Money Markets
By DAVID HERBLING
In Summary
- The proposed RBC model comes after the regulator in 2010 tripled the minimum required paid-up capital for general business to Sh300 million, life insurers (Sh150 million) and Sh450 million for composite (combining both) insurance companies.
Insurance companies bulked up their capital by almost
one-fifth in the nine months to September as the industry prepared to
adopt a risk-based capital (RBC) regime.
Total shareholder funds in the Kenya insurance industry grew
to Sh117.9 billion in September 2014 from Sh100.9 in December last year
as underwriting companies prepare for the fresh capital requirements
set to be enacted next year.
The impending shift to an RBC model, contained in
the Insurance Bill 2014, has forced Kenya’s 48 insurers to seek
additional funds from strategic partners and retain earnings to boost
capital. The Insurance Regulatory Authority (IRA) attributed the growth
in shareholders’ equity to increased deal making such as mergers and
acquisitions in the industry over the past year.
“This increase in net worth is attributable to
capital injections evidenced in the Kenyan insurance market in the
recent past coupled with the rising foreign interest in the market,”
said Sammy Makove, IRA chief executive, in an industry update.
“These mergers and acquisitions are indicative of
increasing investor confidence in the industry and present a greater
growth potential and stability for the insurance industry in Kenya.”
The proposed RBC model comes after the regulator in
2010 tripled the minimum required paid-up capital for general business
to Sh300 million, life insurers (Sh150 million) and Sh450 million for
composite (combining both) insurance companies.
IRA’s strategic plan for the period 2013-2018 sets
December 2015 as the effective date for the roll out of the risk-based
capital model.
The RBC model will see the regulator ensure
insurance firms maintain their capital resources at a level that matches
the nature, scale, complexity and risk profile of the business.
“The authority may issue a directive requiring the
licensed insurer to increase its paid-up capital…and increase the
minimum capital adequacy requirement applicable to a licensed insurer,”
reads section 36(1) of the Insurance Bill, which gives IRA powers to set
risk-based capital adequacy requirements
The imminent need for additional cash has made
local insurance firms a prime target for global financial firms seeking
entry into Kenya and the Eastern African region.
“Kenyan insurance industry is amongst the top
insurance markets in Africa in terms of attractiveness and growth
potential,” said Mr Makove.
Prudential Plc. in September made a return to the
Kenyan insurance industry after it wholly acquired Shield Assurance —
the life assurance arm of the collapsed Blue Shield Insurance — for an
undisclosed fee, saying it plans to invest Sh1.5 billion in the company
over the next one year.
Morocco’s Saham Group in April completed a deal
where it acquired a 66.7 per cent stake in Mercantile Insurance which
was majority owned by the Pandit family. The value of the deal was not
publicly disclosed.
Cape Town-based financial services firm
Metropolitan International last month completed purchase of a majority
stake in Cannon Assurance for Sh2.3 billion (R300 million).
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