Foreign capital to flow into non-life insurers on hopes of State divestment hinh anh 1The logo of BIDV Insurance Corporation (BIC) - one of the leading non-life insurers in Vietnam. (Photo thoibaotaichinhvietnam.vn)

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - State divestment is expected to lure foreign investors into and lift Vietnam’s non-life insurance market.

Among the major State-owned insurers are PVI Insurance, Bao Minh Insurance and BIDV Insurance.

PVI Insurance was on the list of companies that the National Oil and Gas Group (PVN) had to divest from in 2019.

But the divestment did not happen. The major shareholders in PVI are German firm HDI Global SE and PVN.

The German insurer holds 42.91 percent while PVN has 35.47 percent.

HDI Global SE was planning to raise its stake in PVI Insurance when the Government sold its share in the firm, according to BIDV Securities Corp (BSC).

Bao Minh Insurance has been on the must-sell list since 2017 with the divestment expected to be completed in 2020. The company has made some amendments to its business registration to allow foreign investors to increase their holdings in the firm.

The total insurance revenue of the sector in 2019 was estimated at 160.2 trillion VND (6.9 billion USD), up 20.3 percent on-year.

Of the total figure, non-life insurance sales were worth 52.4 trillion VND, an annual rise of 11.6 percent.

The non-life insurance market has room for further development in 2020, BSC said in a recent report, noting that Vietnam’s population is young and the country’s average income grows 7 percent each year.

According to BSC, the percentage of Vietnamese people buying non-life insurance products was low (1.3 percent) compared to those in emerging markets (3-4 percent). Spending on non-life insurance products was only 21 USD per capita, which is comparatively low to emerging markets that reached 70 USD per capita, the brokerage said.

It said large-cap firms are actively increasing their market shares and offering new products to win customers, which could help them raise core revenues and market shares during the year.

In 2020, businesses are expected to cut corporate management and administration costs, BSC said, adding the non-life insurance market could grow 11 percent on-year in 2020.

But the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, named COVID-19, could dampen corporate earnings in the first three months of 2020, according to the Ministry of Finance.

Insurers may have to extract a part of their earnings this year to hedge the risks for China-invested businesses, which have struggled with the lack of Chinese employees amid travel controls between the two countries.

These controls would also reduce the number of tourists visiting Vietnam, and insurers may have to take care of contracts signed with local travel businesses.

In addition, after the pandemic is declared over or the situation improves at least in the short term, insurers may face financial claims from customers who want the funding for medical treatment and quarantine expenses./.

VNA