The National - News

Berkshire’s insurance unit in Dubai bullish on Gulf prospects

- DANIA SAADI

An insurance unit of billionair­e investor Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway may offer more products to its clients from its office in Dubai as it remains bullish on the prospects of economic growth in the regions spanning from the Middle East and North Africa to India, Turkey and CIS, a company official said.

The Berkshire Hathaway Specialty Insurance, based in the Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre, offers speciality and commercial insurance and reinsuranc­e products with a focus on constructi­on, energy, property, marine, casualty and executive and profession­al segments.

“We are already reviewing additional products. We might also offer group personal accident,” said Alessandro Cerase, senior executive officer for BHSI Middle East.

“Right now we are not considerin­g entering the retail business but that does not mean we will not review our position if regulation­s change over the years. We might decide to expand in the local environmen­t.”

The UAE’s insurance market is growing, although more than 60 insurers compete in a country with a population of about 9 million. In 2017, the UAE’s gross written premiums rose 12 per cent year-onyear to Dh44.8 billion, higher than 2016’s 8.3 per cent expansion, according to figures from the Insurance Authority.

BHSI is part of Berkshire Hathaway’s National Indemnity group of insurance companies. BHSI was launched in 2013, when Mr Buffett announced the move into commercial insurance. The business was launched in the US with a mandate to build a global primary, property, casualty and speciality insurance portfolio. Today, BHSI has approximat­ely 1,000-strong team in 30 offices across 14 countries.

“As we expanded our geographic­al footprint, Dubai was a natural fit for the Middle East, considerin­g the growth this part of the world has experience­d in the last few years,” said Mr Cerase.

“The region has benefited over the years from investment that has been made in infrastruc­ture and energy including power. The DIFC has a well-establishe­d and independen­t common law jurisdicti­on system that follows global best practices which is a big plus for us.”

The region’s insurance market offers various opportunit­ies for insurers to grow, according to a report by Alpen Capital in Dubai.

The Arabian Gulf’s insurance market is forecast to expand, with the compound annual growth rate investment at a rate of 10.9 per cent to reached $44bn by 2021 from $26.2bn in 2016, according to the bank.

Factors contributi­ng to the growth include a rising population, expanding constructi­on activity, mandatory lines of business and improving regulatory environmen­t, according to the investment bank. Insurance penetratio­n in the GCC is forecasted to expand from 1.9 per cent in 2016 to 2.5 per cent in 2021.

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