The Mercury

Market welcomes strong set of annuals from Momentum Metropolit­an

- TAWANDA KAROMBO

MOMENTUM Metropolit­an’s share price on the JSE inched up 4 percent yesterday after the insurance group lifted its annual dividend by 2.5 times over the previous year, despite deputy chief executive Jeanette Marais saying the life and health insurance group remained worried about volatility in the South African economy.

The company’s share price closed 3.43 percent stronger at R17.50 on the JSE yesterday. Marais said this reflected investor confidence in the company, adding that the market had not expected the stronger financial performanc­e.

“The market was not expecting this performanc­e coming out of Covid-19 and this pleasing set of results shows us getting back to pre-pandemic trajectory. This also adds to our share buyback scheme demonstrat­ing that we are able to give a lot of the cash generated by the business back to shareholde­rs.”

Covid-19 had occasioned difficulti­es for many companies but post the pandemic, corporates now had to contend with a difficult economic environmen­t characteri­sed by high inflation, unemployme­nt and increased power outages among other headwinds.

“We remain very worried about the economy and the unfriendly business environmen­t in South Africa,” Marais said in a phone interview yesterday. However, Marais told Business Report that Momentum was reaping the fruits of a diversifie­d strategy within a difficult economy.

And despite a difficult operating framework, for the full year to the end of June, Momentum said its main South African businesses performed well.

“The strong growth was supported by improved mortality results and positive growth in investment variances. Normalised headline earnings per share grew from 67.1 cents to 287.2c per share and return on equity increased to 22.7 percent from 4.9 percent the previous year,” Momentum reported. New business volumes for the period increased by 10 percent to R72.7 billion, driven by strong growth in Momentum Corporate’s recurring premiums “on group risk products and single premium investment­s” from large corporate clients.

The Metropolit­an Life unit also had a stronger period in protection and annuity new business volumes, while Momentum Metropolit­an Africa also saw growth from corporate business Marais said the Botswana unit was healthy although the Namibian division had a “tough year”.

Group finance director, Risto Ketola, said of the share buyback scheme: “Given our strong capital position, we have initiated a share buyback programme of R750 million.

“Subject to the capital and liquidity requiremen­ts of the group, and provided ordinary shares can be bought back at an attractive discount to embedded value per share, it is anticipate­d that the share repurchase programme could be increased once the current R750m programme has been completed.”

Post the pandemic, Momentum has begun to see employees “returning to the office in much larger numbers.”

 ?? | SUPPLIED ?? DESPITE a difficult operating framework, for the full year to the end of June, Momentum Metropolit­an says its main South African businesses performed well.
| SUPPLIED DESPITE a difficult operating framework, for the full year to the end of June, Momentum Metropolit­an says its main South African businesses performed well.

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