By Joanne Chiu
This article is being republished as part of our daily
reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S.
print edition of The Wall Street Journal (April 24, 2019).
Once the crown jewel of American International Group Inc.,
pan-Asian life insurer AIA has eclipsed its former parent thanks to
soaring demand from China's middle class.
Hong Kong-listed AIA Group Ltd., whose shares hit fresh records
this month, now boasts a market capitalization of around $123
billion, more than three times that of AIG.
AIA's rise highlights the size and promise of Chinese financial
services -- and what AIG missed out on after it was forced to sell
the business to repay a huge government bailout.
"China is the place to be for insurers," said Victoria Mio,
chief investment officer for China at Robeco. Ms. Mio said a
burgeoning middle class was more aware of insurance and health-care
products, and had more money to spend on them.
However, the company has to tread carefully, since a large chunk
of its growth is thanks to mainland Chinese looking to build
offshore portfolios -- a sensitive area for China's government.
AIA says more than half the value of new business it generates
in Hong Kong comes from mainland customers. This measure is a key
yardstick for AIA, reflecting expected total earnings from new
policies, after adjusting for factors such as required capital
reserves.
The same demand also benefits rivals operating in the city such
as London-listed Prudential PLC, which previously tried to buy
AIA.
Hong Kong doesn't use the Chinese yuan but has its own currency,
the Hong Kong dollar, which is pegged to the U.S. dollar. Beijing
limits personal transfers out of China to roughly $50,000 a
year.
In 2016, as China battled a weakening yuan and capital outflows,
an increasing number of mainland Chinese residents were traveling
to Hong Kong to buy insurance policies, particularly those with
investment functions. As using credit cards to buy insurance became
a popular loophole to shift more funds abroad, dominant
payment-card company China UnionPay Co. began enforcing transaction
limits on offshore insurance purchases, and later limited these to
accident- and medical-related policies.
Those limits remain in place but the overall amounts spent by
mainlanders buying policies in Hong Kong have somewhat recovered
after Beijing's capital-flight crackdown, according to the city's
insurance regulator. The rebound comes as Chinese consumers seek to
protect themselves from rising economic uncertainty. In many cases,
buyers can use existing hard-currency holdings to buy policies.
AIA and its peers recruit well-educated mainland Chinese staff,
particularly graduates of Hong Kong universities, to sell products
to their compatriots, according to analysts and insurance agents.
These individuals' connections back home are seen as giving the
companies an edge in winning business from mainland Chinese
clients.
However, there are legal limits on what agents can say and do.
They can talk about the benefits of insurance, but cannot directly
promote or solicit Hong Kong business while on the mainland, nor
sign contracts with clients there, said Zhu Chao, chief executive
at Asset Pro Group Ltd.
Mr. Zhu, whose Hong Kong-based company works with
wealth-management and insurance firms in China and abroad, said
after seeing friends and relatives buy offshore insurance, "more
Chinese customers are jumping on the bandwagon."
He said there was genuine demand for protection, for example, to
guard against the cost of treating serious illnesses. And offshore
policies, typically in U.S. dollars, were also viewed by many
Chinese customers as a way to diversify their investments.
Priscilla Chen, 26, is from Zhejiang province in eastern China,
and is studying for a Ph.D. in Hong Kong. In March, she bought a
critical-illness policy, with savings elements, from AIA.
"Having U.S. dollar-denominated insurance coverage not only
gives me protection but would also help me hedge against any
currency risk in the future," said Ms. Chen. "I would also
recommend my friends and relatives to buy policies offshore. The
insurers are better managed and their products offer better
returns."
China's insurance market is already the world's second-largest
by premium volume, surpassing Japan in 2017, and the Swiss Re
Institute estimates it will overtake the U.S. by the mid-2030s.
AIG spun off AIA in a 2010 listing, valuing the unit at $30.5
billion, after the U.S. government committed up to $182.3 billion
of support for AIG during the financial crisis. The U.S. company
sold its remaining shares in AIA in several stages in 2012.
Once one of the world's most valuable insurers, AIG now mainly
consists of a global property-and-casualty insurance business and a
U.S. life insurance and annuity business.
In addition to its large Hong Kong business, AIA is the only
foreign insurer working in the mainland without a local partner.
AIA has wholly owned operations in Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and
the provinces of Guangdong and Jiangsu, and earlier this year won
permission to start up in two more cities.
Even before factoring in the benefits of any expansion, AIA's
China business is likely to see further rapid growth. BNP Paribas
analyst Dominic Chan said he expects AIA's onshore business to keep
growing more than 40% annually, as it recruits more highly educated
agents, and undertakes other initiatives such as partnering with
WeDoctor, a health care startup backed by Tencent Holdings Ltd.
Further out, CLSA analysts led by Lloyd Xu said Beijing's plans
to liberalize life insurance from 2021 could allow AIA to operate
nationwide, pending provincial approvals.
Write to Joanne Chiu at joanne.chiu@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 24, 2019 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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