Prudential, Sun Life among bidders for CBA's Indonesia
insurance business: sources
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[September 28, 2018]
By Sumeet Chatterjee
HONG KONG (Reuters) - At least five
insurers, including Britain's Prudential <PRU.L> and Canada's Sun Life <SLF.TO>,
have bid for Commonwealth Bank of Australia's (CBA) <CBA.AX> majority
stake in an Indonesian insurance venture, people with knowledge of the
process said.
The stake sale, which could value the venture at between $250 million
and $300 million, has also received second-round bids from insurer FWD
Group, Singapore-listed Great Eastern Holdings <GELA.SI>, and
Indonesia's Sequis Life, three people said.
Australia's biggest lender is selling its 80 percent stake in PT
Commonwealth Life, which has a presence in 20 Indonesian cities with
more than 500,000 individual and group customers, Reuters reported in
January.
The interest in PT Commonwealth Life is the latest case of foreign
insurers wanting to expand their life business in Southeast Asia, a
region of more than 600 million people.
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In March, CBA confirmed that it was undertaking a strategic review of
its Indonesian life insurance business, and that it has engaged external
advisers for guidance on a possible sale of the venture.
The second-round bids were submitted last week, the people said, adding
potential buyers are likely to be further short-listed within the next
few weeks before a decision is made by CBA.
Representatives of CBA, FWD, Great Eastern, Prudential, and Sun Life
declined to comment. Sequis said it could not comment now as it was
"bound by NDA", or non-disclosure agreement.
The people declined to be named as they were not allowed to talk to the
media about the deal process.
The Australian lender has been selling some of its businesses over the
past year after suffering a string of scandals including rate-rigging
charges, breaches of anti-money laundering laws, and fees charged to
dead clients.
CBA sold its insurance business in Australia and New Zealand to AIA
Group <1299.HK> for $3.1 billion last year. It also said this year its
loss-making digital banking unit in South Africa was being sold for an
undisclosed sum.
The Indonesian stake sale, if completed, will also be another instance
of Asian banks exiting the insurance sector to free up capital and focus
on their core banking businesses amid tougher regulatory capital buffer
requirements.
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A man walks past a branch of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in
central Sydney, Australia, February 7, 2018. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz
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GROWING MARKET
Asia is a battleground for foreign insurers including Aviva <AV.L>, Prudential
and Sun Life, attracted by the region's lower insurance penetration levels and
faster growth rates for insurance premiums.
The people said the foreign insurers competing for CBA's stake in the Indonesian
venture were looking to bolster their presence in Southeast Asia, which has seen
a handful of M&A deals in the last couple of years in the insurance sector.
Swiss group Zurich Insurance <ZURN.S> said on Thursday it was acquiring an 80
percent stake in Indonesia's Adira Insurance from PT Bank Danamon Indonesia <BDMN.JK>
and a minority investor for at least $414 million.
FWD, owned by Hong Kong billionaire tycoon Richard Li, has agreed to buy HSBC
Holdings' <HSBA.L> stake in a Malaysian insurance joint venture as part of a
plan to expand its presence in Asia, sources told Reuters last month.
Sun Life, which operates in seven Asian markets including China, Hong Kong,
India, the Philippines and Malaysia, has in recent years made a series of deals
in the region to acquire businesses or raise its ownership in several of those
markets.
CBA raised its holding in Commonwealth Life to 80 percent in 2007 in what was
then a 50:50 joint venture. The remaining 20 percent is owned by an Indonesian
firm, PT Gala Arta Jaya, according to the insurer's website.
Besides the insurance joint venture, CBA also has a retail and business banking
presence in Indonesia.
(Reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee; Additional reporting by Anshuman Daga in
Singapore, Paulina Duran in Sydney and Fanny Potkin in Jakarta; Editing by
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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