By Favour Nnabugwu

The Director-General of the Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria, CIIN, Mrs Abimbola Tiamiyu has celebrate the women professional in the insurance for talent, hard work and achievements.

Tiamiyu who was elevate by the courage to achieve a fest in life, dropped a note in the institute tweeter handle yesterday, greet the women for driving growth in the sector.

“Women have earned the right to be respected because of their talent, hard work and achievements”

She continued, “It is pleasing to see that there are more women taking a place at the head of the table and driving positive growth”

A few weeks ago, the 61-year old premier professional body, Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria (CIIN) welcomed Mrs. Abimbola Tiamiyu as its new Director General. She is the first woman to hold this position since 1993 when Mrs. Caludiana Brown served as Acting Registrar

This exciting news is coming shortly after the Nigeria Insurers Association (NIA) elected Mrs. Ebele Nwachukwu as its Vice Chairman, a position that means she will be decorated as the Chairman in 2022 after the new Chairman, Mr. Ganiyu Musa passes the baton. The NIA Secretariat, you may know, is headed by the indefatigable Director General, Mrs. Yetunde Ilori.

 Also, it would be necessary to remind us that the Nigerian Council of Registered Insurance Brokers (NCRIB) is currently led by Dr. (Mrs.) Bola Onigbogi who stepped in as President last year; and this is besides the Professional Insurance Ladies Association (PILA) which is, of course, headed by a new President, Mrs, Joyce Ojemudia who just came on board last May.

The list will not be complete without the mention of Mrs. Bukola Ifemade who chairs the influential Lagos Area Committee of the NCRIB, and Mrs. Yeside Oyetayo, the Rector of the College of Insurance and Financial Management, a full-fledged college set up by CIIN to undertake its training functions.

 These women are jointly and severally, if you may permit me to put it that way, on one mission: to transform the insurance industry in Nigeria

The Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) says it paid gratuity and pension arrears to 414 Association of Retired War Affected Police Officers (ARWAPO) amounting to over N954 million

The Executive Secretary of PTAD, Dr Chioma Ejikeme, made this known at a stakeholders’ forum with ARWAPO in Enugu State on Thursday.

Ejikeme said that death benefits were paid to 145 Next of Kin (NoK) of the deceased pensioners amounting to over N149 million
She explained that the retired war affected police officers were set of members of the Nigerian police force that took sides with the state of Biafra during the Nigeria Civil War and were dismissed in 1971.

Ejikeme said that they were later pardoned and granted amnesty by former President Olusegun Obasanjo on May 29, 2000.

She said that in a bid to bring pension administration to the doorstep of the pensioners, PTAD periodically engages stakeholders to update them of the directorates past and ongoing activities.

Ejikeme said that also allowed the organisation the opportunity to interact with the pensioners one on one with a view to serve them better.

She said that the directorate was currently reviewing and computing all pending ARWAPO pensioners complaints in order to payroll them monthly for pension, payments of arrears and payment of NoK.

She also stated that the provision of documents by ARWAPO members required for qualification for benefits computation and payment had been a challenge.

“Meetings such as the one we are having today provide the opportunity for cross-pollination of ideas, provision of clarity regarding grey areas and information dissemination.”

The executive secretary noted that the meeting provided another opportunity for continuous discussion with ARWAPO members on the way forward, getting mandatory requirements for the remaining pensioners to ensure their benefits were paid.

“This is a very potent indication of the importance, seriousness and commitment the present administration attaches to the wellbeing of our senior citizens,” she added.

Ejikeme said that in spite of the COVID-19 challenges the directorate had been making progress in addressing pensioners issues and restoring hope, dignity and a decent living to a Defined Benefit Scheme Pension

By admin

Sunu Assurances Nigeria Plc has projected a gross written premium of N2.74 billion representing 62.41 percent of the full year budget, for the Q2 2021.

The projection surpasses the premium generated in the corresponding period 2020 by 41.97 percent which stood at N1.93 billion.

The company in its notice at the Nigerian Stock Exchange also projected a profit after tax of N184.425 million for the Q2 2021.

SUNU Assurances Plc recently listed on the daily official list of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) additional 3,010,800,000 ordinary shares of 50 each at N1.00 per share.
The additional shares listed on the Exchange arose from SUNU Assurances’ private placement of 3,010,800,000 ordinary shares of 50 kobo each at N1.00 per share to SUNU
Participations Holdings SA and SUNU Assurances Vie Cote D’ivoire SA. With this listing of the additional 3,010,800,000 ordinary shares, the total issued and fully
paid up shares of SUNU Assurances Nigeria Plc has now increased from 2,800,000,000 to 5,810,800,000 ordinary shares of 50 kobo each

20 PFAs register 3,663 for N25m in Q4 2020

No fewer that 20 Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) registered 3,663 contributors under the Micro Pension Plan and a total sum of N25,024,528.08.

Data from the National Pension Commission (PenCom), during the fourth quarter of 2020 revealed that 20 Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) registered 3,663 contributors under the Micro Pension Plan and a total sum of N25,024,528.08 was remitted to the Retirement Saving Accounts (RSAs) of the contributor within the same period.

The Commission stated that in terms of withdrawals from the contingent portion of the contributions, six PFAs processed and approved requests amounting to N880,521.29 from 11 MPP participants during the review period.

The Director-General of PenCom, Mrs. Aisha Dahir-Umar, said the implementation of the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) has greatly impacted the economy.

Dahir-Umar stated that the major visible areas of this impact are the economic and social spheres and that the pension assets, is slowly but surely changing Nigeria’s financial landscape and by extension, the course and pace of our socio-economic development.

 

22 PFAs recorded transfer window of N18.89bn in Q4 2020

By admin

All of the 22 Pension Fund Administartors, PFAs, operating in the country were involved in the Retirement Savings Account (RSA) Transfer System launched on 16 November 2020, with a total sum of N18.89 billion moved by 2,799 RSA holders

The figure from National Pension Commission (PenCom) read that  during the fourth RSA Transfer Quarter of 2020 (i.e. the maiden RSA Transfer Quarter), the total value of the RSA balances transferred stood at N18,898,848,438.79. All the 22 PFAs were involved in the transfer, as transferring and/or receiving PFAs,”

The Comission revealed that the pension industry recorded a net marginal growth of 0.72 per cent (66,704) in schemes membership during the fourth quarter of 2020, rising from 9.20 million contributors as at the end of the preceding quarter to 9.27 million as at Q4 2020.

The growth in the industry membership, according to PenCom, was driven by the RSA Scheme, which had an increase of 68,749 registered contributors, adding that however, membership of the Closed Pension Fund Administrator (CPFA) Schemes declined by 2,045 to 14,926 while the Approved Existing Schemes (AESs) membership remained unchanged at 40,951 as at Q4 2020.

Favour Nnabugwu

The West African Insurance Companies Association Reinsurance, Waica Re, is set to hold its maiden edition of the annual corporate social responsibility competition in Nigeria and seven other countries.

With the theme “Practical solutions to natural disasters in West Africa”,  WAICA Re mentioned that the company is launching several other CSR projects in the countries where it operates in these seven countries- Sierra Leone, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Gambia, Zimbabwe, Tunisia and Kenya.

The reinsurer is committed to improving training conditions in the insurance sector.

The competition is an opportunity for insurance professionals to propose solutions to the natural disaster-related issues in their respective countries.

Five judges will be in charge of selecting the three winners. The top-ranked candidate will be designated Waica Re (WRA) Ambassador for one year.

The WRA will receive a prize of 5 000 USD. The second and third place nominees will receive 2 000 USD and 1 000 USD respectively. The award ceremony shall be held in August 2021.

The Implementation of the proposal is required not to exceed 100 000 USD and is to be completed within one

By admin

With the growing number of companies entering the takaful market, the Islamic insurance sector is expected to expand to $44bn in the next three years, expanding at a CAGR of 12.8 percent during 2019-2024, accoring to an industry expert.

Takaful insurance companies serve as an alternative to commercial insurance companies as the latter violate the restrictions on interest, uncertainty and gambling principles which are outlawed in sharia. Recently, there has been a rise in the number of institutions that offer Islamic financial services which have aided in the expansion of takaful across the globe.

Countries in South East Asia have implemented the Life Insurance and Family Takaful (LIFE) Framework which is expected to spur various market activities and enhance the sustainability of the takaful industry in the longer run. Apart from this, there has been a rise in the awareness among Muslims regarding the monetary benefits offered by takaful insurance.

This has encouraged foreign insurance companies to collaborate with takaful insurance companies, in turn, expanding their worldwide market reach. Moreover, the demand for takaful insurance products is also rising amongst the non-Muslim consumers as it is an ethical investment policy, with strong growth prospects and price competitiveness.

Despite these growth-inducing factors, the global takaful market is being impeded by the current inability of insurers to retain consumers

Speaking during a webinar hosted by Doha-based SEIB Insurance and Reinsurance on the Islamic insurance sector, Dr Mazen Abou Chakra, managing director of Gen Re Life and Health in MENA and the East Mediterranean region, said that the annual gross written contribution in 2020 was around $21bn worldwide. He added that the industry is projected to grow to $44bn by 2024, reported the newspaper The Peninsula.

Dr Mazen said takaful markets are mainly in Malaysia, Saudi Arabia and Iran, which together command around 80% of global takaful assets.

Another industry expert, Nohra Chaghouri, said, “In the mid-1990’s, there were only seven takaful companies in Sudan, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Jordan, and in 2016, this number increased to around 300 takaful companies.”

By admin
The global travel insurance market size was valued at $19.2 billion in 2019 and is projected to reach $39.3 billion by 2027, growing at a CAGR of 17.4 percent from 2020 to 2027.
The market is evaluated based on its regional penetration, explaining the performance of the market in each regional market covering provinces such as North America (United States, Canada and Mexico), Europe (Germany, France, UK, Russia and Italy), Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, Korea, India and Southeast Asia), South America (Brazil, Argentina, Colombia), Middle East and Africa (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa).
The key players operating in the global travel insurance industry include Allianz Group, American International Group Inc., Assicurazioni Generali S.P.A, AXA, Insure & Go Insurance Services Limited, Seven Corners Inc., Travel Insured International, Travel Safe Insurance, USI Insurance Services, and Zurich Insurance Co. Limited.
Several intermediaries in distribution channel such as insurance aggregators, banks, insurance brokers providing consumers with various options to compare products and prices, suggest suitable policies, and others. In addition, travel insurance providers offer different plans by covering costs and losses depending on coverages in the policy.
Convenient options provided to the consumers for travel insurance purchases via online comparison-shopping sites such as direct airline sites and online travel agencies (OTAs), company websites & applications, and others fuel the travel insurance market growth.
In addition, rise in tourism due to increase in disposable income, easy online travel bookings, package holidays, extensive coverage of holidays, and others also drive the market growth.
Moreover, increase in tourism led to several incidences such as trip cancellations, loss of luggage & important documents, medical emergencies, and others take place. To mitigate these risks, consumers opt for travel insurance, which is a significant driving factor for the travel insurance market.
Travel insurance providers in the market are adopting several model acts, laws & regulations including development of prospective legislation, and enforcement activity, accelerating the growth of travel protection products and services in the industry.
However, lack of awareness towards travel insurance policies, low consumer experiences in terms of coverages, premium rates, and services by third-party providers of travel insurance remains a primary concern, as a result, these factors limit the growth of travel insurance premium in the market.
On the contrary, insurers are expected to enhance existing distribution platforms of travel insurance to accelerate productivity with the help of technologies such as geo-location, application program interface (API), artificial intelligence (AI), data analytics, and global positioning system (GPS), among others. As a result, these factors are expected to create travel insurance market opportunity in the upcoming years.
The insurance intermediaries sector dominated the travel insurance industry in 2019 and is projected to maintain its dominance during the forecast period. Due to several intermediaries upgrading their offerings by incorporating software such as global distribution system (GDS), which enables transactions between travel industry service providers such as airlines, hotels, car rental companies, and travel agencies.
The report focuses on the growth prospects, restraints, and trends of the travel insurance market analysis. The study provides Porter’s five forces analysis to understand the impact of various factors such as bargaining power of suppliers, competitive intensity of competitors, threat of new entrants, threat of substitutes, and bargaining power of buyers on the travel insurance market.

By Favour Nnabugwu
The Covid-19 health crisis has plunged the world economy into uncertainty. Like several business sectors, insurance has not been spared.
Swiss Re’s projections show a decline in the global insurance market of 1.4 percent in 2020 after the increases of 2.3 percent reported in 2019 and 4.8 percent in 2018.
Moreover, this crisis comes at a time when the market is heavily strained by the resurgence of more severe and devastating natural disasters.
The persistence of low interest rates, the volatility of the capital markets and the low outlook for premium growth are all factors that show very little hope for a return to normal for several years to come.
Cost of the Covid-19 to the insurance market pandemic, According to Standard & Poor’s estimates by the end of June 2020, the cost of this health crisis for the global insurance and reinsurance market would be between 35 and 50 billion USD. The top 20 reinsurers alone will bear 14% of the bill, that is approximately 12 billion USD.
In addition to this heavy bill, market stakeholders expect a drop in profitability and a decline in operational performance. The annual accounts for the year 2020 should be adversely impacted at the level of assets, liabilities, results, revenues.
Impact of the Covid-19 on profitability of insurers
The decline in the results of the leading insurers and reinsurers for the third quarter 2020 has forced some stakeholders to revise downwards their growth prospects for the financial year 2020. Projections for 2021 and the following years are, for their part, put on stand-by or revised downwards.
Among the market leaders, Axa puts forward a projected cost of the crisis on its accounts of 1.5 billion EUR (1.75 billion USD). Allianz’s losses would amount to 1.3 billion EUR (1.52 billion USD). The German reinsurer Munich Re, for its part, forecasts an invoice of 800 million EUR (936.4 million USD) related to the current pandemic for the first nine months of 2020.
Impact of the Covid-19 on claim experience
As a result of the interruption of economic activities, the loss ratio has evolved either downwards or upwards depending on the class of business.
In general, all property and casualty classes of business reported a decline in claims, a trend mainly observed in motor and homeowner’s insurance.
This improvement has led some companies, especially the mutual ones, to grant discounts to policyholders and to pay out dividends even before the 2020 financial statements are closed.
The lines of business hit the hardest by the effects of the crisis are event cancellation and business interruption covers.
Other directly exposed lines such as credit insurance, assistance, travel insurance, health insurance and provident insurance also saw an increase in claims.
Non-physical damage business interruption coverage Insurance: event cancellation coverage Covid-19: Insurers and authorities up against the risk of a pandemic
The exceptional magnitude of the crisis forced the authorities to react. Indeed, to avoid a total collapse of the economy, governments had to take urgent measures to support the various market stakeholders, calling on insurers to participate in this surge of solidarity.
Consequently, some regulators asked and sometimes imposed on private insurers to examine with understanding the claims related to Covid-19. Others, on the other hand, have insisted on the respect of the guarantees as stipulated in the contracts, while requesting financial support from the insurance companies for the benefit of individuals and sectors affected by the crisis.
Nigeria

For insurers, the fallout from the COVID-19 outbreak includes a surge in health, travel and business interruption claims, pressure on sales from reduced business activity, and less use of face-to-face channels. The gathering economic slowdown emanating from the pandemic is also driving interest rates even lower and increasing credit risk exposures from businesses facing possible default.

This raises the possibility of regulators asking for extraordinary solvency tests to ensure insurers can withstand the immediate and knock-on impacts. Put together, this daunting list of issues represents a stern test of resilience for an industry already weighed down by enduringly low interest rates and slow growth in mature markets.

South Africa
Insurers are not required to cover business interruption caused by the pandemic when coverage is not purchased.
Kenya
The Kenyan regulatory authority IRA has ordered insurers to pay all pandemic-related claims.
Cima Zone
The Inter-African Insurance Market Conference, which includes 14 African countries, recommends fair treatment and protection of policyholders’ interests.
Morocco
The Supervisory Authority of Insurance and Social Welfare (ACAPS) has temporarily loosened certain prudential rules. It has also taken mitigation measures to enable the insurance sector to cope with the consequences of the pandemic. Thus, the losses avoided to the market by these measures are estimated at 700 million MAD (76 million USD).
France
The authorities have opted to establish a public-private partnership to find “new insurance solutions to this unprecedented crisis”. The French Federation of Insurers has thus submitted proposals to the government to build a system of protection against “exceptional disasters”.
Faced with exceptional economic costs related to Covid-19, estimated at 86 billion EUR (100.57 billion USD) at the end of 2020, insurers have taken several support measures including: a contribution of 3.2 billion USD to support and indemnify the most affected individuals and companies, a 2.5 billion USD grant to participate in the country’s economic recovery.
United States
In order to alleviate the burden of the pandemic, the United States, the country most affected by Covid-19, adopted a series of emergency measures, including the CARES Act.
The new provisions allowed the federal government to allocate approximately 3 000 billion USD in financial aid to businesses and individuals.
The insurance companies have provided 8.1 billion USD in assistance in the form of refunds, discounts, dividends and credits to motor insurance policyholders.
In most states, companies provide this support on a voluntary basis, although government authorities encourage insurers to take such initiatives. Cigna and New York Life, for example, have created a fund called the Brave Heart Fund. Its purpose is to provide financial support to the families of medical employees who have died from coronavirus.

Favour Nnabugwu

Capital constraints in local markets are leading to more business flowing to wholesale markets, such as London and Bermuda.

According AM Best, Private equity, industry capital and public placements all contributed to the capital inflow, said Best, supporting the balance sheets of existing players, alongside some material scaleups and a number of true startups.

Listed carriers including Beazley, Hiscox, QBE, Lancashire and Renaissance Re tapped public equity and debt markets, while privately-owned Convex and Fidelis raised capital from new and existing shareholders.

Best said the capital inflow partly reflects the absence of other opportunities for investors, particularly the low interest-rate environment, and the risk and reward calculation posed by the insurance industry in a hardening market may look more attractive to existing and new investors.

The ratings agency noted that Bermudian and London market insurers have been able to raise equity with relative ease, suggesting that investors have confidence in the near-term prospects of the insurance industry, despite claims uncertainty in respect of Covid-19, social inflation and catastrophe exposure.

Third-party capital, for example in the form of collateralised reinsurance vehicles (sidecars) and insurance-linked securities, continues to flow into the market, but the pace has tempered, following a period of high-severity losses and issues surrounding collateral release, said Best.

One area attracting interest as a result of the current hardening market is US casualty business. In recent years, insurers writing US casualty business has been hit by an increase in both the frequency of attritional claims and a rise in the severity of large losses, largely reflecting the issues with social inflation and rising jury awards in the US, said Best.

In particular, directors and officers, errors and omissions, excess casualty and healthcare liability lines have been particularly affected; and as a result these lines have been pruned, with the subsequent squeeze on capacity supporting material rate improvements.

Best said: “Capital constraints in local markets are leading to more business flowing to wholesale markets, such as London. As a result, insurers are seeing attractive opportunities to deploy capital, particularly in specialty excess and surplus markets and more recently in reinsurance.

This was demonstrated by the strong growth recorded by existing London market insurers in 2020, with results announcements detailing double-digit rate increases for some lines of business.”

The impact of all of this could have a dampening effect on price increases, said Best, although it noted that a portion of the additional capital raised in 2020 has already been required to absorb adverse prior-year loss reserve development and upward revisions in Covid-19-related loss estimates.

“The [effect that the] economic consequences of the pandemic will have on demand for insurance is highly uncertain and will largely depend on the length and depth of the economic downturn. As economies shrink, so does the value of insurable risk. But when businesses come under financial pressure, their appetite to retain risk may also reduce – increasing demand for insurance cover,” said Best.

Best also noted that there has been a concern that some risks, even where there have been material rate increases, are still not adequately priced. “The persistent squeeze on capacity means rates have continued to rise in these lines and there does now appear to be growing confidence around price adequacy,” it said.

Best explained that economic volatility caused by Covid-19 may constrain M&A activity in the short term, but in the longer term, consolidation pressures are likely as some insurers come under increased financial pressure. However, Best said it expects to see further portfolio transfers in the forms of disposals of non-core businesses to strategic buyers, financial buyers and runoff specialists.