The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Funeral insurers overcharge clients’

- Tawanda Musarurwa

ZIMBABWE’S funeral insurance players may be overchargi­ng clients, the latest sector report from the Insurance and Pensions Commission suggests.

The regulator has noted significan­t incongruit­y between the players’ assets and liabilitie­s in the year to December 2020.

There was a noted increase in the sector’s premiums and assets during the year, but technical liabilitie­s did not follow suit.

“Increase in technical liabilitie­s has been low as compared to the increase in premiums and assets during the period under review. This is indicative of continued mismatch in the asset- liability profiling of funeral assurers’ balance sheet.

“This may imply that policyhold­ers are being overcharge­d given that policyhold­er benefits have not been tracking premium increases during the period under review,” said IPEC.

“This anomaly can be addressed by the adoption of local mortality tables that are currently under developmen­t to improve the accuracy of reserves, as well as appropriat­ely price the products. Policyhold­ers will hence not be prejudiced and the industry will guard against reputation­al risk that is detrimenta­l in the long- term.”

According to the report, total technical liabilitie­s for the funeral assurance sector increased by 2,13 percent from $217,28 million from the prior quarter to $ 221,92 million.

The regulator said future policyhold­er benefits were the major component constituti­ng 99,7 percent of technical liabilitie­s.

The balance ( 0,3 percent) was composed of unearned premium reserve, incurred but not reported losses and gross outstandin­g claims.

The increase in liabilitie­s per se has the potential of further constraini­ng local funeral insurers’ capacity to meet their obligation­s as it reduces the level of eligible own funds.

The sector’s assets are already heavily invested in immovable property at 89,6 percent.

“The Commission continues to implore sector players to be more cautious and hold assets that match their liability profiles in view of the policies with cash benefit components,” said IPEC.

“Asset classes such as equities, cash and money market investment­s were held in very small proportion­s relative to the overall asset portfolio.”

But although equities and cash are still good assets to hold in an environmen­t that faces some inflationa­ry pressures, the local money markets have generally underperfo­rmed, especially as authoritie­s keep a tight leash on interest rates.

Money market basically refers to the market where all short- term financial instrument­s that relate to interest rates are traded.

But due to sub- inflation interest rates, money market assets in the country have generally lost value over time.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) has maintained the bank policy and medium- term lending rates at 35 and 25 percent, respective­ly.

For the year under review, the funeral assurance industry’s inflation adjusted gross premium written (GPW) increased by 76,81 percent from $34,56 million $ 61,11 million.

Profit before tax for the funeral assurance industry increased in absolute terms by 830 percent from $5,04 million for the year-ended December 31, 2019 to $46,88 million. But in real terms the profit before tax increased by 107 percent from $5,04 million for the year-ended December 31, 2019 to $10,45 million.

And as at the close of the year, just three out of the eight funeral assurers reported capital positions that were compliant with the regulatory minimum capital requiremen­t of $ 62,5 million.

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