  of debt,
including outstanding commercial  paper and other  third party indebtedness  and
the   satisfaction   of  other   obligations,   for  working   capital,  capital
expenditures, investments  in or  loans to  subsidiaries and  for other  general
corporate purposes.
    
 
   
                                      I-6
    
<PAGE>
                                       PART II

                         INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS
                                           
Item 14. OTHER EXPENSES OF ISSUANCE AND DISTRIBUTION.

         Not applicable.

Item 15. INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.

         Article VIII, Section 1 of the By-laws of Hartford Life Insurance 
         Company provides for indemnification of Directors and Officers as
         follows:

         "Section 1.  The Company shall indemnify and hold harmless each 
         Director and Officer now or hereafter serving the Company, whether 
         or not then in office, from and against any and all claims and 
         liabilities to which he may be or become subject by reason of his 
         being or having been a Director or Officer of the Company, or of 
         any other company which he serves as a Director or Officer at the 
         request of the Company, to the extent such is consistent with 
         statutory provisions pertaining to indemnification, and shall 
         provide such further indemnification for legal and/or all other 
         expenses reasonably incurred in connection with defending against 
         such claims and liabilities as is consistent with statutory 
         requirements."

Item 16. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

    NUMBER    DESCRIPTION                         METHOD OF FILING
    ------    -----------                         ----------------
    <C>       <C>                                  <S>
    1         Underwriting Agreement               Incorporated by reference to the
                                                   Registration Statement File No. 33-17324,
                                                   dated May 1, 1996.

    4         Group Annuity Contract               Incorporated by reference to the 
                                                   Registration Statement File No. 33-17324,
                                                   dated May 1, 1995.

    5         Opinion of Lynda Godkin,
              General Counsel                      Filed herewith.

    23        Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP, 
              Independent Public Accountants       Filed herewith.

    24        Power of Attorney                    Filed herewith.

    27        Financial Data Schedule              Filed herewith.
</TABLE>


<PAGE>


Item 17. UNDERTAKINGS.

         (a)  The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes:

              (1)  To file, during any period in which offers or sales are
                   being made, a post-effective amendment to this registration
                   statement:

                   i. To include any prospectus required by section 10(a)(3) of
                      the Securities Act of 1933;

                  ii. To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising
                      after the effective date of the registration statement (or
                      the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which,
                      individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental
                      change in the information set forth in the registration
                      statement;

                 iii. To include any material information with respect to the 
                      plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the
                      registration statement or any material change to such
                      information in the registration statement, including (but
                      not limited to) any addition or deletion of a managing
                      underwriter;

              (2)  That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the
                   Securities Act of 1933, each such post-effective amendment
                   shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating
                   to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such
                   securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial
                   bona fide offering thereof.

              (3)  To remove from registration by means of a post-effective
                   amendment any of the securities being registered which remain
                   unsold at the termination of the offering.

         (b)  Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the
              Securities Act of 1933 may be permitted to directors, officers and
              controlling persons of the registrant pursuant to the foregoing
              provisions, or otherwise, the registrant has been advised that in
              the opinion of the Securities and Exchange Commission such
              indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Act
              and is, therefore, unenforceable.  In the event that a claim for
              indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment
              by the registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director,
              officer or controlling person of the registrant in the successful
              defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such
              director, officer or controlling person in connection with the
              securities being registered, the registrant will, unless in the
              opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling
              precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the
              question whether such indemnification by it is against public
              policy as expressed in the Act and will be governed by the final
              adjudication of such issue.



<PAGE>


                                          SIGNATURES
                                           
   
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the registrant 
has duly caused this registration statement to be signed on its behalf by the 
undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Hartford, State of 
Connecticut on this 20 day of June, 1997.
    

HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

*By:  /s/ John P. Ginnetti                     *By:  /s/ Lynda Godkin
     -----------------------------                  ---------------------------
     John P. Ginnetti, Executive                    Lynda Godkin
     Vice President                                 Attorney-in-Fact

   
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Registration 
Statement has been signed by the following persons in the capacities and on 
this 20 day of June, 1997.
    

Bruce D. Gardner, Vice President,              
    Director *                                      
Joseph H. Gareau, Executive Vice
    President and Chief Investment
    Officer, Director *
John P. Ginnetti, Executive Vice
   President, Director *
Thomas M. Marra, Executive Vice                *By:  /s/ Lynda Godkin
      President, Director *                         ---------------------------
Leonard E. Odell, Jr., Senior                       Lynda Godkin
   Vice President, Director *                       Attorney-In-Fact
Lowndes A. Smith, President,
   Chief Executive Officer, Director *
Raymond P. Welnicki, Senior Vice
   President, Director *
Lizabeth H. Zlatkus, Senior Vice President
   Director *


<PAGE>


                                    EXHIBIT INDEX


    5    Opinion and Consent of Lynda Godkin, General Counsel

    23   Consent of Arthur Andersen LLP, Independent Public Accountants

    24   Copy of Power of Attorney

    27   Financial Data Schedule








                                         

<PAGE>

                                                               THE     [LOGO]
                                                               H A R T F O R D



June 20, 1997                                     Lynda Godkin
                                                  General Counsel & Secretary
                                                  Law Department

Board of Directors
Hartford Life Insurance Company
200 Hopmeadow Street 
Simsbury, CT  06089

RE:  GENERAL ACCOUNT OPTION 
     HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
     FILE NO. 333-________

Dear Sir/Madam:

This opinion is furnished in connection with the registration under the 
Securities Act of 1933, as  amended, of a certain group deferred annuity 
contract (the "Contract") that will be offered and sold by Hartford Life 
Insurance Company (the "Company") and certain units of interest to be issued 
in connection with the Contract.  I have examined such documents (including 
the Form S-2 Registration Statement) and reviewed such questions of law as I 
considered necessary and appropriate, and on the basis of such examination 
and review, it is my opinion that:

1.   The Separate Account is a separate account of the Company validly 
     existing pursuant to Connecticut law and the regulations issued thereunder.

2.   The assets held in the Separate Account are not chargeable with 
     liabilities arising out of any other business the Company may conduct.

3.   The Contract is legally issued and represents binding obligations of the 
     Company.

I hereby consent to the use of this opinion as an exhibit to the Form S-2 
Registration Statement  for the Contract and to the reference to my name 
under the heading "Legal Opinions" in the prospectus included as a part of 
such Form S-2 Registration Statement.

Sincerely,

/s/ Lynda Godkin

Lynda Godkin


<PAGE>

                         ARTHUR ANDERSEN LLP




              CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS



As independent public accountants, we hereby consent to the use of our 
report (and to all references to our Firm) included or made a part of 
this registration statement for Hartford Life Insurance Company General 
Account Option on Form S-2.

                                            /s/ Arthur Andersen LLP

Hartford, Connecticut
June 25, 1997


<PAGE>

                           HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                                         AND
                     HARTFORD LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

                                  POWER OF ATTORNEY

                                   Donald R. Frahm
                                   Bruce D. Gardner
                                   Joseph H. Gareau
                                   John P. Ginnetti
                                   Thomas M. Marra
                                Leonard E. Odell, Jr.
                                   Lowndes A. Smith
                                 Raymond P. Welnicki
                                 Lizabeth H. Zlatkus


do hereby jointly and severally authorize Lynda Godkin, Marianne O'Doherty,
and Margaret E. Hankard to sign as their agent, any Registration Statement,
pre-effective amendment, post-effective amendment and any application for
exemptive relief of the Hartford Life Insurance Company and Hartford Life and
Accident Insurance Company under the Securities Act of 1933 and/or the
Investment Company Act of 1940.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned have executed this Power of Attorney for the
purpose herein set forth.


        /s/ Donald R. Frahm                          /s/Leonard E. Odell,  Jr.
- ---------------------------------------       ----------------------------------
            Donald R. Frahm                             Leonard E. Odell, Jr.


        /s/Bruce D. Gardner                          /s/Lowndes A. Smith
- ---------------------------------------       ----------------------------------
           Bruce D. Gardner                             Lowndes A. Smith


        /s/Joseph H. Gareau                          /s/Raymond P. Welnicki
- ---------------------------------------       ----------------------------------
           Joseph H. Gareau                             Raymond P. Welnicki


        /s/John P. Ginetti                           /s/Lizabeth H. Zlatkus
- ---------------------------------------       ----------------------------------
           John P. Ginnetti                             Lizabeth H. Zlatkus


        /s/Thomas M. Marra
- ---------------------------------------
           Thomas M. Marra




Dated:  December 3, 1996
       -------------------


<TABLE> <S> <C>

<PAGE>
<ARTICLE> 7
<CIK> 0000045947
<NAME> HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
<MULTIPLIER> 1,000,000
       
<S>                             <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                   3-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                          DEC-31-1997
<PERIOD-START>                             JAN-01-1997
<PERIOD-END>                               MAR-31-1997
<DEBT-HELD-FOR-SALE>                            13,496
<DEBT-CARRYING-VALUE>                                0
<DEBT-MARKET-VALUE>                                  0
<EQUITIES>                                         107
<MORTGAGE>                                           0
<REAL-ESTATE>                                        0
<TOTAL-INVEST>                                  17,404
<CASH>                                              73
<RECOVER-REINSURE>                               6,200
<DEFERRED-ACQUISITION>                           2,888
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                  79,170
<POLICY-LOSSES>                                  2,632
<UNEARNED-PREMIUMS>                                  0
<POLICY-OTHER>                                  21,498
<POLICY-HOLDER-FUNDS>                                0
<NOTES-PAYABLE>                                      0
                                0
                                          0
<COMMON>                                             6
<OTHER-SE>                                       1,045
<TOTAL-LIABILITY-AND-EQUITY>                    79,170
                                         319
<INVESTMENT-INCOME>                                337
<INVESTMENT-GAINS>                                   4
<OTHER-INCOME>                                       0
<BENEFITS>                                         351
<UNDERWRITING-AMORTIZATION>                         81
<UNDERWRITING-OTHER>                                73
<INCOME-PRETAX>                                    101
<INCOME-TAX>                                        38
<INCOME-CONTINUING>                                 63
<DISCONTINUED>                                       0
<EXTRAORDINARY>                                      0
<CHANGES>                                            0
<NET-INCOME>                                        63
<EPS-PRIMARY>                                        0
<EPS-DILUTED>                                        0
<RESERVE-OPEN>                                       0
<PROVISION-CURRENT>                                  0
<PROVISION-PRIOR>                                    0
<PAYMENTS-CURRENT>                                   0
<PAYMENTS-PRIOR>                                     0
<RESERVE-CLOSE>                                      0
<CUMULATIVE-DEFICIENCY>                              0
        

</TABLE>


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