The Star Malaysia

ING likely to sell Asian insurance unit piecemeal

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AMSTERDAM: Dutch bank and insurer ING is likely to sell its Asian insurance business, worth about US$7bil, in several separate deals in an attempt to get the highest price and speed up the divestment process.

The company is also preparing to list its European and US insurance units on stock markets.

ING, which got 10 billion euros (US$12.4bil) of state aid during the 2008 global financial crisis, is selling assets to meet conditions set by the European Commission for its bailout and to repay the Dutch government.

“The sales process for our insurance and investment management businesses in Asia is on track,” chief executive Jan Hommen said yesterday. “For Insurance Europe, we are stepping up our efforts as we prepare for the base case of an IPO (initial public offering).”

A person close to the deal has told Reuters that Canadian insurer Manulife and AIA, Asia’s No. 3 insurer, are the only bidders left in the race that want to take on the entire insurance unit – excluding ING’s annuities business in Japan – but they have put in unattracti­ve bids.

That means the most likely scenario is a three-way split of ING’S insurance assets into South-east Asia, South Korea and the attractive pieces of the Japanese business, a strategy which could net ING a higher overall price and which could speed up the divestment process.

While Hommen declined to give details about bidders or the bidding process for the Asian insurance assets, he said it was more likely they would be sold piecemeal.

“You will see some units will go quicker than others, joint ventures take more time (to sell)… Certain things will go relatively quickly,” Hommen told an analysts’ conference call.

ING reported yesterday lower thanexpect­ed second- quarter results as its bank was hit by losses and provisions on loans, mainly in Spain and Greece, two countries at the centre of the eurozone debt crisis, and its insurance business was hurt by a weak performanc­e in Belgium, the Netherland­s and Luxembourg (Benelux).

“As the eurozone crisis deteriorat­ed, we accelerate­d our efforts to de-risk the investment portfolio at the bank, and brought down our Spanish exposure to reduce the funding mismatch in that country,” Hommen said, adding that ING would continue to cut its exposure to Spanish debt.

Net profit fell 22% to 1.17 billion euros (US$1.45bil), below the lowest estimate in a Reuters poll of analysts. Underlying pre-tax profit for banking operations fell 13% to 995 million euros, while ING’s insurance business reported a 52% fall to 229 million euros. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Hommen: ‘The sales process for our insurance and investment management businesses in Asia is on track.’
Hommen: ‘The sales process for our insurance and investment management businesses in Asia is on track.’

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