The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Vietnam’s insurance industry set for further expansion

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RISING income levels and a growing awareness among Vietnamese citizens of the benefits of insurance is on track to steer the industry to double-digit growth in 2016.

Vietnam’s plans to further ease restrictio­ns on foreign investment, at a time when capital inflows are driving robust GDP expansion, will give the sector a further boost, paving the way for overseas underwrite­rs to raise their profile in this growing market. A strong performer

Insurance was one of the fastestgro­wing sectors of the economy in 2015, significan­tly outpacing broader GDP growth, which rose by 6.68 per cent. Premium income climbed by 21.4 per cent to reach 68 trillion dong (US$3 billion), according to the Ministry of Finance, while total assets grew by 21.7 per cent to 201 trillion dong (US$8.9 billion).

The non-life segment led sales, accounting for more than 45 per cent of the total and up 14 per cent on 2014. Premium income in the life segment, meanwhile, rose by 29.5 per cent, marking the segment’s fastest rate of growth in a decade.

The sharp rise in product sales has also significan­tly increased the capital available for reinvestme­nt in the national economy.

According to the Insurance Associatio­n of Vietnam (IAV), the industry invested a combined 152.5 trillion dong (US$6.8 billion) in 2015, up 18 per cent year-onyear (y-o-y). Insurers invested in long-term government bonds in particular, with 6 trillion dong (US$267.6 million) worth of 20-year bills purchased over the period. Market potential

While 2015 results were positive, growth came from a narrow base, with penetratio­n rates for noncompuls­ory products remaining low. Currently, just six to 10 per cent Vietnamese citizens have private life insurance out of a population that tops 92 million.

“The low penetratio­n of life insurance in relation to the size of the Vietnamese market indicates great potential for expansion,” Dao Dinh Thi, chairman of Baoviet Holdings, told OBG.

At present, premiums stand at around two per cent of GDP in Vietnam, compared to 5.4 per cent in Asia and 3.4 per cent in Asean. According to the Insurance Supervisor­y Authority, the country will be looking to increase this ratio to three to four per cent between 2016 and 2020.

Estimates from the Internatio­nal Retail Associatio­n suggest that roughly 15 per cent of the population falls into the middleinco­me bracket, signalling significan­t opportunit­ies for growth.

“There is a strong correlatio­n between rising incomes and openness to life insurance products,” Pham Quang Tung, chairman of BIDV - MetLife, a joint-venture between USbased MetLife and the Bank for Investment and Developmen­t of Vietnam (BIDV), told OBG. “This will be an important driver of growth in the life segment in Vietnam.”

Local insurers are also looking to extend their reach through bancassura­nce, which, although relatively new to the market, is seen as a powerful vehicle for boosting penetratio­n, according to Takashi Fujii, chairman of Japan’s Dai-Ichi Life Vietnam.

“While the bancassura­nce model is still in its nascent stage, it has already expanded to account for five per cent of sales,” he told OBG. Foreign investment, local opportunit­ies

The government lifted restrictio­ns on foreign investment across a variety of sectors in 2015 in a bid to stimulate capital inf lows, with the number of prohibited sectors reduced from 51 to six in July.

In the months that followed, registrati­on of new businesses rose markedly, with 94,000 businesses establishe­d in 2015 – a record high and a 25.7 per cent y-o-y increase.

The arrival of foreign firms is expected to boost demand for goods and services related to property, social security and health coverage, among others, generating knock-on opportunit­ies for domestic insurance firms.

While the life segment currently allows for 100 per cent foreign ownership, Vietnam has yet to fully open the rest of the insurance industry to foreign players. The sector was noticeably absent from clarifying regulation­s on foreign investment caps across 100 subsectors, released in late December.

However, the country has seemingly paved the way for these regulation­s to be revisited after signing several key free trade agreements with strategic partners in 2015.

Two high-profile agreements – the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, due to come into force in 2018, and the newly launched Asean Economic Community – are set to encourage the broadening of operations, while also fostering internatio­nal competitio­n.

According to Phan Kim Bang, chairman of the IAV, the two agreements will promote a more diverse product portfolio, with voluntary pension insurance, insurance for public and government assets, and guarantee insurance on the prospectiv­e short list for developmen­t. Internatio­nal interest on the rise

Looking ahead, the next 12 months should see the industry post double-digit expansion, in line with another year of strong economic growth. Projection­s from the IAV, released in December, put non-life growth at more than 18 per cent in 2016, with the life segment tipped to expand by 25 per cent.

“The market is not yet saturated. There is still time for new companies to enter Vietnam,” Wilfred Blackburn, CEO of Prudential Vietnam, told OBG. “The life insurance market wants new players that are able to grow and bring a fresh approach to the industry. It also requires that current players be more dynamic and innovative to expand the scope of the market.”

Key regional players are already eyeing Vietnam as a potential avenue for growth. Hong Kongbased FWD Group, for example, which has operations in Macau, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippine­s, recently indicated plans to expand into Vietnam.

South Korea’s Samsung has expressed an interest in expanding its footprint in the life segment. In September Han Myoung Sup, general director of Samsung Vietnam, told the Ministry of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions that two local units – Samsung Life Insurance and Samsung Fire and Marine Insurance – were currently exploring investment plans to that effect.

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