Tokio Marine to buy U.S. insurer Pure Group for about $3 billion
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[October 03, 2019] By
Junko Fujita
TOKYO (Reuters) - Tokio Marine Holdings Inc <8766.T> will buy insurer
Pure Group for about $3.1 billion, it said on Thursday, marking its
fourth sizable acquisition in the United States in a little over a
decade.
Japanese financial firms have been forced to look abroad for growth amid
an ageing, shrinking population at home. Tokio Marine, the world's
fourth-largest property-and-casualty insurer by revenue, has pushed into
both emerging markets and the United States.
"The U.S. market is huge and it is expected to grow steadily," Tokio
Marine Chief Executive Satoru Komiya told a news conference. "Also, the
market is transparent."
But he acknowledged that the $3.1 billion price, at 33-times Pure
Group's forecast profit for 2020, was "not cheap".
"We are paying for Pure's big potential growth," he said.
The deal, to be financed through cash on hand and external funding, is
expected to close during the first quarter of 2020 and Tokio Marine will
keep Pure Group's current management in place, Tokio Marine said in a
statement.
Pure Group provides property-and-casualty insurance to high net-worth
individuals across the United States and has become one of the top three
players in that market since its founding in 2006, Tokio Marine said.
REVENUE AND RISK
Overseas acquisitions allow insurers to diversify their revenue and
risk, so that a natural disaster hitting one region could be offset by
profits from elsewhere.
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Satoru Komiya, President and Group CEO of Tokio Marine Holdings Inc
attends a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, October 3, 2019.
REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Tokio Marine bought U.S. speciality insurer HCC Insurance Holdings for $7.5
billion in 2015. It paid $2.7 billion in 2011 for Delphi Financial and bought
Philadelphia Consolidated for $4.7 billion in 2008.
The high net-worth insurance market is one of the few insurance businesses
seeing strong growth in the United States, Tokio Marine said, as growth in the
number of wealthy individuals outpaces that of the overall population.
Pure has achieved a compound annual growth rate of around 30% in the last five
years and reached around $1 billion in managed premiums in 2018.
Tokio Marine is valued at $38 billion and brings in $45 billion a year in
revenue, according to Refinitiv data.
Shares of the insurer ended 1.8% lower after the Nikkei newspaper earlier
reported the news.
(Reporting by Kevin Buckland and Junko Fujita; Writing by David Dolan; Editing
by Muralikumar Anantharaman/Edwina Gibbs/Jane Merriman)
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