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Showing posts with label General Takaful. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Takaful. Show all posts

Indonesia Islamic Insurance Assets Increased 47.6% in 2010

Posted by nurul Tuesday, March 15, 2011 0 comments

Indonesia Islamic Insurance Assets Increased 47.6% in 2010
By Suryani Omar - Mar 15, 2011 10:09 AM GMT+0500
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Business ExchangeBuzz up!DiggPrint Email .Indonesia’s Islamic insurance assets surged 47.6 percent to 4.5 trillion rupiah ($512 million) last year from a year earlier, Indonesia’s Capital Market and Financial Institution Supervisory Agency said.

Islamic insurance, or takaful, is based on the Koranic principle of mutual assistance where policy holders contribute a sum of money to a common pool managed by the company.

Premiums for the takaful sector rose 35.7 percent to 3.2 trillion rupiah in 2010 from a year earlier, Isa Rachmatarwata, head of the insurance bureau at the agency, said in a written response to questions.

Islamic insurance made up 2 percent of the total 224.9 trillion of insurance assets in the country, Rachmatarwata said.

Courtesy by: Bloomberg

Dow Jones Indexes to launch Takaful Index

Posted by nurul Wednesday, February 23, 2011 0 comments

Dow Jones Indexes is expanding its Dow Jones Islamic Market Indexes series by launching the Dow Jones Islamic Market Global Finance & Takaful Index, which measures the performance of financial services stocks that pass rules-based screens for Shari’ah compliance.
The new index, designed to provide broader coverage of the Shari’ah-compliant financial services sector, will serve as a benchmark and an underlying instrument for investment products such as mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).


“The Dow Jones Islamic Market Indexes is a unique series that combines faith-based principles and benchmarking,” said Michael A. Petronella, president, Dow Jones Indexes. “Our index family was the first to market and has clearly set the standards of Islamic indexing around the world. And, once again, with the launch of the Dow Jones Islamic Market Global Finance & Takaful Index, we are providing the market with the first benchmark of its kind for these combined sectors.”


Eligible companies are banks, insurance and financial services companies. Included in the index are those stocks that pass financial ratio screens that are less than 33 per cent in total debt, divided by trailing 24-month average market capitalisation; cash plus interest-bearing securities, divided by trailing 24-month average market capitalisation; and accounts receivables, divided by trailing 24-month average market capitalisation.


The dollar-denominated Dow Jones Islamic Market Global Finance & Takaful Index is weighted based on float-adjusted market capitalization, with the weight of individual stocks restricted to 15 per cent. The index composition is reviewed quarterly in March, June, September and December; it is also regularly reviewed to account for corporate actions such as mergers, de-listings or bankruptcies.

Courtesy by: CPI Financial

PQFTL, HBL Islamic Banking sign accord

Posted by nurul Tuesday, January 25, 2011 0 comments

KARACHI: Pak-Qatar Family Takaful Ltd (PQFTL) and HBL Islamic Banking inked an accord to provide family (Life) Takaful coverage to HBL-Islamic Banking Al-Ziarat Account (Hajj and Umrah Savings Plan) holders. The contribution for Life Takaful coverage will be made by HBL. P Ahmed CEO PQFTL and Muhammad Aslam head of Islamic Banking HBL said HBL Al-Ziarat Account is a scheme where the plan holders could save for Hajj and Umrah to undertake the journey at the time of their choice. As an incentive HBL Al-Ziarat Account will have higher weightage than PLS account in addition to free life cover. In case of death of an account holder, PQFTL will pay the remaining contribution towards the scheme and the nominee of the plan holder will get lump sum amount to perform Hajj-e-Badal or Umrah in place of the deceased. HBL will initially offer this product from 19 stand-alone dedicated Islamic Banking branches and 206 Islamic Banking windows throughout Pakistan.

ourtesy by: Daily Times

Is Egypt going takaful?

Posted by nurul Friday, December 31, 2010 0 comments

Islamic insurance has been steadily growing as a "Halal" alternative for commercial insurance that some believe to be illegal and risky


"If you want to invest in Halal items, with fair interest. If you want to insure your home without opposing God, come and let’s all cooperate and invest in Halal."

So reads a statement on the facebook group page of Saudi Egyptian Insurance House, one of Egypt’s takaful insurance companies, in Latin letters.

Takaful, literally "joint guarantee", is to invest the halal (permitted in Islam) way.

Recent as it is in the Egyptian liberal market, the Islamic laws-compliant version of insurance seems to be slowly but surely growing.

"Facebook is one of our innovative ways to marketing," says Gamal Shehata, the company’s branches and production general manager, from his office in the company's five floor silver building in the Cairo suburb of Dokki.

Egypt has had a bad experience with Islamic finance.

Back in the mid 1980s, Islamic fund management tycoons like Rayan and Al-Saad were accused by the government of investing millions of pounds of Egyptians' savings in a ponzi scheme. Any dividends paid to investors were from their own money or that of other investors rather than from any actual earned profit

Although the government confiscated their local assets, hundreds of millions of Egyptians lost their money.

"One way to attract customers and regain their trust is by combining state-of-the-art marketing tools with word-of-mouth traditional ways," says Shehata, surrounded by decorative Quranic frames, before being interrupted by an attractive veiled young lady, one of the company’s marketers, wearing modern jeans and high heeled boots.

"Our main target is that growing category of Egyptians who are wary of investment and other financial dealings because they think its haram (forbidden in Islam)," added Shehata.

Established back in 2003, with an authorized capital of LE100 million ($17,220,595), as the first Takaful insurance company in Egypt, the Egyptian Saudi House operates according to sharia (Islamic law) whereby the insured is a partner in the end of the year's surplus.

As a corporate insurance entity, the company provides insurance against all manner of risks.

The company’s total assets have grown from LE79.6 million ($13.7 million) in 2007-2008 to LE95.9 million ($16.5 million) in 2008-2009.

The company has been followed into the sector by eight others companies that all started operating in mid 2008, with fifty percent of the capital coming from the Gulf countries.

The new comers quickly prospered to claim, in 2009, a 5 percent stake of the LE8 billion ($1.45 billion) Egyptian insurance market, according to figures released by the Egyptian Financial Surveillance Authority (EFSA).

According to the World Business Institute's International Review of Business 2009 (Islamic Banking Theories, Practices and Insights), the first modern experiment with Islamic banking and financing took place in Egypt back in the 1963. Ahmad El Najjar, an Islamic economist, set up a savings bank based on profit-sharing in the Egyptian town of Mit Ghamr.

The bank proved to be popular and prosperous until it closed in 1967.

The bank, which neither charged nor paid interest, invested mostly by engaging in trade and industry, directly or in partnership with others, and shared the profits with their depositors.

In 1972, Mit Ghamr Savings was revived when it became part of Nasr Social Bank which is still in business in Egypt.

In modern times, takaful was revived in 1979 with new companies emerging first in Sudan and Saudi Arabia.

From the mid 1980s the idea spread to the Far East, before gaining momentum among other Arab countries in the last five years.

Abdul Raouf Qutb, chairman and managing director of the Union of Egyptian Insurance Company, told Ahram Online he expects the growth of the takaful insurance sector in Egypt to reach "between 15 and 20 percent by the end of 2013."

Such expectations, say insurance executives, are optimistic.

"I think one main reason for our quick jump in sales is that we have targeted that sector of Muslims who fear halal and haram investment," explains Shehata.

In a nutshell, takaful pools a community's resources with an investment manager or company. Contributors to the fund are then given financial support when they need it.

In essence, there are two kinds of investment tools: Equity-based and fixed income-based, explains Mahmoud Abdallah, chairman of Insurance Public Holding which holds 55 percent of the Egyptian insurance market.

Islamic companies invest only in the first kind of tools, which means sharing risks and variable premiums.

The idea, spiritual as it is, has proved a success worldwide, with cooperative insurance coming as a hostile yet parallel body to the illicit conventional insurance, in which companies deposit premiums in interest-bearing, but risky, investments.

Internationally, total takaful premiums topped $2 billion in 2006 and are estimated to reach US$7.4 billion by 2015, according to a 2008 study entitled ‘The Viability of Islamic Banking and Finance in a Capitalist Economy: A South African Case Study’ in the Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs.

"Clients view their contribution as a “donation” which is transferred to the ownership of the Takaful Waqf Fund and placed in interest-free sharia-approved investment projects including Faisal Islamic Bank, and Egyptian Saudi Finance Bank," adds Shehata.

Each takaful company has a governing body (Sharia Board) that consists of ulamaa (Islamic scholars) to judge if the company’s transactions are consistent with Islamic practice or not.

"Nasr Fareed Wassel (Egypt’s former Mufti) keeps the upper hand in our company when it comes to issues of halal and haram," elaborates Shehata.

But because business is business, the company didn’t miss the chance of taking on a big cigarette company last year, though the item is considered forbidden by Islam.

"The compromise we reached with the board is to sign a medical insurance contract, while avoiding insurance on the company’s assets that are considered haram."

For Islamic life insurance companies, the issue of halal and haram is a constant one, to the point of whether it is even consistent with the fatalistic religion to insure your life.

"We're not preachers, we're doing business," says Saleh Eid, CEO of Egyptians for Takaful Life Insurance Company. "We don’t care who says this is improper as we have our sharia board that says what's ok and what's not."

The company has seen its revenue surge to LE12 million in 2009, from LE1.8 million the previous year.

By the end of 2008, Islamic finance gained a new reputation for stability with the credit crunch and subsequent global recession seeing many lose faith in the capitalist system and its vulnerable financial institutions.

"I think the 2008 financial crisis has caused clients shift from investing in commercial banks and institutions to Islamic companies," adds Shehata. "We have customers who don’t give much attention to issues of halal and haram. We also have Christian clients."

In Islamic finance, derivatives, hedge funds, short-selling and speculation are illicit, haram.

Furthermore, the risk-sharing concept of murabaha, where entrepreneurs are granted capital and share the profits with the bank, brings Islamic companies closer in step with the real economy.

Advocates say that Islamic banks are untouched by the current crisis due to the nature of Islamic banking, especially its avoidance of the debt trading and market speculation that takes place in European and American banks, according to the Saudi Al-Sharq Al-Awsat daily.

The less risky and more stable practices of takaful companies might go some way to changing Egyptians' suspicion of religious institutions.

At the moment, however, there are twice as many traditional insurance companies, with far larger investments and assets.


ourtesy by:Ahram Online

Malaysia's Great Eastern Takaful plans regional growth

Posted by nurul Tuesday, December 28, 2010 0 comments

KUALA LUMPUR | Mon Dec 20, 2010 3:09am EST

KUALA LUMPUR Dec 20 (Reuters) - Malaysian Islamic insurer Great Eastern Takaful will expand to Indonesia and Brunei to tap the Muslim market for sharia-compliant products, its chief executive officer said on Monday.

The company, which is owned by a subsidiary of Singapore's Great Eastern Holdings Limited and Malaysia's armed forces cooperative, also has Singapore and China on its radar for expansion.

It plans to go to Indonesia in 2011 and Singapore and China in 2014 or 2015.

"Both (Indonesia and Brunei) are majority Muslim population and this sharia-compliant insurance will definitely attract the population," Great Eastern Takaful chief executive Mohamad Salihuddin Ahmad told reporters.


"Beyond that we are also looking into Singapore and China because these are the two countries where Great Eastern has a presence."

Indonesia is regarded as the next Asian growth market for Islamic finance. Its Islamic bank assets were 66 trillion rupiah as of December 2009, compared with 2,534 trillion rupiah for the banking industry as a whole, central bank figures show.

In Malaysia, Islamic banking assets totalled about $95 billion, or 19.6 percent of the total, as of December 2009, the central bank has estimated.

(Reporting by Liau Y-Sing, Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

Courtesy by:Reuters

Takaful International in medical services deal

Posted by nurul Monday, December 27, 2010 0 comments

MANAMA: Takaful International Company has signed a mutual co-operation agreement with Anadolu Medical Centre in Turkey to provide a wide range of medical services for its customers.

Anadolu Medical Centre has a specialised medical team in all disciplines including oncology, cardiac care, women's health and IVF, neurological sciences, surgical sciences and orthopedics.

It is also considered among the top hospitals in the world that uses the 'cyberknife radiosurgery' technology in the field of oncology, which is currently one of the most secured ways to treat tumours without any surgical intervention.

It is designed to destroy tumours with minimal damage to the tissues surrounding it.

"Signing this agreement enhances Takaful services, especially coverage of health insurance," Takaful International chief executive Younis Jamal Al Sayed said.

"We are pleased with this co-operation with such a large medical centre that works in strategic partnership with John Hopkins Medicine, which is consistently ranked amongst the best hospitals in the US.

"The agreement includes many features such as assistance in travel and transportation, as once a person has decided to be treated at Anadolu Centre, Takaful International will make arrangements for the travel, hotel reservation and other trip requirements deemed necessary," he said.

"Moreover, the agreement entitles all Takaful International customers and non-customers to have access to all medical services," he added.

In addition, Takaful International will provide all its customers and non-customers the Remote Second Medical Opinion service with specialised doctors in their fields, to ensure diagnosis accuracy and the treatment to be received by the patient.

It is now possible for the executive managers to have a full medical examination at special comprehensive rates, which include the cost of medical examinations and travel tickets, accommodation and transportation.

"The company continues to develop its insurance products and health insurance in particular, due to the growing demand and increased importance of health awareness, as the company seeks to attract more major medical hospitals regionally and globally," Mr Al Sayed added.

"We are delighted to sign this agreement with Takaful International, which is one of the leading insurance companies that provides innovative products, safe and special services in addition to its association with the major international re-insurance companies," Anadolu Medical Centre chief executive Hasan Kus said.

He also added that Anadolu Medical Centre offers wide range of high quality products and services that meet the international standards. The agreement was signed in Turkey at the Anadolu Medical Centre Hospital by Mr Al Sayed and Mr Kus.

Courtesy by: Gulf Daily News

Five new firms set to join UAE takaful market

Posted by nurul Thursday, November 11, 2010 0 comments
About five new companies offering Islamic insurance, or takaful, are expected to launch in the UAE by mid 2011, boosting competition, industry executives said last week of October, 2010.
"At least four to five companies have applied for licences and they could launch initial public offerings (IPOs)," Ezzeldin Elmassry, chief operating officer of Abu Dhabi National Islamic Finance (ADNIF), told a round table.
"There is fierce competition between takaful and conventional insurance companies," he said, adding that there are 54 insurance firms in the UAE.
ADNIF, the Islamic finance unit of National Bank of Abu Dhabi, plans to launch a takaful company in the first quarter of 2011 in a joint venture with three Abu Dhabi government backed firms.
Insurance penetration rates in the Middle East are among the lowest in the world at about 1 percent of per capita expenditure compared to 9 or 10 percent in Western countries, said Osama Abdeen, CEO of Abu Dhabi National Takaful Company.
The new takaful firms are mostly backed by strong existing entities, said ADNIF's Elmassry.
An official of the UAE regulator Securities & Commodities Authority said several applications for insurance licences are pending and some would be approved shortly, declining to provide any names.

Takaful IKHLAS Launches Group Scheme For Immigration Staff

Posted by nurul Saturday, August 22, 2009 0 comments
Takaful Ikhlas Sdn Bhd has launched a comprehensive group Takaful scheme for the staff of Immigration Department through the latter's Kesatuan Perkhidmatan Imigresen Semenanjung Malaysia (KPISM).Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of Takaful Ikhlas, Wan Mohd Fadzlullah Wan Abdullah said the group scheme has been prepared specially to provide Syariah based comprehensive financial protection."The scheme will provide attractive and reasonable rates into the investment accounts of the participants. Besides the element of saving for retirement days, it is also created to minimise the risk factor," he said in a statement here Friday.Wan Mohd Fadzlullah said Takaful Ikhlas aimed to get 2,000 new members under the scheme with an estimated contribution amount of RM1 million in the first year.The scheme will be also opened to the family members of those taking up the scheme.Among the features of the scheme will include coverage for accidents, death, hospitalisation benefits, as well as coverage for 40 critical illnesses.Further details on the scheme can be obtained at KPISM or from any Takaful Ikhlas office.

--BERNAMA

SABB Takaful rights issue starts

Posted by nurul Monday, August 17, 2009 0 comments
SABB Takaful announces its rights issue started Saturday, 15 August 2009.
A number of 24m new shares are offered through this rights issue representing a 240% increase in SABB Takaful's shares to 34m. Shares are being offered at SR12.5 per share. The rights issue offering period will continue for ten working days including Wednesday 26 August 2009.

Dr Yazid AbdulRahman Al Ohaly, Chairman of SABB Takaful said:

'This is the first rights issue held in the Kingdom for an insurance company and the proceeds will be used to finance the future plans of the company. We are pleased to announce the start of the subscription period.'

Shareholders voted at the Extraordinary General Meeting, held at The Saudi British Bank headquarters in Riyadh on 8 August 2009 to increase the company's capital through a rights issue.

The offering is open to all SABB Takaful registered shareholders as of the close of trading on 8 August 2009. 12 shares is allocated for every 5 shares held by shareholders on the eligibility date.

During the offering period, eligible shareholders may submit their applications to subscribe for rights issue shares either through a branch of the receiving banks or tele-banking services section or automated teller machines (ATMs) or the internet banking service of any of the receiving banks providing such services.

Receiving banks for the rights issue are The Saudi British Bank (SABB), Al Rajhi Bank, The National Commercial Bank (NCB or otherwise known as Al Ahli Bank), Bank Al Jazira, and Samba Bank.

--AMEInfo

Takaful Ikhlas Appoints Two New Syariah Committee Members

Posted by nurul Wednesday, August 5, 2009 0 comments
Takaful Ikhlas Sdn Bhd has appointed Associate Professor Dr Shamsiah Mohamad and Dr Muhammad Naim Omar as the company syariah committee members, effective April 1, 2009.

In a statement here today, the company said Shamsiah is currently serving as at the 'Fiqh' and 'Usul' Islamic Academic Studies Department of University Malaya while Muhammad Naim is an Assistant Professor of law studies at the International Islamic University (IIU).

The Takaful Ikhlas Syariah Committee's role is to assist the board and top management to provide counsel and guidance in ensuring the company operates and manages its business in accordance with Syariah principles.

--BERNAMA

Methaq Takaful changes board of directors

Posted by nurul 0 comments
Ali bin Za’al Al Mansouri replaced Dr Abdul Latif Al Shamsi as the chairman of Methaq Takaful Insurance Company, after the latter resigned recently.

Samer Mohammed Kanan was also elected as the managing director, and he will manage the company’s administrative staff.

“The change in the board of directors aims at developing the company and supporting its continuous progress and expansion plans,” said Samer Kanan.

Methaq Takaful Insurance Company is a registered and licensed General Takaful company in the UAE, with a capital of Dh150 million ($40.8 million).

The company offers individuals and corporations a complete range of high quality, flexible, integrated, Shariah-compliant insurance products and services.

Established on March 11, 2008, Methaq Takaful Company was listed on Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange on May 11, 2008 and its activities are clearly segregated between Takaful Fund, which belongs to its policyholders, and Methaq Takaful Operation, which belongs to the shareholders and from which all claims are reimbursed.

--TradeArabia News Service

Islamic business insurance from Salaam Halal

Posted by nurul Wednesday, July 29, 2009 0 comments

Muslim CEOs running UK-based companies will soon be able to opt for takaful risk management solutions from stand-alone Islamic insurer, Salaam Halal.

According to a report by Reuters, the move represents a branching out by Salaam Halal, which has so far focused on providing takaful motor and home insurance.

Takaful, a form of insurance legal under Islamic law, adheres to strict guidelines on investments.

Insurance funds cannot be invested in alcohol or gambling and there is clear segregation between assets owned by members and those owned by the insurer.

The new business will target Muslim-owned small and medium sized businesses with less than £1m annual turnover, including lawyers, doctors, retailers, and accountants.

“It was always our intention to look at these markets,” said Salaam Halal CEO Bradley Brandon-Cross.

“We will be very much focusing on this project in 2010,” he added.

There are an estimated 140,000 Muslim-owned SMEs in the UK.

--Insurance Daily

IGI Investment Bank, Pak-Qatar sign MoU

Posted by nurul 0 comments
IGI Investment Bank, a part of the IGI Financial Services, recently signed a bancatakaful agreement with Pak-Qatar Family Takaful aiming to further strengthen its portfolio by adding Family (Life) Takaful Insurance to its insurance advisory services. Under this agreement, clients will be able to secure their own and their family’s future the Islamic way through a host of Shariah compliant Takafu—Islamic insurance—products offered to the bank. IGI Investment Bank will, therefore, be able to cater to all those clients who are seeking a Halal alternative to conventional insurance

--Daily Times

UK's only Islamic insurer targets entrepreneurs

Posted by nurul 0 comments

* Eyes Muslim-owned SMEs with less than 1 mln stg turnover

* Mulls life insurance partnership, Europe expansion

LONDON, July 24 (Reuters) - Salaam Halal, the UK's only stand-alone Islamic insurer, will expand next year to offer insurance -- or takaful -- to companies run by Muslim businesses, the company's CEO said on Friday.

Bradley Brandon-Cross told Reuters the company, which launched in 2008, wants to launch the first takaful product range for Muslim-owned small and medium-sized business in Britain, which he estimated number around 140,000.

Major European insurers have been considering a move into the European takaful market, seeking to tap demand from the millions of Muslims on the continent [ID:nLE729394], but the market is still in its infancy and growth is hard to predict.

Salaam Halal -- which has so far focused on car and home insurance -- will particularly target businessmen with less than 1 million pounds ($1.65 million) annual turnover, typically lawyers, accountants, doctors and retailers.

"It was always our intention to look at these markets. We will be very much focusing on this project in 2010," Brandon-Cross said.

Takaful works like mutual-insurance but there is a clear segregation of the assets owned by members and those owned by the insurer. Members contribute to a common pool to fund claims and members benefit if the pool is left in surplus.

Investments made using the pool of funds adhere to sharia law and shun sectors such as alcohol and gambling.

Ernst & Young has estimated the global takaful contributions will reach $7.7 billion in 2012, double the volume in 2007, at the conservative end of estimates.

Salaam Halal is considering offering life savings products in partnership with other insurers in the UK and outside the UK, which Brandon-Cross declined to name. The company may also move into European countries with large Muslim populations, such as France, Germany and the Netherlands.

--Thomson Reuters

Takaful Ikhlas Appoints Two New Syariah Committee Members

Posted by nurul 0 comments
Takaful Ikhlas Sdn Bhd has appointed Associate Professor Dr Shamsiah Mohamad and Dr Muhammad Naim Omar as the company syariah committee members, effective April 1, 2009.

In a statement here today, the company said Shamsiah is currently serving as at the 'Fiqh' and 'Usul' Islamic Academic Studies Department of University Malaya while Muhammad Naim is an Assistant Professor of law studies at the International Islamic University (IIU).

The Takaful Ikhlas Syariah Committee's role is to assist the board and top management to provide counsel and guidance in ensuring the company operates and manages its business in accordance with Syariah principles.


--BERNAMA

Takaful Malaysia confident of outperforming sector's growth target

Posted by nurul Saturday, July 18, 2009 0 comments
SYARIKAT Takaful Malaysia Bhd (STMB), the pioneer Islamic insurer in Malaysia, expects to outperform the industry's 25 per cent growth target for 2009, says group managing director Datuk Hassan Kamil.

Recovery in the general and family insurance portfolio and improved equity market in the past four months has improved the company's outlook, he said.

STMB has added professional financial advisers to its distribution channels and hopes to expand its customer base to include the middle-upper Malaysian market.

"We want to elevate the company to the next level, targeting more cash from the demand of customers in this income bracket (with higher contributions or premium size)," Hassan said, after the signing ceremony between STMB and Standard Financial Planner (SFP) in Kuala Lumpur yesterday SFP will market STMB's products through its network of more than 300 representatives, who include Bank Negara Malaysia-licensed financial advisers.

The tie-up would improve the company's bottom line by 10 per cent, he added.

For the third quarter ended March 31 2009, the insurer posted a pre-tax loss of RM11.46 million down from a pre-tax profit of RM11.07 million in the same quarter last year.

Revenue also declined to RM187.67 million from RM280.67 million previously.

Hassan also said that STMB is on track to regain its number one position in the market in two years, when it secures more than 50 per cent of RM11 billion assets in the industry, from its current RM4 billion or 40 per cent.

--Business Times

STMB teams up with Standard Financial Planner

Posted by nurul 0 comments
Syarikat Takaful Malaysia Bhd (STMB) has entered into a distribution agreement with Standard Financial Planner Sdn Bhd (SFP) to enhance the penetration rate of STMB’s family and general products into the middle-upper Malaysian market.

The agreement signed yesterday makes STMB the first takaful player to add professional financial advisers to its existing portfolio of distribution channels.

SFP is to market STMB products through its nationwide network of more than 300 representatives, of whom 75 are licensed financial advisers.

STMB group managing director Datuk Mohamad Hassan Kamil said SFP’s financial advisers would play an instrumental role in reaching out to potential customers in the middle-upper income bracket.

“STMB will also work closely with the financial advisers to offer comprehensive insurance, investment and saving options to satisfy the holistic demand of these customers,” he said in a statement yesterday.

The engagement of SFP is part of STMB’s strategy to gain more customers with higher contributions or premium size.

SFP is the market leader and the largest independent financial advisory group in Malaysia.

--The Star online

Takaful Malaysia Eyes Over 50 Per Cent Mart Share

Posted by nurul Friday, July 17, 2009 0 comments
Syarikat Takaful Malaysia Bhd aims to capture more than half of the takaful industry's total asset market share within the next two years amid the current economic slowdown.

Group managing director, Datuk Mohamad Hassan Kamil, said the industry's total assets amounted to between RM11 billion and RM12 billion while the company's share currently was RM4.05 billion.

"We will grow slightly above the current takaful market rate, which is between 20 and 25 percent per annum," he told a media briefing after signing an agreement with Standard Financial Planner Sdn Bhd (SFP) here Wednesday.

SFP, which was set up in 1999, is one of only ten licensed financial advisors in Malaysia.

It is a member of the Australian-based Professional Investment Group of Companies that operates across seven countries.

Hassan said under the agreement, SFP would market Takaful Malaysia's products through its nationwide network of more than 300 representatives, of which 75 percent were licensed financial advisors with Bank Negara Malaysia.

He said the addition of SFP to its existing portfolio of distribution channels would boost the company's revenue by 10 percent.

"This will enhance the penetration rate of our family and general products into the middle-upper Malaysian market as well as making them more accessible wider customer base.

"We will work closely with SFP's financial advisors to offer comprehensive insurance, investment and saving options to satisfy the holistic demand from customers," he said.

Takaful Malaysia posted a pre-tax loss of RM11.461 million for the third quarter ended March 31, 2009 compared to a pre-tax profit of RM11.07 million in the same quarter last year.

Revenue declined to RM187.667 million from RM280.678 million previously.

Hassan said Takaful Malaysia planned to undertake a rebranding exercise to reflect its fresh characteristics in conjunction with its 25th year anniversary in December.


-- BERNAMA

Etiqa bags Best Banca Takaful award

Posted by nurul 0 comments
ETIQA Takaful Bhd has won the Best Banca Takaful award at the International Takaful Award 2009 held in conjunction with the Third International Takaful Summit 2009 in London recently.

Etiqa Takaful was the only Malaysian takaful company to win in the global 17-category event, it said in a statement.

Etiqa Takaful was hailed for its performance despite the economic environment and innovative yet simple products in Banca Takaful.

“Etiqa Takaful’s growth in the banca takaful business does indeed exhibit its capabilities to provide appropriate financial solutions together with its Banca partners” said Mohamed Abdullah, director of the Middle East Business Forum.

--Business Times

Insurance Stands Tall

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These are testing times for any financial institution. But if there is a Middle Eastern industry relatively well-placed to weather the pressures of the international downturn, it may be insurance, writes Paul Melly...

Having been a relatively slow developer in the past - by comparison with the region's dynamic banking scene - the insurance business is probably less exposed to the pressures of the credit crunch. And in extending its reach among consumers, it may have room for expansion even at a time of cutbacks elsewhere in the economy. Indeed, the recent underlying trend has been strikingly vigorous.

In 2007, the industry grew by 27 per cent in the UAE and, before the credit crunch, analysts were suggesting that, across the region as a whole, future growth rates could be in the 18-20 per cent range before long. The Saudi insurance sector was already worth SR7 billion ($1.87 billion) and analysts suggested it could double or even triple in size within a relatively short timescale.

While the most bullish growth projections may have to be revised downwards, in light of global economic trends and the softening of the oil price in 2008, the overall pattern appears to be solidly established: the gradually extending reach of an industry that has yet to get to many of the potential personal or small business customers that the Middle Eastern market offers.

Moreover, it already has a solid base on which to build in key economies. In the UAE, for example, expatriates must now be able to show evidence of health insurance cover before they can secure a visa for work or even a visit. To cater for their needs, 30 different health underwriters are now active in Abu Dhabi alone.

Greater take-up
In Saudi Arabia, the authorities have been phasing in a mandatory requirement for the use of nine types of insurance, including employer liability, health and motor cover. That represents a major regulatory change for a country where only 10 per cent of cars used to be insured.

The Saudi industry used to be dominated by the parastatal National Company for Co-operative Insurance; competition was limited and was largely provided by foreign companies represented by agents. Tougher regulatory requirements for the use of insurance have been coupled with the liberalisation of the market, under a 2003 sector framework law, to allow room for a wider range of providers. Banks in the Kingdom have already started to respond by buying stakes in new local underwriters, while foreign players are now able to get directly involved, through joint ventures with local partners.

A significant feature of the reform is that it allows companies to offer both conventional insurance and the Islamic equivalent, 'takaful' - although they have to be able to account for both lines of business separately, so that auditors can clearly see that the Islamic services have been provided on the basis of sharia-compliant financing and security. But this is a small price to pay for insurers keen to move into what is a particularly dynamic segment of the industry across the Middle East. Because so many potential consumers are Muslims, takaful has huge scope for growth - emulating the expansion already enjoyed by Islamic banking.

By early 2008, the Saudi regulators had licensed a score of new takaful companies. In Egypt, the pioneering provider of takaful, Egyptian Saudi Insurance House, founded in 2002, saw its premium income quintuple
over the first five years of its operation.

Other investors - Egypt Kuwait Holding (EKH) in partnership with Tokio Marine & Nichido Fire Insurance, Bahrain's Ithmaar/Solidarity Group and a UAE consortium of Amlak, Arab Orient Insurance Company and Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank - are also moving into the Egyptian takaful business.

Fewer than 1 per cent of Egyptians use insurance at present. But the provision of sharia-compliant products is seen as a major tool for overcoming consumer resistance. "EKH sees great opportunities for profitable growth in Egypt, where insurance products have not yet reached the levels of acceptance that could be expected. The offering of the takaful scheme will remove one of the important barriers to the acceptance of insurance products by a large segment of the market," explained the chairman, Nasser al-Kharafi.

Growing volumes
The sheer size and untapped potential of the Saudi and Egyptian markets is a particularly strong attraction for investors seeking to develop new takaful activity, because they can hope to spread the costs of developing business models to comply with local requirements across a large volume of activity. But even in smaller markets, there are signs that takaful - and retakaful (Islamic reinsurance) - is on an upward trend.

February 2008 saw the launch of Al Fajer Retakaful, Kuwait's first such entity, but the third to be established in the Gulf, with Dubai Group holding a 51 per cent stake. With paid-up capital of $178.5 million, and building on Kuwait's strong base in Islamic finance, it aims to be the largest retakaful company in the world. "Given the clearly evident growth in the takaful industry, there are excellent opportunities ahead for a new, strongly capitalised retakaful company," explained Sameer al-Gharaballi, vice-chairman and managing director.

--Global Arab Network