ZhongAn Subtly Touts Its Investment Chops Without Help Of Big-Name Parent

Key takeaways:

  • ZhongAn Insurance says it renewed an asset management services agreement with Ping An Insurance, one of its three parents
  • While the cap on fees ZhongAn can pay to Ping An annually was unchanged in the new agreement, the company hasn’t fully utilized the quota in recent years

By Warren Yang

As ZhongAn Online P&C Insurance Co. Ltd. (6060.HK) matures into a force in its own right, China’s first online-only insurer is subtly asserting its independence from one of its three main shareholders, industry heavyweight Ping An Insurance (2318.HK; 601318.SS).

Such asset management agreements can be helpful for small insurers that don’t have sufficient resources to place their own investments. Insurers invest large parts of premiums they collect from customers in financial instruments like stocks and bonds. Services from large asset managers can help generate better returns, but fees eat into profit.

Similarly, fees that ZhongAn pays to Ping An as a proportion of its overall investment income likely dropped last year. Fees payable to the insurance giant for the first 11 months of the year equaled only 0.6% of ZhongAn’s investment income in the first six months. That’s already down from about 0.9% for all of 2020 and looks set to decline further when investment gains in the second half are added.

The bottom line is that ZhongAn’s reliance on Ping An for assistance in managing its assets is already quite small and getting smaller.

The latter feat is noteworthy because ZhongAn competes in an industry dominated by state-owned heavyweights and deep-pocketed financial conglomerates. The online insurer carved out its own niche by introducing unique, low-cost products, such as plans that pay for shipping costs when products need to be returned, while continuously expanding its offerings spanning auto and health insurance.

Symbolic underwriting profit

That means investment income will remain the main driver of ZhongAn’s net profit. In the first half of 2021, investment income grew a solid 25% from a year earlier. The total investment yield held steady at 3.8% on a non-annualized basis, although returns on a net basis declined to 1.3% from 2%.

As creative as ZhongAn is with product development, it’s rather conservative when it comes to its own investments. As of the end of June, about 36% of its investment assets were in fixed-income instruments, which entail relatively low risks. Only about 20% was in equities, including unlisted ones, which often offer better yields but carry higher risks.

The “other investments” category of ZhongAn’s portfolio accounted for about a quarter of the total, the bulk of that in wealth management products. Some such investment schemes in China are notorious for being opaque and risky. But based on the modest overall yield for all of its investments, ZhongAn, as a more sophisticated institutional investor, is likely staying away from such speculative products that promise high returns.

ZhongAn has been adjusting the allocation of its investment assets over the years. The current composition of its portfolio may be aimed at providing greater stability than in the past, helping to curb income swings that were sometimes large in previous years.

For now, ZhongAn isn’t in the same category of household names like JD and Weibo. But if it keeps growing, it may eventually become too big for Alibaba and Tencent to own without raising regulators’ eyebrows.

ZhongAn is currently quite reliant on Alibaba and Tencent platforms for its business. In the first half of last year, it paid almost 750 million yuan to the pair in fees for product distribution and technical services, about 18% of the total operating expenses for its insurance business.

Chinese internet stocks have fallen out of favor with investors these days as the nation’s regulators broaden their crackdown on technology companies. ZhongAn shares haven’t been exempt, losing more than half of their value since their market debut in 2017.

That suggests that investors are more optimistic about ZhongAn’s prospects than other fintechs. And ZhongAn is proving it can be more than a gimmicky offspring that has made headlines because of its big-name parents.

Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs

To add Benzinga News as your preferred source on Google, click here.