Just six of the 37 members of the emirate’s benchmark equities index have gained this year, and four of those are insurers. They have all advanced by at least 4.9 per cent, while the DFM General Index has slumped 18 per cent, under pressure from weak real-estate developers.
The prospects of mergers and acquisitions are increasing after Dubai gave the industry a boost by making health insurance mandatory among foreign employees, including their dependents and domestic workers, under changes that started in 2014. Foreigners make up more than 80 per cent of the population in the United Arab Emirates, last measured at 9.1 million in 2016.
Closely held investment firm Abu Dhabi Financial Group LLC and its Goldilocks fund last month acquired a stake of almost 30 per cent in Islamic Arab Insurance Co., known as Salama. It’s the best-performing stock on Dubai’s main index this year, up 30 per cent. The transaction is reflective of an industry that’s experiencing “a positive transformation,” ADFG said in an emailed response to questions.
The DFM Financial Insurance Index is alone among the Dubai market’s nine sector gauges in generating a positive performance for 2018. The UAE had 35 local insurance companies and 27 foreign ones by the end of 2017, according to data from the country’s Insurance Authority. Last year, insurers racked up their fastest growth in written premiums in three years at 12 per cent.
“As the industry matures over time, we expect consolidation and industry-wide economies of scale to improve the sector productivity, which will ultimately result in higher service quality at lower cost,” ADFG said.