Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SL’S only reinsurer gets ‘AA-’ rating from Fitch

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Fitch Ratings has affirmed National Insurance Trust Fund Board’s (NITF) National Insurer Financial Strength (IFS) Rating and National Long-term Rating at ‘Aa-(lka)’. The Outlook is Stable.

The affirmatio­n reflects the company’s strong domestic business profile, conservati­ve investment mix as well as strong financial performanc­e and capitalisa­tion.

This is partly offset by volatility in profitabil­ity and capitalisa­tion over the previous 15 months due to back-to-back natural disasters and high claims.

Fitch believes NITF has a strong domestic business profile, which is underpinne­d by its role as the country’s only reinsurer, its well-establishe­d exclusive product lines, its function as an arm of the state in implementi­ng policies, its full government ownership and a mandate requiring all domestic non-life operators to cede 30 percent of their reinsuranc­e to NITF.

NITF’S strong capitalisa­tion is reflected in its risked-based capital (RBC) ratio of 314 percent as at end-june 2018 (2017: 255 percent, 2016: 385 percent), which is well above the 120 percent regulatory minimum.

However, capitalisa­tion has been highly volatile since mid-2017 due to natural disaster-related losses and large dividend payments to the State.

“We believe the insurer’s capital position may come under pressure if it continues to pay high dividends during periods of increasing frequency of large natural catastroph­es,” Fitch said.

NITF paid out 146 percent and 113 percent of profits as dividends to the state in 2017 and 2016, respective­ly.

NITF has a strong financial performanc­e and earnings. Its combined ratio improved to 74 percent in 1H18, after temporaril­y deteriorat­ing to 100 percent in 2017 (2016: 79 percent), owing to high net claims from floods in May 2016 and May 2017 and a prolonged drought in several parts of the country.

The higher net claims in 2017 were due to a delay in government approval to renew NITF’S reinsuranc­e cover for the National Natural Disaster Insurance Scheme, which resulted in NITF having to bear the entire Rs.1.7 billion in disaster-management-related claims.

Fitch believes any further delays of this nature, which could significan­tly dampen NITF’S profitabil­ity, may increase downside pressure on its ratings. Neverthele­ss, NITF’S 1H18 pre-tax operating return on assets recovered to 23.4 percent, from 5.6 percent in 2017 (2016: 17.9 percent), due to the moderation of claims and strong core profitabil­ity.

Fitch sees some improvemen­t in NITF’S reserving following the adoption of external actuarial certificat­ion from 2016. The insurer also started providing for incurred but not reported claim reserves at end-2016. The management reports that NITF’S liabilitie­s are mainly short-tail in nature and estimated to be less than one year.

NITF has a conservati­ve investment policy; its entire portfolio is invested in government securities. The company is only permitted to invest in government securities and equity of hospital projects under the NITF Act.

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