Tuesday, January 5, 2016

DBS, Manulife tie-up takes aim at Asia’s growing insurance market

DBS, Manulife tie-up takes aim at Asia’s growing insurance market
"While Asia's middle class is increasing, it is also rapidly ageing, with citizens aged above 60 years old expected to triple to 1.3 billion by 2050. This is a tremendous opportunity in a business that we have strong advantage in," Mr Richard Vargo, regional head of bancassurance at DBS Bank says.

By Tang See Kit, Channel NewsAsia
Posted 05 Jan 2016 14:44

SINGAPORE: The official launch of a 15-year regional distribution deal between Singapore’s DBS Bank and Canadian insurer Manulife Financial Asia on Tuesday (Jan 5) marks the latest move by companies aiming to gain access into one of the world’s fastest-growing life-insurance markets.

Mr Richard Vargo, regional head of bancassurance at DBS Bank, said at the press conference on Tuesday: “The middle class in this part of the world will expand by more than three times to 1.8 billion by 2020.”

Despite this explosive growth, Asia remains largely under-insured, Mr Vargo added.

"While Asia's middle class is increasing, it is also rapidly ageing, with citizens aged above 60 years old expected to triple to 1.3 billion by 2050. This is a tremendous opportunity in a business that we have strong advantage in,” he said.

Manulife's chief financial officer Steve Roder agreed, noting that "Asia is fundamentally important" to the Canadian life insurer.

"The deal is expected to add materially to insurance sales in Asia from the first year and improve the bank's insurance position especially in Singapore," said Mr Roder, adding that the agreement could catapult Singapore into Manulife's third leading market in Asia, behind Hong Kong and Japan.

Manulife also expects the partnership to help boost core earnings per share in 2017.

The access to DBS' large and growing retail, wealth and small and medium enterprise (SME) customer base of six million will help Manulife to "deepen and diversify its distribution, while increasing scale and capabilities", added Mr Roder.

S$100M PLUNGE INTO DIGITAL TECH

Both companies also announced plans to make "mutual long-term commitments and investments", such as co-funding up to S$100 million over the next 15 years into digital technology and innovation enhancements plans.

Manulife noted the emphasis on digital enhancements is in line with the changes of how consumers now access banking services. Mobile banking platforms, for instance, are particularly popular in China.

"We want to take bank insurance to the next level in Asia and be the most advanced bank insurance platform in the region," Mr Roder said.

DBS Group Head of Consumer Banking and Wealth Management Tan Su Shan agreed, noting that there is also a shift from Internet to mobile among consumers in Singapore and that it is "imperative to ensure that the digital journey is seamless".

According to a joint filing to the Singapore Exchange in April 2015, Manulife will pay DBS an initial payment of US$1.2 billion, as well as additional variable payments based on the success of the bancassurance partnership. The bancassurance model refers to insurance products distributed through a bank's branch network rather than through individual insurance agents.

Manulife is taking over UK insurer Aviva, which was the primary distributor of insurance products via DBS' Asian branch network since 2001.

Global insurers keen to tap into one of the world's fastest-growing life insurance markets have been courting Asian lenders over the years, offering attractive prices for multi-year exclusive access to the banks' branch networks across the region.

Prudential last year renewed a 15-year distribution agreement with Standard Chartered. This came on the back of AIA Group inking a 15-year exclusive deal with Citibank to distribute its insurance products via the lender's Asia-Pacific retail branch network in 2013.

The billion-dollar tie-up between DBS and Manulife is reportedly the last major agreement of its kind until HSBC considers a new deal in 2022, according to Reuters.

- CNA/av

- wong chee tat :)

2016



Well, 2015 went quickly and now we are in Jan 2016!

- wong chee tat :)

Jan 2016 Singapore Savings Bonds - GX16020F

Issuance details - GX16020F

Bond ID
GX16020F
Amount available
$300 million
Issue date
1 Feb 2016
Maturity date(1)
1 Feb 2026
Interest payment dates(1)
The 1st interest payment will be made on 1 August 2016, and subsequently 
every six months on 1 February and 1 August every year.
Investment amounts
You can invest a minimum of $500, and in multiples of $500 up to 
$50,000 for this issue. The total amount of Savings Bonds held across 
all issues cannot be more than $100,000.
Application period
Opens: 6.00pm, 4 Jan 2016
Closes: 9.00pm, 26 Jan 2016
Results: After 3.00pm, 27 Jan 2016
Keep track of the important dates with our SSB calendar.
Apply through
DBS/POSB, OCBC and UOB ATMs and DBS/POSBInternet Banking
from 7.00am - 9.00pm, Mon - Sat, excluding Public Holidays. On 
4 Jan 2016, these channels will be open from 6.00pm to 9.00pm. 
CPF and SRS funds are not eligible.

This bond will be reflected as "SBFEB16 GX16020F" in your CDP statement and "CDP-SBFEB16" in your bank statement.

Interest rates


Year from issue date
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Interest, %
1.00
1.12
1.81
2.62
3.01
3.01
3.03
3.10
3.27
3.65
Average return per year, %*
1.00
1.06
1.31
1.63
1.89
2.07
2.19
2.30
2.39
2.50
* At the end of each year, on a compounded basis
Calculate the interest you will earn based on your desired investment amount using the Interest Calculator.
(1)If this day is not a business day, payment will be made on the next business day.


- wong chee tat :)

Cron

Cron - What is that? Simply think of that as a task scheduler and the tasks assigned will run periodically. In Windows, cron is like a task scheduler. But of course, cron can do more than the windows task scheduler.

Syntax


 # ┌───────────── min (0 - 59)
 # │ ┌────────────── hour (0 - 23)
 # │ │ ┌─────────────── day of month (1 - 31)
 # │ │ │ ┌──────────────── month (1 - 12)
 # │ │ │ │ ┌───────────────── day of week (0 - 6) (0 to 6 are Sunday to Saturday, or use names; 7 is Sunday, the same as 0)
 # │ │ │ │ │
 # │ │ │ │ │
 # * * * * *  command to execute


Basically, you can see it is like: "min" "hourly": "day of month" "monthly" "day of week" command to execute.


Reference: Cron (Wiki)


- wong chee tat :)