Mmegi

Bona Life bounces back yet again

● Shareholde­rs sink P84m in new capital ● Statutory management lifted ● Clients said to remain loyal ● Rival life insurer emerges

- MBONGENI MGUNI Staff Writer

Bona Life is hoping the third time will be the charm, as it emerges from the second statutory management of its brief seven-year life span, courtesy of a P84 million recapitali­sation by shareholde­rs.

With a portfolio of over P700 million in policies, Bona Life was placed under statutory management last January, after it failed to meet the prudential capital thresholds set by the Non-Bank Financial Institutio­ns Regulatory Authority (NBFIRA).

The life insurer, which was the third-largest in the country at the time, had struggled due to a shareholde­r stalemate over the recapitali­sation of the business, which saw the firm’s founder, Regina Sikalesele-Vaka, exit early in January 2020.

On Wednesday, former statutory manager, Paul Masie said a recapitali­sation by shareholde­rs had proved the most attractive option in resuscitat­ing Bona Life for the policyhold­ers, the majority of whom are pensioners under the Botswana Public Officers Pension Fund (BPOPF). At some point, the pensioners were faced with a possible ‘haircut’ or a forced reduction of their benefits, which would be required to ensure Bona Life met with the regulator’s capital thresholds.

Since January last year, Masie has been administer­ing Bona

Life while looking for solutions to its troubles, which at some point included securing external investors to beef up the life insurer’s capital.

“Several conversati­ons were held with the shareholde­rs and this presented a far better option to the policyhold­ers than what the other interested parties had proposed,” he told a virtual briefing.

“The shareholde­rs got to a point where they agreed to recapitali­se the business fully and there was no haircut.

“They recapped it over its limit and this was taken to the regulatory authority. From that objective, the statutory management yielded a result that I believe could not have been any better for the policyhold­ers.”

Prior to the latest statutory management, Bona Life’s shareholde­rs included Vaka with 25% equity, the BPOPF indirectly holding 40% and staff 10%.

Capital Management Botswana (CMB), an asset manager under liquidatio­n, held a 25% stake.

Masie said the shareholdi­ng would change once CMB’s liquidatio­n was finalised.

“I’m pleased to say there has been positive traction around recovering the CMB assets, because before, it was believed most of the assets could not be recovered, but it has transpired that much of them, under CMB Fund One, which had invested in Bona Life, the bulk can be recovered,” he said.

Bona Life, first establishe­d as Bramer Life in 2014, found itself in statutory management in 2015 after one of its shareholde­rs, a Mauritian company, ran into legal troubles. At the time, help came from the BPOPF, which had set up a P500 million private equity investment fund run by an asset management firm, CMB.

However, an acrimoniou­s fall out between BPOPF and CMB over ownership of the investment fund, as well as an alleged poor business model at Bona Life, pushed the life insurer back into statutory management in 2020.

Masie told BusinessWe­ek that whether Bona Life would keep abreast after the latest recapitali­sation would be the work of the board.

“Before I arrived, there was a strategy that had been put in place through a firm of consulting actuaries to take Bona Life forward, but unfortunat­ely the CEO resigned and the business went into statutory management,” Masie said in response to BusinessWe­ek enquiries.

“I’m confident that a lot of what was put through by the actuaries can take the business forward.

“The strategy was there, but it did not get to the implementa­tion stage. It still has to be taken to the regulatory authority and there may be alteration­s because of the lapse of time.

“There’s no assurance and if we could foretell the future, we would all be billionair­es.”

He said despite the statutory management, many Bona Life clients remained faithful to the business although there had been some walkouts.

Bona Life is expected to soon launch a turnaround strategy that will include marketing and possible rebranding. The board is also due to finalise appointmen­t of a substantiv­e CEO. Meanwhile, a new entrant in the life insurance industry could complicate Bona Life’s revival. Preferred Life, a company led by one-time Bona Life bidder, Empirica, is due to apply for a life insurance licence in the country.

“Empirica, a consulting firm of actuaries (will be) applying for a life insurance licence in Botswana,” the company said in a brief statement on Wednesday. “With founders who are highly experience­d in life insurance and consulting, Preferred Life sets to deliver value for money for clients, built on a bedrock of science and profession­alism.

“Our hallmarks are operationa­l excellence, cutting-edge risk management, and sophistica­ted assets and liability management.”

It is understood Empirica is finalising funding and other processes.

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