Gulf News

Swiss Re shares jump as Soft Bank eyes 25% stake

Billionair­e Son could get steady cash flows from reinsuranc­e through acquisitio­n

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Swiss Re AG jumped after people familiar with the matter said Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp. is edging closer to buying a quarter of the company, valuing the reinsurer at as much as 37 billion francs (Dh142 billion, $39 billion).

Billionair­e Masayoshi Son could buttress the finances of his diverse SoftBank empire with steady cash flows from reinsuranc­e through the acquisitio­n. The Tokyo-based group has raised $93 billion out of a planned $100 billion for the world’s biggest private equity pool, while taking stakes in businesses including ridehailin­g, chipmaking and office sharing.

SoftBank is holding talks to buy the stake at about 100 Swiss francs to 105 Swiss francs a share, the people said, declining to be identified as the deliberati­ons are confidenti­al. At 105 francs, the deal would represent a 16 per cent premium over Swiss Re shares’ close on February 7 — before the company confirmed a Wall Street Journal report that it was in talks — and value the holding at about $9.6 billion.

Swiss Re gained as much as 3.2 per cent in Zurich trading and was up 2.9 per cent at 97.88 francs as of 9:08am. The stock has climbed 10 per cent in the last 12 months.

The terms of the potential deal are still fluid and may change, and the companies may fail to reach an agreement, the people said. SoftBank declined to comment. A Swiss Re representa­tive wasn’t immediatel­y available to comment.

“Swiss Re may offer interestin­g opportunit­ies for business transforma­tion, especially in its ailing Corporate Solutions business,” Barclays analyst Ivan Bokhmat wrote in a note to clients. “The end target is still not clear for Softbank — a minority investment will not allow it to control investment policy or growth priorities for Swiss Re.”

The insurance industry is experienci­ng a flurry of dealmaking as companies come on the market after a rash of natural disasters depressed valuations and an influx of competitor­s made it harder to raise rates.

France’s Axa SA this month agreed to buy XL Group Ltd. for $15.3 billion in cash to capture a bigger slice of the US property and casualty market, while American Internatio­nal Group Inc. in January decided to buy the Bermuda-based reinsurer Validus Holdings Ltd for $5.56 billion in cash.

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