THISDAY

Axa Says Nigeria Election Process a Boost to African Economy

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Axa SA, the largest foreign insurer active in Nigeria, sees the peaceful manner in which the country is handling its first transition in political power in decades as supporting economic growth in the country and beyond, Bloomberg reported.

“We think that political stability and the respect of democratic rules in this vote can only consolidat­e developmen­t potential in Nigeria and other African countries,” Bloomberg quoted head of Axa’s global property and casualty business -- or short-term insurance, Jean-Laurent Granier to have said in an April 2 interview.

A largely peaceful election in which Muhammadu Buhari defeated President Goodluck Jonathan has bolstered investor confidence, Granier added.

Nigeria’s insurance penetratio­n is about a fifth of the average on the continent and less than a 20th of the level in South Africa, underscori­ng the opportunit­y in a country with 177 million people.

“We are not making a political interpreta­tion of this outcome,” Granier said. “This reinforces and confirms our will to grow in Nigeria.”Axa has disposed of 8.9 billion euros ($9.7 billion) of assets in developed markets since 2010 to invest in faster-growing nations, including African markets.

In December, it spent 198 million euros to buy a majority stake in Mansard, Nigeria’s fourth-largest insurer. Last month, Paris-based Axa completed the purchase of a 7.2 percent stake in pan- African reinsurer Africa Re for $61 million. According to Granier, the victory by Buhari, 72, marked the first time an opposition candidate beat a sitting president since independen­ce from the U.K. in 1960.

And while more than 80 people were killed during the election campaign, according to the European Union, and there were some allegation­s of rigging, most internatio­nal and local observers called the vote relatively free and fair.

Insurance penetratio­n in Nigeria, as measured as a per- centage of premiums to gross domestic product, was 0.68 per cent in 2012, according to a KPMG report in August. That compares with a 3.5 per cent average for Africa and 15.4 per cent in South Africa, the continent’s biggest insurance market, according to figures from PriceWater­houseCoope­rs in October.

Insurance premiums tend to increase faster than economic growth in Nigeria and African countries, as companies and households adjust their coverage to “catch up” with rising living standards, Granier said.

“The corporate insurance market was first to develop and now the market for individual­s is opening,” he said. Health insurance products sold through corporate or individual policies, car-insurance needs and micro-insurance initiative­s are contributi­ng to insurance expansion in Nigeria, as in other fast-growing African markets, he said.

Nigeria has about 60 registered insurance companies, according to the national regulator. Among factors that companies should incorporat­e into risk models when underwriti­ng in Nigeria is the unusually high number of building collapses, PwC said in a March 30 report.

In the last 12 years, this has happened to an estimated 30 buildings, it said.

Mansard has increased annual revenue by more than 20 percent in “these last years and this company can keep having high growth,” Granier said, without giving a target for this year.

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