American International Group Inc. (AIG) said Tuesday it has
agreed to sell its life insurance unit in Taiwan to a consortium
led by Hong Kong-based investment company Primus Financial Holdings
Ltd. for US$2.15 billion, in the largest sale globally of an AIG
business so far.
AIG, which is raising funds to repay the tens of billions of
dollars in bailout money it has received from the U.S. government,
said in a statement that Primus, co-founded by former Citigroup
banker Robert Morse, along with Hong Kong investment firm China
Strategic Holdings Ltd. (0235.HK) won the bid for AIG's 97.5%-owned
Nan Shan Life Insurance Co.
"We are pleased to have found a buyer who shares our confidence
in Nan Shan's bright future, and who has pledged to continue Nan
Shan's commitment to its policyholders, agents, and employees, as
well as to the people of Taiwan," said Robert Benmosche, AIG Chief
Executive Officer.
In acquiring Nan Shan, the Primus Financial consortium has
agreed to maintain the Nan Shan brand, the existing compensation
and benefits package for employees and the existing agency
organizational and commission structure for a minimum of two years
following the closing of the transaction, AIG said. The current Nan
Shan management team will remain in place.
Primus said it would turn Nan Shan, Taiwan's third-largest life
insurer by gross premiums and second largest by assets after Cathay
Financial Holding Co.'s Cathay Life Insurance Co., into a regional
player.
"As part of AIG, Nan Shan was limited in focus to Taiwan. Under
new owners we are very excited about the possibility of expanding
Nan Shan into other markets," Morse said in an interview.
Morse said he expects Nan Shan to expand through a combination
of acquisitions and organic growth.
Primus Co-CEO Wing-Fai Ng told Dow Jones Newswires in late
August that the company would take Nan Shan Life public if its bid
was successful, and would consider expanding its operations into
China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Japan, Singapore,
the Philippines, among others.
Primus, a successor to private-equity fund Primus Pacific
Partners which has raised the bulk of its funds from Hong Kong
tycoons, has set aside US$300 million-US$500 million to support Nan
Shan in case it needs to replenish its capital, Ng said
earlier.
Based on Nan Shan's Web site, the company, founded in 1963, had
NT$1.54 trillion (US$47.66 billion) worth of assets and a net worth
of NT$99.68 billion (US$3.1 billion) on June 30. Nan Shan has 4
million policyholders, 34,000 sales agents in addition to 4,000
employees.
The deal is subject to certain conditions being satisfied,
including regulatory approvals.
A pending issue concerns the mandatory contributions of Nan
Shan's agents to a provident fund, which they have sought they be
repaid to them.
Lauren Day, an AIG spokeswoman, said Primus, AIG and Nan Shan's
management team will continue to negotiate with Nan Shan's agents
to resolve the dispute.
Deal Boosts AIG's Asia Sales
The deal is the biggest ever in Taiwan's financial sector,
surpassing Standard Chartered's US$1.2 billion acquisition of
Hsinchu bank in 2006, and brings to almost US$3.5 billion the
announced amount AIG has raised in Asia.
In May, AIG said it sold its office building in Tokyo for US$1.2
billion. It has also sold some of its Philippine finance assets,
its Hong Kong consumer finance unit, its Thai retail bank and
credit card business, its Taiwan credit card company and its Indian
back-office businesses, for smaller, or undisclosed amounts. It
also sold its global third-party institutional asset management
unit to Hong Kong tycoon Richard Li for around US$500 million a
couple of months ago.
Until Nan Shan, AIG's biggest disposals globally were the US$1.9
billion sale of its energy and infrastructure investment assets in
August and its U.S. personal auto insurance business for the same
amount.
Waiting in the wings, however, is a much-touted
US$5-billion-plus initial public offering of its Asian
life-insurance unit, American international Assurance Co, which is
set to list in the first quarter of next year, most probably in
Hong Kong.
AIG has been selling some of its non-core businesses as part of
a major restructuring plan to slim down after it was forced to
accept billions in government support last autumn. However,
Benmosche has said he doesn't want to be rushed into fire-sale
prices. AIG's government bailout, which began in September 2008,
has grown to include government support of all types totaling $180
billion at the end of June, AIG has said.
The US$2.15 billion price tag is well above the $1.2
billion-$1.3 billion Primus was tipped to have offered initially
but in line with a US$2 billion valuation when the unit was put on
the block earlier this year.
"All financing is in place," Morse said, with the balance to be
financed by a syndicate of banks, which have already committed.
John Chou, a vice president at Taiwan Cooperative Bank
(5854.TW), said the bank is managing a NT$24 billion syndicated
loan for Primus together with First Financial Holding Co.
(2892.TW).
China Strategic had said Aug. 20 it planned to raise US$1
billion from selling convertible bonds to finance the Nan Shan
deal.
AIG picked Primus and China Strategic over Chinatrust Financial
Holding Co. (2891.TW), Taiwan's credit-card giant and the biggest
bancassurance services provider.
Chinatrust's shares fell 3% to NT$21.25 around 0520 GMT, when
the key stock index fell 0.3%.
Others bidding for the unit included Fubon Financial Holding Co.
(2881.TW) and Cathay Financial Holding Co. (2882.TW).
Blackstone Advisory Partners and Morgan Stanley acted as
financial advisors and Debevoise & Plimpton LLP and Lee &
Li, Attorneys-At-Law served as legal advisors to AIG on this
transaction. Deutsche Bank AG acted as financial advisor to Primus
Financial on this transaction, while Simpson Thacher & Bartlett
LLP and LCS & Partners acted as international and domestic
legal counsel respectively.
-By Perris Lee Choon Siong and Nisha Gopalan, Dow Jones
Newswires; +8862-2502-2557; perris.lee@dowjones.com
(Ellen Sheng and Aries Poon in Hong Kong contributed to this
article.)