The Phnom Penh Post

S’pore’s insurance sector in red

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SINGAPORE’S general insurance industry sank into the red last year with an underwriti­ng loss of $28 million compared with an underwriti­ng profit of $36.3 million in 2018.

The loss was largely due to a 12.2 per cent or $159 million increase in total insurance claims paid out last year, the General Insurance Associatio­n of Singapore (GIA) said in results released on Tuesday.

The five largest segments – motor, health, property, employer’s liability and travel, which make up 70 per cent of the general insurance market – recorded a combined underwriti­ng loss of $43.4 million in 2019.

Partially offsetting this loss was underwriti­ng profit of $17.2 million from the personal accident segment.

Gross written premiums for the overall sector grew 7.6 per cent on the year to $4.1 billion as at Dec 31, 2019.

By segment, motor insurance was the largest contributo­r to gross written premiums, raking in some $1.12 billion last year, up 1 per cent from 2018. However, it also weighed down the sector’s overall underwriti­ng performanc­e, by incurring a 7.6 per cent or $41.3 million increase in total claims paid out. The motor insurance segment posted an underwriti­ng loss of $17.4 million, versus a profit of $9.2 million in the previous year.

There was a shift in vehicle ownership in Singapore in 2019, with vehicle population at its highest since 2013, fuelled mainly by a spike in private-hire cars, the GIA said.

“This meant that the sector was insuring a vehicle population with higher risk profiles as private-hire cars are driven more frequently on the road,” the associatio­n noted. This was reflected in the total number of accident reports last year, which increased by 1.4 per cent from 2018.

As for health insurance, the second-largest general insurance segment in Singapore, underwriti­ng loss narrowed to $11.2 million last year, compared with a $44.2 million loss in the year prior.

The upward trend in health insurance claims continued, with an 8.1 per cent or $22.6 million increase in payouts to policyhold­ers requiring medical treatments last year. Gross written premiums for the segment rose about 14.3 per cent to $666.8 million, from $583.3 million a year ago.

The employers’ liability insurance segment was buoyed by a sustained growth in employment for the constructi­on sector last year, which led to an 8.9 per cent increase in gross written premiums.

The sector paid $8.29 million more in work injury compensati­on amid a 5 per cent rise in the number of nonfatal injuries, even though the number of workplace fatalities fell to a record low last year, the GIA said.

 ?? STRAITS TIMES/PIXABAY ?? The loss was largely due to a 12.2 per cent or $159 million increase in total insurance claims paid out last year.
STRAITS TIMES/PIXABAY The loss was largely due to a 12.2 per cent or $159 million increase in total insurance claims paid out last year.

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