UPDATE: AIA's New Business Value Climbs 40% In Fiscal 2011; Beat Estimates
February 24 2012 - 12:05AM
Dow Jones News
HONG KONG (Dow Jones)--Asian insurance company AIA Group Ltd.
(1299.HK) Friday beat estimates to report its highest ever value
from new policies in fiscal 2011, thanks to robust premium-income
growth in its major markets of Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia and
China.
AIA's new business value, a key measure of profitability for
life insurance companies, surged 40% to US$932 million in the 12
months ended Nov. 30, up from US$667 million a year earlier. This
was higher than the average new-business value forecast of $870.5
million in a Dow Jones Newswires poll of eight analysts.
The insurance company, whose largest shareholder is American
International Group Inc. (AIG) with a 32.89% stake, managed the
performance despite weaker fourth-quarter sales in Thailand amid
flooding in the country.
The company also said it expects to maintain the pace of growth
in the current fiscal year.
"I am confident that we will continue the underlying momentum
established over the last 18 months as we take full advantage of
the outstanding opportunities presented by the Asian markets,"
Chief Executive Mark Tucker told reporters in a teleconference.
Hong Kong, AIA's biggest market, registered 45% growth in
new-business value, due to improved agency sales and higher margins
combined with a better product mix, the company said. New-business
value for Singapore surged 58%, while in China and Malaysia it
jumped 50% and 49%, respectively.
During the period, the insurer's value-of-new-business margin
increased by 4.6 percentage points to 37.2%, and
annualized-new-premium sales were up 22% at $2.47 billion.
However, AIA's net profit in the last fiscal year dropped 41% to
US$1.60 billion from US$2.70 billion a year earlier.
Tucker attributed the fall to weak investment returns, which
dropped 73%, amid mark-to-market equity declines over the year. The
Hong Kong benchmark Hang Seng Index was down 22% during the life
insurer's reporting period.
Though, "as of today, the negative market movements have been
full reversed," Tucker said, adding that equity markets in the
region have recouped much of the losses so far in this fiscal
year.
Tucker also said that given the insurer's strong capital
position, it would consider acquisition opportunities if it added
shareholder value. But he refused to comment on whether AIA would
join the bidding race for ING Groep NV's Asian business and on the
possibility of AIG selling part of its stake in the company.
The company has decided to pay a final dividend of HK$22 cents a
share for 2011, making the full year total dividend payout HK$33
cents per share.
Investors cheered AIA's results, pushing up its Hong Kong-listed
shares 2.9% higher to HK$28.20 at the midday break.
-By Fiona Law, Dow Jones Newswires; 852-2802-7002;
fiona.law@dowjones.com
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