By Benjamin Chiou
Date: Wednesday 20 Mar 2024
LONDON (ShareCast) - (Sharecast News) - Shares in Prudential tanked on Wednesday despite the insurance giant saying it is "increasingly confident" in meeting its long-term targets following a strong 2023, during which new business profits jumped by almost a half.
After brief stint in positive territory when markets opened, the stock was down nearly 7% by lunchtime, falling to 728.6p - a level it has not seen since 2012.
Results were largely in line or better than expected, though analysts put the negative market reaction down to ongoing concerns surrounding the company's end-markets - namely its exposure to China's struggling real-estate sector.
"Unfortunately the economic clouds which have hung over the likes of China more recently have had a detrimental effect on the share price for Prudential, if not for its long-term prospects," said Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactive Investor.
Hunter said that the stock's underperformance against the FTSE 100 - falling 23% compared to a 4.5% rise on the blue-chip index - is a "painful reminder of the ground which needs to be recovered".
Prudential reported new business profit of $3.13bn for 2023, up 45% year-on-year and some 6% ahead of consensus forecasts, according to Morgan Stanley, helping the company to swing to an IFRS profit after tax of $1.71bn, compared with a loss of $1.0bn in 2022.
According to its five-year plan set in 2022, Prudential is targeting new business profit to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 15-20%, implying a figure of $4.4-5.4bn by 2027.
The company, which has more than 18m customers across Asia and Africa, is also guiding to an operating free surplus generated from in-force insurance and asset management business of more than $4.4bn by 2027. However, this was broadly stable in 2023 at $2.74bn due to ongoing investments into its new strategic pillars.
"The gradual compounding of the new business contribution and improving operating variances will support progress towards our 2027 financial objective," the company said.
Commenting on the results, chief executive Anil Wadhwani said: "These are a very strong set of results while operating in a challenging macro environment, with new business profit up 45% driven by a relentless focus on execution in our markets in Asia and Africa.
"It is also an illustration of the strength of both our agency and bancassurance distribution channels as well as an affirmation of our leadership position in many key markets."
The board approved a second interim dividend of 14.21 cents per share, taking the total dividend to 20.47 cents, up 9% year-on-year.
Looking to 2024, Prudential said sales growth had continued over the first two months of the year. "Given the relentless execution focus in implementing our strategy, we are increasingly confident in achieving our 2027 financial and strategic objectives and in accelerating value creation for our shareholders," Wadhwani said.
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