The move would mean Singlife becomes a wholly owned subsidiary of Osaka-based Sumitomo Life. It is part of the Japanese insurer’s strategy in South-east Asia.
Singlife said the transactions are expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2024 and are subject to regulatory approvals in Japan and Singapore. Sumitomo Life, which had first invested in Singlife in 2019, sees Singapore as a key part of its South-east Asia strategy and expects the deal to strengthen the earnings of its international business portfolio.
The home-grown insurer added that Sumitomo Life is fully supportive of its plans and its longer-term aspirations to grow in both Singapore and the broader region. The firm has grown from a small insurtech start-up to become a key player in Singapore’s insurance and financial services industry.
Singlife, founded in 2014, is one of the top six insurers in Singapore based on total assets of $14.4 billion as at Dec 31, 2022. The deal comes after the Japanese insurer in November increased its stake in Singlife to 27 per cent from 23.2 per cent by buying $180 million of new shares.
In September, Sumitomo Life agreed to nuy the 25.9% stake in Singlife held by British-based Aviva for $900 million. Singlife partnered TPG and Sumitomo to buy a majority stake in Aviva’s Singapore business in 2020 for about $2.7 billion. The acquisition of Aviva made Singlife the sole insurance provider for Singapore’s Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Home Affairs and Public Officers Group Insurance Scheme.
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