Tuesday, August 11, 2020

AXA Considering Selling Singapore Operation

Axa logo and symbol, meaning, history, PNGAxa SA is considering a sale of its Singapore business as it seeks to raise funds divesting peripheral operations. The French insurer is working with an advisor on the potential sale.

The Singapore unit, which offers life and property and casualty insurance, could draw interest from rivals seeking to expand in South-East Asia. It generated €615 million (RM3.08 billion) of revenue in 2019.


A sale process could start as soon as the next few weeks. No final decisions have been made, and there’s no certainty the deliberations will lead to a transaction.

Axa and a local partner are also considering a potential sale of their life and general insurance venture in Malaysia, which could fetch about US$650 million (RM2.73 billion).

Axa said this month that an agreement it struck to sell its Axa Life Europe business to Cinven Group Ltd, an international private-equity firm, had been terminated after certain conditions weren’t met.

CEO Thomas Buberl is trying to shift Axa’s focus on property and casualty insurance following its US$15.3 billion purchase of XL Group Ltd in 2018. Since then, the CEO has been reviewing options for smaller businesses across the world, including in the Middle East, to help pay for the XL deal.

Profit at Axa sank in the first half (1H) as it booked a €1.5 billion charge for claims related to Covid-19. Axa also warned of further shocks from the pandemic, scrapped growth targets and cancelled a payout to shareholders.

Dealmaking in the insurance industry has remained resilient amid a slowdown in broader mergers and acquisitions activity amid the coronavirus pandemic. Insurers have been involved in US$99 billion of acquisitions this year, up 77% from the same period in 2019.

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