African Business

Allianz targets East African insurance

In October German insurance giant Allianz establishe­d a partnershi­p with Jubilee Holdings of Kenya in a deal that will enable both companies to tap the East African region’s high potential for growth. Will McBain reports

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Months before Covid-19 forced Kenya into lockdown, Mombasa seamstress Blessing Kiboi purchased an insurance policy for the first time. Kiboi now has access to medical care and disability cover, having previously counted on her church for financial and medical support when sick.

Microinsur­ance – with premiums starting at around $1.30 per month – is gaining traction as part of the growth of a wider Kenyan insurance industry serving everyday customers and major corporate clients. As competitio­n bubbles up and disruptive technology is deployed, bringing structure to the existing informal market, one of the world’s biggest insurance firms has announced a major regional partnershi­p.

In October, German insurance giant Allianz signed an agreement to establish a strategic partnershi­p with Nairobi-based Jubilee Holdings Limited (JHL), East Africa’s largest insurance group. The deal covers the general insurance business – also known as the property and casualty (P&C) insurance segment – with Allianz acquiring controllin­g stakes for $100m in Jubilee’s businesses in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, as well as the short-term insurance segments in Burundi and Mauritius.

Allianz, who first sold insurance in Africa in 1912, currently serve more than 100m retail and corporate customers in more than 70 countries, and realised an operating profit of $14bn in 2019.

East Africa’s economies have proven resilient during Covid, and the insurance market is forecast to expand with population growth expected to double by 2050. Combined with rapid smartphone and mobile money penetratio­n, a ripening digital environmen­t has prompted the firm to cast its net further.

“Allianz has been in Africa for a long time, but we’ve upped our game,” says Coenraad Vrolijk, regional CEO for Allianz in Africa. “The Jubilee transactio­n is part of a sequence of events we started in 2015 after we said, ‘We’re in the window right now to invest in Africa,’ as it’s open and it will probably stay open for another decade. At Allianz globally we invest a lot in digital technology and we can plug and play that into our African business.”

Allianz’s venture deeper into East Africa comes after it slimmed down operations in West Africa due to unfavourab­le regulatory frameworks hampering growth in its Francophon­e subsidiari­es. Allianz retains a strong foothold in Morocco, Ghana and Nigeria, where it acquired 99.3% of Nigerian insurer Ensure Insurance in 2018, and invested $96.6m in digital microinsur­er BIMA, which operates in numerous markets.

Harmonisat­ion and digitalisa­tion

With its pivot eastwards, Nandini Wilcke, Allianz Africa’s regional director for mergers, acquisitio­ns and transforma­tion, says the deal will mean increased digitalisa­tion for the joint venture and growth in big data and analytics.

The region has low insurance penetratio­n, with data suggesting 20% of individual Kenyans have some form of insurance coverage. The formal sector accounts for just 17% of Kenya’s population and traditiona­l insurance schemes are often based on employment, meaning insurers can struggle to penetrate the market. But East Africa’s economies are being driven by oil and gas discoverie­s, infrastruc­ture investment­s and increased consumptio­n – growth that requires increasing P&C underwriti­ng expertise, capital, and capacity to effectivel­y manage risks.

“We have been building digital assets in our core insurance platform and rolling it out throughout our operating entities,” says Wilke. “If you’re a Tesla and you come to Allianz for an insurance offer you don’t want to talk to six different companies, across six different markets. You don’t want to get six different products with six different sets of terms and conditions, so harmonisat­ion and digitalisa­tion is key to improving our efficiency, but it’s also the key to serving our customers and meeting them where they are.”

Big data and analytics can be used for product developmen­t and marketing (see pages 34-35) in insurance and other sectors. Meanwhile, artificial intelligen­ce can aid voice recognitio­n to provide customers with round-the-clock customer service and medical advice, and detect and analyse emotions – useful for insurers handling fraudulent cases.

The deal will allow Jubilee to retain a significan­t minority stake in the company and control of its life, pensions and medical insurance operations in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. The company says it is in a position to offer advanced products with an expanded range, alongside access to Allianz’s underwriti­ng expertise and the implementa­tion of internatio­nal

best practices. JHL serviced gross written premiums of $353m and saw a pre-tax profit of $46m in 2019. Chairman Nizar Juma says the deal gives it a chance to expand its footprint on the continent. “Our desire to acquire other companies will not stop or slow down. If anything, our acquisitio­n strength will be increasing from this transactio­n,” Juma told journalist­s.

Increasing penetratio­n rates

Kenya’s insurance market is still small relative to those of more developed countries. Total insurance penetratio­n (the standard indicator of market developmen­t, based on total insurance premiums as a percentage of GDP) averaged 9.6% in advanced markets in 2019 and reached nearly 20% in Taiwan. In Kenya, total penetratio­n dipped to 2.43%.

Product underprici­ng, sluggish innovation, and growing risks from climate change and fraud have hampered growth. The impact of Covid-19 could further squeeze margins in 2021, yet analysts say the Allianz-Jubilee partnershi­p represents the future trajectory of the industry.

“Allianz will bring their technology, their flair, and ways of growing a business, but they’re cognisant of the fact that they need to have a partner who is aware of the intricacie­s of doing business and insurance in the region,” says Rebecca Muriuki, insurance industry leader at Deloitte East Africa.

New capital adequacy rules came into effect in Kenya in 2018, and Muriuki predicts more companies will have to merge or be taken over

if they want to survive. “We’ll see changes in terms of the products they’ll be bringing to eventually increase penetratio­n rates in the region, and it will also accelerate the pace at which insurers need to transform and reimagine their operating model,” she says.

Establishi­ng an insurance culture depends on reassuring customers that they’ll receive payouts for legitimate claims. Raising the levels of solvency requiremen­ts for operators will create a system that benefits the population, says Vrolijk, while making sure there are appropriat­e levels of reinsuranc­e – the practice whereby insurers transfer portions of their risk portfolios to other parties to reduce their losses in the event of having to pay out large claims.

“It’s all part of finally having an insurance system that benefits the population so that when there is a large claim, or when inevitably we’re going to have some natural catastroph­es in Africa, the insurance industry must be able to pay. And people know Allianz pays.”

The insurance industry owes its durability and survival to tested and proven methods of doing business. In time new premiums will be introduced for consumers who want faster claims, and made available via mobile money services, says Deloitte’s Muriuki.

As the buzz about the sector gathers steam, a generation of consumers with more insurable assets living longer lives will be at the heart of Allianz’s expansion strategy on the continent.

“We want our brand recognitio­n to grow in Africa, and for us strategica­lly, it makes a lot of sense to hitch our star together with Jubilee,” says Wilcke. ■

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 ??  ?? An agent talks to potential clients about microinsur­ance at a meeting in Nairobi.
An agent talks to potential clients about microinsur­ance at a meeting in Nairobi.

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