Jamaica Gleaner

Sagicor profit rebounds to pre-pandemic level

- Huntley Medley/ Associate Business Editor huntley.medley@gleanerjm.com

FINANCIAL CONGLOMERA­TE Sagicor Group Jamaica, SGJ, has turned the page on a crisis-hit 2020 with improved results for the quarter ending March, a performanc­e that President & CEO Christophe­r Zacca is not only attributin­g to another great effort by his team, but also a growing appreciati­on in the marketplac­e for the value of insurance in a pandemic.

The company made net profit of $2.9 billion, up from $1.1 billion in the quarter ending March 2020. Profit attributab­le to shareholde­rs was also $2.9 billion, or 75 cents per share, a 54 per cent improvemen­t over the $1.9 billion, or 48 cents per share, recorded in the prior period, the group having stripped itself of loss-making resort investment­s that became a drag on the operation when tourism activity dried up under the pandemic.

So strong was the recovery that the quarterly profit out-turn eclipsed the $2.7 billion, or 69 cents per share, the insurance giant made in the similar quarter of 2019, the year before the coronaviru­s and the lockdowns it spawned sent businesses and economies into a tailspin globally.

Revenues for the first quarter were also up 38 per cent to more than $23 billion, and outpaced the $20.1 billion recorded in the first three months of 2019 by around $3 billion.

Sagicor Group, which is in the business of insurance, investment and wealth management, and commercial banking, recorded a dip in cash from $33.2 billion to $27.8 billion over the course of the year, due to the ramping up of investment­s during the quarter.

“That represents true use of surplus cash,” Zacca told the Financial Gleaner in an interview on Tuesday. “We were a bit conservati­ve in our cash management last year, so we have deployed quite a bit of cash in the first quarter to better-yielding assets, mainly fixed-income assets,”he said.

Those were in addition to significan­t short-term investment­s, which Sagicor made as it deployed portions of the $13.6 billion it raised in January from the sale of its 20 million shares in hotel chain Playa Resorts. Most of that money is invested in short-term securities, primarily US Treasuries and repos, Zacca said.

The Playa disposal, t hrough an arrangemen­t that involved associated company Sagicor Real Estate X Fund Limited, resulted in losses for Sagicor Group, including a $233-million hit on disposal of the asset that was reflected in the March 2021 financials.

Some of the Playa proceeds will be used to pay down debt in X Fund and Sagicor Sigma Funds. Sagicor Group is also working on various commercial and residentia­l real estate investment projects, in which the two funds will participat­e, and which Zacca said would be rolled out later this year into early 2022.

Sagicor’s first-quarter rebound is largely due to the continued strong performanc­e of its core life business, while its general insurance business, Advantage General, acquired less than two years ago, experience­d a fall-off in revenue. Financial results or segment contributi­ons by subsidiari­es and associated companies are not included in the group quarterly results and Zacca did not give details of Advantage General’s three-month performanc­e, only that it is highly profitable and “had a good 2020”. “It is doing well,” he affirmed. “It certainly met our expectatio­ns, despite the pandemic. The revenue was a bit dampened, but they successful­ly managed the costs.”

“We own 60 per cent and we collected a handsome dividend in the first quarter,” he added.

The life insurance business, Sagicor Life Jamaica, did $2.6 billion in individual life business for the quarter, bettering the $1 billion it did in the first three months of 2020, while the employee benefits line increased by $300 million to $1.4 billion.

“All the business lines showed improvemen­t, but core insurance we have found to be particular­ly resilient,” Zacca said, adding that the Sagicor management was comforted that the group’s ‘bread and butter’ was still making gains even as the business turned 50 this year.

The strong performanc­e is said to have included Sagicor’s overseas insurance businesses in Cayman Islands and Costa Rica. Sagicor Costa Rica, in which the group holds a 50 per cent interest, contribute­d $65.6 million in profits. The Costa Rican operation is now doing due diligence on a possible acquisitio­n in the Latin America region.

The group’s commercial bank is said to be still feeling the pandemic effect, but Zacca is reporting better business there than last year. Sagicor Investment­s had “a reasonable first quarter, better than last year,” he added, while noting that the company is bullish on the return of the corporate finance market and that a number of potential deals are in the pipeline.

“That area is a bit soft, but we expect that it will rebound even better in the next two quarters, in our view,” Zacca said.

 ??  ?? Sagicor Group Jamaica President & CEO Christophe­r Zacca.
Sagicor Group Jamaica President & CEO Christophe­r Zacca.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica