Nib to buy OnePath Life for $24.7 mln
Nib to buy OnePath Life for $24.7 mln, extending New Zealand reach
By Paul McBeth
Oct. 15
(BusinessDesk) - Nib Holdings, the ASX-listed insurer which
bought Tower's medical insurance unit in 2013, has extended
its reach into the local market after agreeing to buy
OnePath Life (NZ) for $24.7 million from Australia & New
Zealand Banking Group.
The deal, which is subject to regulatory approvals from the Reserve Bank, is expected to be finalised in December, and will be funded though nib's existing available capital, it said in a statement to the ASX. The acquisition adds 20,000 policies covering 44,000 people to nib's book, lifting its share of New Zealand's health insurance market to 15 percent from 12 percent, and will immediately add to earnings per share. Nib New Zealand will provide insurance to more than 200,000 people once the deal is completed.
"The purchase of OnePath Life's NZ
medical insurance business meets our strict investment
criteria, and importantly provides us with additional scale
and scope to grow and leverage our existing New Zealand
operations," nib managing director Mark Fitzgibbon said.
"The purchase also reinforces our commitment to the adviser
market, with the majority of the OnePath Life NZ's medical
insurance products being distributed by financial
advisers."
Nib entered the New Zealand market with the
purchase of the Tower business and said when reporting its
annual earnings in August that it was considering merger and
acquisitions. The New Zealand division's operating profit of
A$7.3 million accounted for about 9.7 percent of the group's
earnings.
OnePath Life NZ generated gross written
premium of about $27 million in the year ended June 30, and
nib will honour pre-existing medical conditions where
customers are covered by their existing policies.
Nib and ANZ Bank New Zealand will enter into a distribution deal where the insurer will distribute its products through ANZ's network for five years.
In a separate statement, ANZ Wealth New Zealand managing director John Body said the exit from medical insurance will let the bank focus on its core life insurance business, and isn't material to the lender.
Nib anticipates transaction costs of about
A$1.3 million.
The insurer's shares last traded at traded at A$3.23 on the ASX, and have gained 2.9 percent this year.
(BusinessDesk)