Aviva boosts investor payouts after profit beat

    • Aviva said it had paid more than £5 billion to investors since 2021, including a final dividend of 20.7 pence per share for 2022.
    • Aviva said it had paid more than £5 billion to investors since 2021, including a final dividend of 20.7 pence per share for 2022. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Fri, Mar 10, 2023 · 12:00 AM

    AVIVA hiked its payouts to investors on Thursday (Mar 9), including a pledged £300 million (S$483.2 million) share buyback, after navigating a volatile year in its key markets amid pressure from activist investor Cevian to boost returns.

    The British insurer and asset manager said it had paid more than £5 billion to investors since 2021, including a final dividend of 20.7 pence per share for 2022.

    The wider insurance sector has faced strain over the past year due to claims inflation and the impact of more extreme weather.

    But Aviva’s 2022 earnings topped analyst estimates, boosted by a jump in general insurance premiums.

    The FTSE 100 company reported a 35 per cent rise in 2022 operating profit from continuing operations to £2.2 billion, up from £1.6 billion the previous year.

    “Aviva now offers one of the strongest levels of total capital return in the sector,” JPMorgan analysts said in a note.

    Aviva shares were up 2.4 per cent at 1430 GMT.

    Since taking charge three years ago, Aviva CEO Amanda Blanc has raised billions from selling business units across the globe and has sought to more aggressively cut costs.

    Activist investor Cevian – which first revealed its stake in the company in 2021 – said the results showed the company had made a “strong start to the next phase”, which it said was delivering Aviva’s long-term potential.

    “Amanda Blanc and the board of Aviva have done an excellent job in restructuring the company,” said Niko Pakalen, partner at Cevian Capital.

    Aviva made an accounting loss of £1.1 billion, compared to a £2 billion profit the previous year, which it blamed on adverse market movements in 2022.

    The company’s solvency ratio, a key measure of capital strength, came in at 212 per cent, down from 244 per cent the previous year. Following a pension scheme payment and investor payouts, this fell to an estimated 196 per cent, the company said.

    The company’s general insurance gross written premiums increased 8 per cent to £9.7 billion, while its fund arm Aviva Investors reported external net flows of £1.3 billion, down from £3.3 billion the prior year. REUTERS

    Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services