The bad news for competitors outside China is that Ping An may be getting ready for another growth leap.
China’s largest insurer by market value has evaluated buying Prudential PLC’s Asia business, people familiar with the matter said last week. Such a deal would immediately extend its reach to insurance markets from Singapore to Indonesia, bringing it into more direct competition with international brands like AIA Group Ltd. and Manulife Financial Corp.
Prudential PLC is a separate company from Prudential Financial Inc. and the parent of Jackson National Life Insurance Company, a major U.S. annuity issuer.
A mega-acquisition like the Prudential unit would mark an abrupt departure from Ping An’s strategy of incubating various tech businesses and then spinning them off, while incorporating the technology in its main financial and insurance operations. That strategy helped Ping An supercharge growth, and won it plaudits among analysts as one of Asia’s most technologically advanced insurers.
“An acquisition is a good strategy for Ping An to expand into other regions” as it seeks to mitigate the risk of concentrating on its home market, said Lu Yunting, a Shanghai-based analyst at Zhongtai Securities Co. “Its fintech is for sure a lot stronger than global insurers’ and its hardware and software are both very competitive.”
Ping An hasn’t approached Prudential about a deal, a person with knowledge of the matter said Wednesday, and Prudential Chief Executive Officer Mike Wells said the same day that the Asian operations aren’t for sale.
When Ping An presented its technology strategy in November, analysts were immediately enthused. Deutsche Bank AG and Nomura Holdings Inc. raised their price targets, in the German bank’s case by 38%. The company wants to eventually generate half its earnings from technology and said in its slideshow that fintech may increase banks’ return on equity globally by 44% by 2025.
Technology has “materially” bolstered Ping An’s performance in terms of customer analytics, channel development, risk management and client services, Morgan Stanley analyst Jenny Jiang wrote at the time, citing the insurer’s big-data analysis that can identify prospective clients and generate sales leads more accurately.
Cross-selling efforts mean about almost a third of Ping An’s 166 million individual clients hold products from more than one unit, the company’s 2017 annual report shows. The group’s individual clients, or those that have actually bought products, are distinct from the total number of people who access its internet portals.
“Ping An’s tech capabilities are driving a lot of cross-selling for the full financial services provider,” said Steven Lam, a Hong Kong-based analyst with Bloomberg Intelligence. “It’s sensible to think whether Ping An can leverage its tech prowess to take a leading role in Southeast Asia’s insurance markets.”
Prudential is seeking to take greater advantage of potential growth in Asia and plans to roll out retirement solutions it developed in the U.S. as the local population ages. Contribution to Prudential’s operating profit from the region’s markets, led by Indonesia, Hong Kong and Singapore, rose to about 42% in the first half of this year from 35% for all of last year, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
One thing that might facilitate a marriage: Several Ping An executives have worked at Prudential, said Zhongtai’s Lu. Ping An’s chief insurance business officer Lee Yuan Siong used to work at Prudential in Taiwan and at its China joint venture.
“Prudential can really make use of Ping An’s technologies” Lam said. “That would be a powerful combination.”
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