Germany's Munich Re Posts 2008 profit of 1.5 Billion Euros
February 4, 2009"Notwithstanding the most severe financial crisis for generations, Munich Re recorded a clear profit for the financial year 2008," a statement said.
In November, Munich Re was forced to abandon its initial 2008 profit target of more than 2.0 billion euros, and the result announced on Wednesday was less than an average forecast of 1.63 billion euros compiled by Dow Jones Newswires.
Shares in the re-insurance giant dropped by 2.56 percent to 104.73 euros in opening Frankfurt trade, while the DAX index of leading shares was 0.23 percent higher overall.
Gross premiums, a Munich Re yardstick, rose last year by 1.5 percent to 37.8 billion euros, and the company said it would propose an unchanged dividend of 5.50 euros per share.
Munich Re said it had significantly reduced its equity exposure in the fourth quarter, though it was also forced to reevaluate its stock portfolios, which had a negative impact on income.
It put the full-year cost at around 200 million euros, although the sale of holdings helped compensate in part, adding 700 million euros to the fourth quarter results.
"Naturally, as an investor of about 175 billion euros, we too had to absorb large losses on our risk-oriented investments," the statement quoted chief financial officer Joerg Schneider as saying.
But the group's asset manager system managed nonetheless "to steer our portfolio successfully through the crisis," he added.
"We have reduced our equity exposure further and have invested strongly in secure government bonds, but have increasingly also taken selective advantage of good return opportunities especially from corporate bonds."
Re-insurance sector expected to strengthen this year
Board member Torsten Jeworrek was quoted as saying that the market for re-insurance would strengthen this year, citing as an example the offshore energy sector, where prices have improved following hurricane-related losses last year.
"Re-insurance is currently one of the few remaining possibilities for primary insurers to swiftly obtain the capital they need," Jeworrek noted.
On Tuesday, German rival Hannover Re said it had also managed to raise its prices when contracts came up for renewal.
The group's president Wilhelm Zeller declared: "For us, the financial market crisis is finished."