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UOB reviewing insurance deal with Prudential

S’pore lender wants to get more value

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Singapore lender United Overseas Bank Ltd (UOB) is reviewing its insurance business, including an existing partnershi­p with Prudential Plc, after SouthEast Asia witnessed a wave of lucrative distributi­on deals, sources said.

UOB has been soliciting ideas from potential advisers regarding its life insurance tieup with Prudential, including ways to get more value out of the operations, said the sources.

Possibilit­ies include renewing its agreement with the London-based insurer, which started in 2010, or looking for another partner, the people said.

The bank is also weighing options for its non-life business, which is run by publicly listed United Overseas Insurance Ltd.

UOB’s deliberati­ons are at an early stage, and no adviser has been appointed yet.

Shares of UOI rose 4.4% in Singapore trading yesterday, the most in more than five weeks.

Bancassura­nce deals in Asia have been fetching top dollar as insurers seek access to banking networks reaching the region’s growing middle class.

Standard Chartered Plc expects at least US$1bil over the 15-year life of its Asia agree- ment with insurer Allianz SE, sources said last year.

PT Bank Central Asia signed a revised bancassura­nce deal with AIA Group Ltd last year, after people with knowledge of the matter said the Indonesian lender worked with an adviser to find ways to get more money from the partnershi­p.

Bank for Foreign Trade of Vietnam JSC in June was seeking a new distributi­on deal that could be worth as much as US$1bil, Bloomberg News reported at the time.

Representa­tives for UOB and Prudential declined to comment.

UOB sold its life insurance unit to Prudential for S$428mil (US$310mil) in 2010.

At the time, Prudential also entered a 12-year agreement with UOB to sell its life, accident and health insurance products through the bank’s branches in Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand.

In August, UOB reported second-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates, surging to a record as income from lending and fee businesses jumped.

Net income climbed 28% to S$1.08bil for the three months through June.

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