French insurer AXA narrows M&A focus to 16 countries


FILE PHOTO: Logos of France's biggest insurer Axa are seen on a building in Nanterre, near Paris, March 8, 2016. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann/File Photo

PARIS: French insurer AXA will narrow its acquisition focus to 16 key countries and could sell some assets in markets where it lacks scale, its executives said on Tuesday.

“We want to focus on fewer countries. We want to focus on these countries where we have scale and potential,” chief executive Thomas Buberl told analysts at an investors’ day in Paris.

AXA singled out 10 developed markets - such as Germany, France, Belgium, Italy and the United States - and six in emerging markets - Brazil, China, Indonesia, Mexico, the Philippines and Thailand - countries that together account for nearly 90% of AXA’s profits.

“Our M&A (mergers and acquisitions) strategy will focus only on those 10 plus six countries,” Buberl said.

AXA earlier this year ruled out major takeovers. Buberl said on Tuesday that the company did not want to overpay for acquisitions, and would be ready to use the money for share buybacks, if it did not find the right takeover target.

The insurer also said on Tuesday it would dedicate 200 million euros (RM986.3mil) of its annual one billion euro mergers and acquisitions budget to innovation.

The company said it could sell some assets in 26 markets where it lacks scale.

Chief financial officer Gerald Harlin said that did not mean that activities in these countries - which include Algeria, Colombia, Turkey and Russia - would all be sold.

“What we said is that we will rationalise it. There will be some that will be sold and there will be others that indeed will be managed for more profit,” Harlin said.

Buberl, at the helm of the insurer since 2016, aims to grow the business in areas such as health, protection and property and casualty insurance for small and mid-sized companies to help boost profitability.

No change in targets

AXA earlier confirmed its earnings per share and cashflow targets at the investors’ day, drawing a muted response from the market, with AXA shares down 0.9% by 1430 GMT.

In reply to an analyst who voiced disappointment that the company had not revised up targets, Buberl said that now was not the right time to raise them, given the company was only a year and a half into its original business plan.

“We are well on the journey and we are accelerating. Due to the fact that I am coming from a German culture with a very prudent approach, I’d really like to keep it there and leave some room for later till 2020,” he added.

In health insurance, one of the business areas where it wants to expand, Buberl said AXA would consider putting money into medical centres.

AXA aims to increase earnings per share by 3% to 7% a year over 2016-2020 and have a cumulative cashflow of 24-27 billion euros over that time frame, before the proceeds from an initial public offering of its combined US life insurance and asset management unit, scheduled for the second quarter of 2018.

On Monday, AXA presented a plan to simplify its operating model with a new structure based on geographical areas, rather than business units.

The reshuffle saw the departures of two executives who had worked at the group for more than 15 years - Gaelle Olivier, head of AXA’s global property and casualty business and Paul Evans, head of life, savings and health. - Reuters

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Business News

Middle East turmoil poses major economic risk
Codelco explores new partnerships
Bank Indonesia steps in to support weaker rupiah
US ties easing of Venezuela oil sanctions to fair elections
Cost of Lockheed F-35 jet deal lilkely to exceed US$1.5 trillion
Legalisation of casinos to be studied by various agencies
VN-Index plunges, loses US$10bil in market cap
MIDA, a vital instrument to remove obstacles for prospective investors - Tengku Zafrul
Ringgit easier against US dollar at closing
Alpha IVF remains committed to its growth strategy

Others Also Read