| Reinsurance
corp reshapes to survive (11/13/2002)
China Reinsurance Corporation, the nation's largest reinsurance
company, is undergoing restructuring that will expand its business
into insurance, banking and securities. The move is expected to
offset a steep drop in profits due to market deregulation.
The company plans to ultimately reshape itself into a full-service
financial holding company that will run insurance, banking and investment
units through separate subsidiaries, said China Reinsurance President
Dai Fengju in an interview.
The bold move aims to bypass stiff regulations that bar financial
institutions from running diversified financial businesses at the
same time.
Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin's vow to "continuously
push through reforms in financial sectors" last Friday when
addressing over 2,000 national congress delegates is good news for
Dai's company.
"Cross-investment is an international trend. We are moving
toward this end via system reforms," said Dai, who is attending
the Party Congress.
Dai is betting the reforms can help increase his company's income,
and thus help it shrug off imminent profit decline.
At present, all insurance companies in China must reinsure 20 per
cent of their businesses with China Reinsurance, as stipulated by
law. But starting from next year, the 20 per cent "legal reinsurance"
will be cut by 5 per cent annually and will be completely eliminated
by 2006.
In other words, China Reinsurance, which gets 95 per cent of its
income from legal reinsurance, is expected to lose 4 billion yuan
(US$483.6 million) per year from 2003.
"The cuts in legal reinsurance will dramatically reduce our
profits," said Dai, adding that profits are predicted to drop
to 16 billion yuan (US$1.93 billion) next year, compared to a likely
18 billion yuan (US$2.18 billion) this year.
Dai said the government has already established a panel to study
its reform plan in a bid to bail out the ailing company.
The first step in the restructuring, Dai said, is to reshuffle
its core business to form a life reinsurance joint venture with
a to-be-determined foreign company, plus a property reinsurance
shareholding company with domestic insurance companies taking shares.
The two subsidiaries are expected to be launched in the first half
of next year, said Dai.
Another avenue it is pursuing is earthquake insurance, which Dai
believes will greatly increase the company's cash flow.
The idea is to allow the company to collect additional premiums
on insurance policies to put into a special fund to pay losses from
earthquakes, flood and other natural disasters.
What may add to the company's woe, however, is that some small
insurance companies evade regulations, therefore dampening China
Reinsurance's interests. They do not reinsure their business, even
though their own equity is inadequate to fend off all the risks.
Dai urged the regulatory commission to better monitor the industry,
and better protect the interests of consumers.
(China Daily)
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