Pandemic casts shadow over Prudential outlook as profit jumps

Reuters

Published Aug 11, 2021 09:50

Updated Aug 11, 2021 11:31

By Carolyn Cohn

LONDON (Reuters) -The coronavirus pandemic is making the short-term outlook uncertain for Prudential (LON:PRU), the Asian-focused insurer said on Wednesday, as it reported a 25% jump in new business profit in the first half of the year.

COVID-19 cases are rising and restrictions increasing in many Asian countries as a result of the more transmissible Delta variant.

"The operating environment remains challenging, we have to run a business of a very nimble model," Chief Executive Mike Wells told a media call, pointing to an increased use of online sales.

Longer term, the pandemic was likely to increase demand for life and health insurance, Wells added.

Prudential will be based only in Asia and Africa after it completes the demerger of its U.S. business Jackson, scheduled for Sept 13. It spun off its UK and European business, M&G, in 2019.

The Jackson demerger follows pressure from activist investor Third Point, which took a stake in Prudential last year.

Third Point also criticised Prudential's London headquarters.

Prudential, which is now regulated in Hong Kong, has headquarters in both cities but is not planning to ditch its London base, Wells said.

The insurer posted a 25% rise in half-year new business profit to $1.18 billion, above the $1.08 billion seen in a company-supplied consensus of analysts' forecasts.

Prudential reiterated it was considering raising around $2.5-3.0 billion of equity through a global offering to institutions and Hong Kong retail investors, following the Jackson split.