AIICO Insurance announce N50.1bn gross written premium in 2019

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AIICO Insurance Plc., has announced gross written premiums for the year ended Dec. 31, 2019, which rose by 33 per cent to N50.1 billion from N37.7 billion in 2018.

The firm, on Tuesday in Lagos, announced the performance at the presentation of its financial result for the year under review.

AIICO noted that the outstanding performance was predominantly driven by growth across all lines of business within the group.

It said that profit before tax (PBT) soared to N6.2 billion, an increment of 78 per cent compared to the N3.5 billion achieved in 2018.

According to the firm, profit after tax (PAT) also grew by 88 per cent to N5.9 billion, compared to N3.2 billion in 2018

Its basic earnings per share (EPS) increased by 89 per cent from 44k in 2018 to 83k in 2019.

Mr Babatunde Fajemirokun, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of the company, explained that in 2019, the firm undertook a thorough review of its businesses with a clear aspiration to attain market leadership through profitable growth.

“Stemming from the progress made so far, it is my belief that we are on course and have the right strategy in place to deliver even more sterling performance in the years ahead.

 “In accordance with our commitment to the fulfilment of our obligations to our clients, gross claims grew by six per cent from N29.0 billion in 2018 to N30.6 billion in 2019.

“From this amount, about 75 per cent was for benefits and claims payment in our Life business with the remaining 25 per cent incurred in the Non-Life business.

“The Group, however, experienced an underwriting loss of N6.34 billion in 2019.

“This is predominantly driven by the increase in life technical reserves, (change in life funds) in the Life business.

“The Non-Life business achieved N2.4 billion underwriting profit in 2019.

“This increase in life technical reserves is based on significant growth in new business, the impact of changes in yields on federal government securities and assumption changes such as mortality, withdrawal experiences, policy expenses and increased inflation,’’ Fajemirokun said.

According to him, the underwriting loss of N6.3 billion is a notional loss (non-cash) given the format of insurance accounts used for a composite player in Nigeria.

He explained that for Life insurance businesses, investment income which includes the increase in fair value of assets backing life technical reserves is typically combined with premium income.

He said this is to fund the technical reserves (change in life funds), meet part of claims settlement, then contribute to cover expenses and return a profit to shareholders.

“Therefore, adjusting for investment income for the Life insurance business would result in an underwriting profit for the composite insurance operation and the company.

“The total assets grew by 45 per cent from N110 billion in 2018 to N159.5 billion in 2019.’’

The CEO said the firm had received approval to increase the authorised share capital of the company in line with the new regulatory capital requirements for a composite insurer.

“Shareholders’ Equity of the company increased by 92 per cent to N27.9 billion (from N14.5 billion in 2018) driven by the successful completion of a private placement investment by two strategic investors (LeapFrog Nigeria Insurance Holdings Limited and AIICO Bahamas Nigeria Limited) and improvements in retained earnings,’’ he said.

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