France’s AXA, Europe’s second-biggest insurer, pledged on Thursday to deliver higher earnings and returns to shareholders by 2026 by growing its client base, automating processes and reducing labor costs.
The new three-year plan, dubbed “Unlock the Future” — Thomas Buberl’s third since becoming CEO in 2016 — aims to build on the group’s efforts in recent years, marked by assets sales and the turnaround of XL Group, bought for $15.3 billion in 2018.
The insurance sector is navigating in an uncertain economic environment, marked by geopolitical upheavals, higher interest rates and the prospect of climate change driven extreme weather events, which represent both risks and opportunities for international underwriters.
AXA, which posted lower-than-expected annual earnings on Thursday, announced a 2026 average underlying annual earnings growth target of 6-8 percent, up from 3-7 percent in its previous plan.
It expects an underlying return on equity of 14-16 percent over the 2024-2026 period, up from 13-15 percent in its three-year plan that ended in 2023.
Analysts at investment bank Jefferies described AXA’s situation as “pleasantly surprising.”
“Faster growth, structurally higher remittance ratios, and materially higher capital generation, all support the group’s new (and ambitious) capital return target of a 75 percent payout ratio,” they wrote.
AXA said the performance would be underpinned by the addition of new customers across its business lines, including in property and casualty policies dedicated to small and medium-sized companies in Britain, Spain, Italy and the U.S.
It will also improve its productivity by investing in automation and increasing the proportion of staff based in countries where labor costs are lower (India, Morocco & Poland), from 10 percent to 12 percent.
The group pledged to return up to 75 percent of its earnings to shareholders in cash, including a dividend payout ratio of 60 percent. The new policy translates into a yearly dividend for 2023 of 1.98 euros per share, up 16 percent from 2022.
Its previous plan offered a dividend only in a range of 55-65 percent.
In total, AXA will return up to 6 billion euros to shareholders in 2024 via 4.4 billion euros in dividends and up to 1.6 billion euros in share buybacks.
For 2023 AXA posted a 5 percent rise in underlying earnings to 7.6 billion euros ($8.22 billion), in line with its guidance but slightly below the 7.69 billion expected by analysts in a consensus it compiled.
The company last year posted higher revenue but also faced higher costs for debt servicing and investment in technology.
Gross premiums and other revenue rose 1 percent to 102.7 billion euros, below the 103 billion expected by analysts, hurt by the loss of two global clients in France and lower sales at its asset management arm.
($1 = 0.9249 euros)
(Reporting by Mathieu Rosemain; editing by Tommy Reggiori Wilkes and Jason Neely)