Tokio Marine Holdings Inc. is considering a sale of its life insurance business in Southeast Asia that could be valued at about $1 billion in a deal, according to people familiar with the matter, as the Japanese insurer looks to focus on its core operations.
The Tokyo-listed firm is working with an adviser to gauge investor interest in its life insurance units in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand, the people said, who asked not to be identified as the information is private. Tokio Marine prefers to find a buyer for all of the assets, though it’s also considering a piecemeal deal, the people said.
A formal sale process can commence in the coming months, according to one of the people. Considerations are at an early stage and Tokio Marine can decide to keep the assets for longer, the people said.
Tokio Marine always considers disciplined M&A and reviews its business portfolio in general to improve profitability and achieve sustainable growth, its spokesperson said in response to a Bloomberg 麻豆原创 query. Nothing has been decided at the moment, the spokesperson said, declining to comment further.
Shares of Tokio Marine fell as much as 1.6% on Wednesday, valuing the company at about $40 billion. The stock is down 5.6% in the year to date.
Tokio Marine was founded in 1879 as Japan’s first non-life insurance company, according to its . The company began direct underwriting operations in London, Paris and New York a year later. It now offers both life and non-life insurance and operates in 46 countries beyond Japan. International business accounts for 54% of its profits.
Tokio Marine runs eight property and casualty insurance companies and five life insurers in eight countries in Asia outside Japan, its . of the life business in Asia excluding Japan increased by 38.9% to about 楼103 billion ($767 million) in the quarter ended December 2022. The life operation posted a 楼900 million profit in the same quarter, accounting for about 7% of Tokio Marine’s profits in the region excluding Japan.
–With assistance from Nao Sano.
Photograph: Pedestrians cross road in front of the Tokio Marine Holdings headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg
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