Reuters/London
XL Group Plc said it would buy underwriter Catlin Group Ltd for about £2.79bn ($4.22bn), increasing the Dublin-based insurer’s share of business written in the Lloyd’s of London market to nearly 10%.
The deal is the latest in a string of European insurance mergers as the region’s 5,000 underwriters face stricter capital rules. Mergers usually make it easier for companies to cut expenses relative to assets, helping them to raise capital.
“We are forecasting that we will, at a minimum, have about $200mn in cost savings across the two organisations when they are combined,” XL chief executive Mike McGavick, who will head XL Catlin, said in an interview.
“That’s about 10% of the combined expenses of the company,” he added.
It is too early to say how many jobs will be cut, he said.
Catlin writes about 7.5% of all Lloyd’s premiums, making it the biggest syndicate on the market, while XL accounts for about 2%.
The offer of 388 pence in cash and 0.13 new XL share values each Catlin share at about 715.3 pence — a premium of 8.3% to the stock’s close on Thursday.
Shares in London-listed Catlin were trading at 708 pence in afternoon business, while XL shares were up 1.6% at $35.99 in early trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
Bermuda-based Catlin, which sells insurance for everything from flooding to kidnapping, said it would pay a final dividend of 22 pence, reversing a decision made in December to forego the payout after an approach from XL.
At the time, XL — which has a market value of more than $9bn — had offered £2.53bn for Catlin.
Stephen Catlin, who founded the company that bears his name in 1984, told Reuters that some of Catlin’s investors had “showed a very clear preference” for the final dividend and to have the amount subtracted from the purchase price.
Catlin’s top investors include BlackRock Institutional Trust Co, Cantillon Capital Managem
ent and MFS Investment Management.
“This bid both highlights the attractions of Lloyd’s for external players and increases the scarcity value for the remaining companies,” Shore Capital analyst Eamonn Flanagan said in a research note.
Earlier this week, brokerage Westhouse Securities flagged Novae Group and Lancashire Holdings as the next possible Lloyd’s takeover targets.
The XL-Catlin deal is the latest in a string of European insurance mergers as the region’s 5,000 underwriters face stricter capital rules.