The Citizen (KZN)

Old Mutual to launch bank

HIGHLY COMPETITIV­E SPACE – BUT GROUP IS ‘DOING SO WITH EYES OPEN’

- Liesl Peyper

It will join the ranks of Discovery Bank, TymeBank, and Bank Zero.

The boss of South Africa’s second-biggest insurer, Old Mutual, says the group is well on track to launch its new bank later this year with a “compelling value propositio­n” that will set it apart from existing players in the market.

Speaking at the group’s fullyear results presentati­on yesterday for the year ended 31 December last year, Old Mutual group CEO Iain Williamson said the insurer is well aware that it is entering a very competitiv­e space.

However, he stressed that the group is doing so with eyes open.

“The proof is in the pudding, yes, but watch this space,” he declared.

Once operationa­l, Old Mutual will join the ranks of Discovery Bank, TymeBank, and Bank Zero – all of which have entered SA’s burgeoning banking sector in recent years.

They are all vying to also steal market share from the big traditiona­l banking giants such as Standard Bank, FNB, Nedbank and Absa.

Old Mutual applied for a banking licence in 2022. It had interests in the banking industry some years ago when it owned a majority interest in Nedbank from 1986 until 2018.

“There are still several regulatory matters that need to be finalised before the new bank can start transactin­g,” noted Williamson.

“We completed the build of the core bank infrastruc­ture at the end of last year within our budget of R1.75 billion.”

The regulatory authoritie­s have confirmed that Old Mutual’s applicatio­n for an additional banking licence is under considerat­ion. After the next round of approvals, the group will need to integrate the bank into all the payment clearing houses within the Payment Associatio­n of South Africa (Pasa), which is expected to be a three-month process, Williamson noted.

“Eventually we will be allowed to utilise a small group of pilot customers and if everything works, we can launch to the public,” he said.

Yesterday, Old Mutual’s latest published financial results showed a headline earnings per share jump of 28% for FY2023.

The group declared a final dividend of 49 cents per share, with total dividends for 2023 amounting to 81 cents per share – an increase of 7% from the prior year. Its profit after tax for the year under review was R7.6 billion, compared to R5.7 billion in the previous correspond­ing period.

Results from operations increased by 14%, while the insurer also recorded double-digit growth in sales of 17% across all its business segments.

The value of new business was up 37%, while gross flows and gross premiums grew by 14%. Its return on net asset value improved by 170 basis points from 2022 to 11.1%.

In the second half of last year, Old Mutual concluded a share buyback of R1.5 billion, reflecting its focus on optimising capital allocation to enhance returns to shareholde­rs, the group said in a statement.

Old Mutual’s active digital users across the Life and Savings businesses reached 1.4 million, up 17% from 2022. Direct and digital distributi­on channels, such as the Pineapple (insurance) partnershi­p, are key to its strategy as Old Mutual seeks to ensure accessibil­ity through channels that are convenient to its customers, it noted.

Over the past year, Old Mutual invested R30.7 billion in renewable energy, up from R26.7 billion in 2022.

The insurer said it funded 39% (2.6 Gigawatts) of SA’s total renewable energy capacity in 2022.

Williamson said renewable energy investment­s, as well as investment­s in water infrastruc­ture, are being done through Old Mutual’s private markets business – a unit specifical­ly set up for investment­s in assets that are not listed.

Investment­s in this sphere include wind farms, solar energy infrastruc­ture, and toll roads.

“Many of our policyhold­er liabilitie­s have long-dated profiles, so we can afford to invest in fairly illiquid opportunit­ies, as long as the economics makes sense,” he added.

By midday yesterday, the group’s share price traded around 3% up, at R11.75 a share.

We completed the build of the core bank infrastruc­ture last year

 ?? Picture: Moneyweb ?? OLD HISTORY. The insurance giant had interests in the banking industry some years ago when it owned a majority interest in Nedbank from 1986 until 2018.
Picture: Moneyweb OLD HISTORY. The insurance giant had interests in the banking industry some years ago when it owned a majority interest in Nedbank from 1986 until 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa