Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Allianz conference call on the Allianz Group financial results for the second quarter of 2024. For your information, this conference call is being streamed live on Allianz.com and YouTube. A recording will be made available shortly after the call. We appreciate your time. We know it's a very busy day today with lots of results. Today on the call, we will be joined by Oliver Bäte, Chief Executive Officer of Allianz SE, and Claire-Marie Coste-Lepoutre, CFO of Allianz SE. The presentation will be followed by lots of time for Q&A. With that, I'd like to turn over to Oliver for some opening remarks. Oliver?
Yeah. Thank you, Andrew. Good afternoon. Busy Thursday. We thought we'd be good, to pick a Thursday, not a Friday like others, but unfortunately many others are there. So again, also from my side, a big thank you for, being here with us today. We had a very strong quarter. Actually, the best quarter, if I remember correctly, we ever had in terms of financials, but also on other dimensions, and I'm gonna go a little bit into the, difference. Because of the strong delivery, we have upped, the share buyback program, when in the beginning of the year we talked, there was a lot of question, does Allianz stick to its, payout strategy? Very much we do. The long-term average, let me remind you, is around 75%. That's where we're about at, depending on how you run the numbers.
It's more accurate to use absolute numbers. I was advised by Andrew, as I'm very happy he's here with us now, EUR 6.9 billion, which is a very strong contribution. Plus, and that's very important, we have built a track record over the last few years of being very disciplined, so we are recycling the gains out of the U.S. from selling a subscale position in the MidCorp space into investing into scale in Southeast Asia, or better to speak of ASEAN. We look at it a little bit in this way by assuming from zero to a, if not the leadership position in Singapore, with taking majority of NTUC Income, and there'll probably be questions around that.
Now, those results are quite remarkable in light of, and you've heard it from various competitors today, of continuing challenges, by the way, in all segments. Let me go through all three. We had elevated Nat Cat activity again in Germany. This is the third out of the last five years where we had significant losses out of weather events, that the portfolio balanced very nice, still below 100, and the overall portfolio still goes strong. The second one, we still, you know, are coming back from very fast rising rates and competing with very high crediting rates on the banking side, so the present value of new business in life and the margins are now very strong. That's coming back.
And the third one, very much in difference to other active asset managers, we're having extremely strong inflows also at PIMCO, and that continues into July. I've mentioned that earlier in some comments in the press, EUR 11 billion. So it shows that you can win in the businesses if you're really strong, one. Second, the diversification that people always think it's a cause for discount, we believe it's a strength, and it shows particularly, again, in times of massive stress in the world economy, in world politics, that we have been very stable. We are also very pleased with the performance improvement continuations that we have seen in Latin America, in the U.K., and Australia, which are helping our results and help balance out some of the other activities that are still very, very tough. Claire-Marie will talk about it a little bit more.
Claims inflation continues to trend above CPI inflation, as car manufacturers are making not enough money from selling cars, so after sales and service, another source of profit, they're raising prices continuously for spare parts and for repair. Our prices, so we need to really bring our scale to the benefit of consumers. And bringing that out, just to give you a number, if you go through our German Steering Tariff, we save on average on a casco claim, EUR 1,000, which we then can pass on in terms of lower prices to our consumers. So the scale in claims where we've been building out scale, and continues to do that, continues to pay back as it does pay back what we're doing on, Nat Cat prevention and portfolio underwriting. I'll share that with you.
So overall, we are on track to meet our outlook for 2024 on the back of 6.5% higher volume, 5% more operating profit, almost 8% more core net income, and the solvency moving up to 206. So that's it. Let me go a little bit more into Solvency II details. The first one is talking about. I think it's very important, not just for the public, but also for you as shareholders, how we put our purpose into practice. Again, looking at the floods in southern Germany, just to give you some numbers, 11,500 claims, an average claim size of EUR 25,000. Workloads increased by more than 45%, and the current loss estimate to be around EUR 290 million.
A big thank you we already handed to our employees earlier today. It's real work for everybody involved, and we had to be there. We were there before anybody else showed up, by the way. Big kudos, not just in terms of dedication, but speed. We deployed 600 claims assessors, moved them down to Bavaria from all sides of Germany. Particular kudos to Allianz Handwerker Services. I'm gonna talk about that in a little while again. It's now more important to talk a little bit about insurance and services, because without Allianz Handwerker Services, we would have not been able to deploy 6,700 air dryers urgently needed one day only until the first loss assessment.
Typically, it normally takes, took in the past 3 days-4 days, and within 2 weeks, we basically had everybody inspected that needed to be inspected, with getting exceptionally strong feedback, not just from clients, by the way, also for the first time from the media and political leadership. That makes us very proud. For you, more relevant is that despite that, our loss share relative to market share is lower, and it's trending lower. We provided you on the right-hand side of page 4 with some data on flood event. That was the July 2021 versus the last one here in May of 2024. We keep on investing in Nat Cat modeling, real-time risk assessment, and proactive loss prevention. Now, the key thing is particularly sending SMS warnings to clients and bringing things down.
I don't know whether you know, but in a very short period of time, we found out that the Wi-Fi systems were down due to power outages, and we got Starlink into the system very quickly. I'd like to thank them for making that technology available at very short notice and allowing us to really do the work in a way that was useful. It's probably one of the most important inventions in the last few years. So we're investing in technology to speed things up and make them more precise. Also needed, and that's a small, interesting technical vignette. We as we move into more sustainable housing and installing, for example, more wooden houses than others, fast inspection to prevent total losses is super important as mold builds within a couple of days.
So there is a true economic cause behind being not just very good, but also very fast. So this shows that you can be good and do well at the same time, and we are continuing to build on this advantage. By the way, behind that is a really important question, that is, do you have scale? We could not do that if we didn't have 14% market share in this area, actually 20%, because you have to have certain minimum size to move. So that's the first example of what we do, bringing more value to the community and more value to shareholders at the same time, and how it works. And we expect over the next few years, even more benefit as we bring technology into the homes and into the assessments.
The second thing that I would like to talk about is there's a never-ending debate about an M&A growth versus returning capital. It's quite sad to see that, you know, growing the company is seen to be more critical than returning capital, but we have been extremely disciplined over the last few years. Here again, as I mentioned earlier, the U.S. MidCorp, we've looked at, we've tried to build it out into a market-leading position.
The capital requirements and the return on that would have been too large relative to what we believe we can do, so we exited the position, and we have been working for a long time on building the partnership with the Singaporean community to acquire Income, the number one P&C company in Singapore, a leading health provider and a strong life company that has lots of upside to put it mildly. This acquisition is aimed to really give us double-digit ROIs over time, but more importantly, creates a very strong home base for us. We've been domiciled in Singapore since 1991, but we have never had an operating business in the city-state. Now we do have it, and it's the leading franchise, and we're very proud of having won the trust of the community to do so.
So these are the two points that I really wanted to highlight in terms of strategic developments. The last one, maybe that's not on the slide, we continue to enjoy not just flows, but strong performance in Asset Management segment. They are fully in line, if not ahead of plan, and there is more to come, particularly in terms of productivity over time. It's a very important subject for the segment and for the industry at large, I think, because of pressure on active management coming both on margin and volume, and we're fully aware of it, and we are fully working on it. And you can see it's quite rare to see numbers like the ones we've seen. By the way, flows for AGI in July have also been positive, in case that somebody wants to ask that.
With that, I hand over to Claire-Marie.
Thank you very much, Oliver. Let's move to page seven. And as you can see here, overall, I'm very pleased with our results in the first half of the year. From my perspective, they clearly demonstrate sustained strong momentum in terms of performance when you really look at it quarter after quarter, together with the resilience of our operating model as we navigated through an environment which has seen inflation remaining sticky in many markets. We have seen as well some volatility in the capital markets, and while the first quarter has been a bit benign in terms of loss experience, the second quarter has been quite active from a weather cat perspective, but as well from a large loss perspective for us.
So in that context, we deliver record operating profit at EUR 7.9 billion, and as well, a record shareholder core net income at EUR 5 billion, which is up almost 8%. And exactly as mentioned by Oliver, and what is really nice also in those numbers, is that all our segments are seeing business volume growth and are as well contributing to the profit growth, as well. So if you look in a bit more details, in Property and Casualty segment overall, so clearly 8% growth, midyear, out of which the majority of that growth is coming from pricing, while we had 1% of volume growth, in that number. We emerged with an operating profit that is at an excellent level of EUR 4 billion.
That is also up versus last year, while we had a much higher level of Natural Catastrophes at this point in time, and also similarly on the large loss side. Life and Health continues very good very strong growth trajectory from my perspective as well. We achieve a record level of operating profit, and we continue that growth with an excellent level of margin, which is basically generating a value of new business that is up 12% compared to last year for the first half of the year. Asset management, exactly as mentioned by Oliver, clearly an environment that is not easy to navigate.
Still, in the first half of the year, we have accumulated fourteen, forty, almost fifty, fifty billion of net inflows, which is a very strong, very strong performance. And our third-party asset under management are basically at the highest level since beginning of 2022. So that's also a very strong, very strong performance for Asset Management side. Overall, given also our slightly reduced Cost-Income ratio, we continue to see an improvement of our operating profit on Asset Management side. So all of that give us clearly confidence, and also, like, the underlying momentum we see in terms of performance into our business towards the second half of the year and also our 2024 operating profit guidance.
I will now go in a bit more details into our second quarter results, and after that, we can enter into our Q&A session. So moving to page nine, and looking at our results per quarter, here you can clearly see the strengths that those results demonstrate in terms of in terms of momentum. Overall, we see almost 9% growth and an operating profit that is very close to the first quarter one, despite the elevated level of natural catastrophes and large loss we have seen this quarter. If I go into the Property and Casualty segment, first, in terms of volume, we see double-digit growth that is coming both from pricing and volume.
Secondly, combined ratio emerged at 93.5% in the second quarter, which is within the range I guided to once of 93-94 for the year, and that's leading to an operating profit of EUR 1.9 billion that is slightly above our quarterly expectations. And as mentioned already, given the elevated level of natural catastrophes and large loss we have seen this quarter, which stand overall at EUR 700 million versus last year, this delivery is supported by a very strong underlying performance of the business, which is particularly nice to see as we are clearly earning the benefits of our pricing actions that we have started to take in 2023 to counteract against the inflationary environment we were seeing. On the Life and Health segment, we continue with an excellent trajectory.
We have EUR 1.1 billion of value of new business and a double-digit operating profit growth. Asset Management, again, and as mentioned already by Oliver, despite an uncertain context when it comes to the central bank intentions, we have seen another quarter of double-digit net inflows. With our slightly improving Cost-Income ratio and our third-party asset under management growth, our operating profit grew as well by close to 6%. Let's now move to page 11, and let's have a look at our balance sheet. Here you can see that we maintain a strong level of strength with our Solvency II ratio. That is up three percentage point compared to previous quarter.
And our sensitivities, which I think in the current environment, right, is a very important element to look at, are broadly unchanged and pointing out to a good level of resilience of our capitalization. Let's move to page 13, sorry, and let's have a look in a bit more detail at our Solvency II ratio development. I think for this quarter, we have a very simple outcome in terms of those three percentage point improvement. We have two percentage points which are coming from our organic capital generation, net of tax and dividend. We have a lot of value effects, which are coming on the market side, but ultimately, they emerge close to zero.
And on the management action side, we also have a lot of, of, different elements, but overall it, it emerged, by almost one percentage point positive. So overall, a strong solvency position we feel really confident about, and this confidence is as well further reflected in our extended, share buyback program of EUR 500 million that we have been announcing yesterday evening. Let's now move to P&C on page 15, and let's first, look at growth. So I think this page is a very good page that is clearly highlighting the excellent level of growth we see across our portfolio. Our growth overall is at 10%, out of which, 3, percentage point is volume, and we see more growth, in retail, which is at 12%, with motor particularly strong at 15%.
Commercial is as well strong at 9%. In those numbers, you have some benefits from the hyperinflation countries, but even adjusted for this, our growth level is strong at 7% for the quarter. You know, on this page, in a bit more details, maybe you can see here the well-spread growth structure across our entities, but maybe in particular, you can see Italy, Spain, Australia, or Germany, that are particularly strong for the quarter in terms of growth. On the commercial side. Maybe looking at AGCS here, you can see that we have a bit of softening on the rate change on renewals when you compare year-end with 6M.
But still, I think if you look at it, at the LoB and geographies level, we continue to see good areas for growth, as you can see as well in our overall level of internal growth for AGCS. Let's move to page 17. Here you can see, on the left-hand side, that our operating profit is at EUR 1.9 billion and is ahead of our outlook midpoint for the year. This is a very strong result, given the elevated level of Nat Cat, weather-related and large loss we have seen this quarter, and this is clearly demonstrating the strength of our diversified portfolio.
If you look at our overall combined ratio, which is at 93.5%, as mentioned already, right in the middle of our target range of 93%-94% for the year. But if you go in a bit more details into that, two elements, I'd like to mention. So first of all, our Expense Ratio, that is improving quarter to quarter. Here you have a bit of positive seasonality effects that came into this 24.2%. But fundamentally, we continue to see a good trajectory in terms of productivity and enhancement, and you should expect to continue to see our Expense Ratio to move towards the 24.5%. We have guided towards for the year.
Then, if you look in more detail into the 93.5 on the attritional side, and you look at our attritional and discounted loss ratio, that is at 72.4. In this number, you have 1.4 percentage point of impact of the New Caledonia riot event. So adjusted for this, our attritional is at 71%, which is better than both last year and Q1. I expect this to continue... basically, this effect to continue to show up, as we are clearly earning the benefit of the pricing actions into our attritional loss ratio. I also expect that over the year, we are going to see the effect of the New Caledonia event to earn out, so that we converge towards our 71% attritional loss ratio and discounted.
So if we look in a bit more detail into combined ratio on the retail side, we are at 94.7, which is improved by 0.8 percentage point compared to last year. And that's actually really good because we have in that number as well 4 percentage point of Nat Cat event. So that's clearly demonstrating again the fundamental improvement we see in the underlying. On the commercial side, despite the higher level of Nat Cat and New Caledonia, here we still are emerging at a strong level combined ratio. Let's move to page 19. And this page quarter after quarter, I would say, continues to be a very strong page, where you can see the quality of our diversified portfolio.
The impact of the large floods in South Germany is clearly visible there. Germany emerged with combined ratio of 99.8 for the quarter standalone, with, fourteen percentage point impact of Nat Cat. So that's and that's still, I think, a strong level to emerge at. But you can also clearly see on this page, all the entities that have been also pushing quite actively for improvements, like the U.K., Australia, that is doing an amazing job, and also Latin America would be another example of that one. And what you also continue to see on that page is a very strong performance of, some of our entities like Italy, Central Europe, Switzerland, will be, a few of them, that are particularly strong, also on that page.
On the commercial side, AGCS as well sees a good level of performance despite 5 percentage points more Nat Cat this year compared to last year. Trade is slightly negatively impacted in terms combined ratio by a technical effect, but basically still operating at an combined ratio of 81.4, and also with further strong growth of the operating profit, clearly. If we look on page 21 at our operating investment result, that is slightly up for the quarter compared to last year. Clearly here, we see the effect of IFRS 9/17 together. We are earning the higher yield levels, but they are more or less neutralized by the higher interest accretion as we are unwinding the previous year's discounting benefits.
So if rates keep a bit stable, then you will continue to see that effect going forward. So let me recap on P&C. For the quarter, we deliver an operating profit at 26% of our outlook midpoint guidance, despite an elevated level of natural catastrophes and large losses during the quarter. For both retail and commercial, our growth momentum continues. For retail, in terms of profitability, we clearly see the earning of our pricing actions that were basically pushed through against the inflationary environment that are coming through as expected. And on the commercial side, we continue to operate at a very good underlying level of profitability. So clearly, all of that puts us on a good trajectory for the future. Let's move to Life and Health, and let's have a look at page 23.
And here you can see, as well, a continuation of the new business momentum we have seen in the previous quarters. Our PVNBP is up 6.5%, but it is in reality up 15% if you adjust for a large annuity treaty contract we had in 2023. And that is clearly visible on the page. I think when you look at the spread of the growth, across entities and even the U.S. had a strong, strong quarter, considering the fact that we had a promotion last year in the second quarter. The growth is also of good quality because we are growing at 93% in our preferred lines of business, and we are growing at an excellent new business margin of 5.8%.
So overall, this is leading us to a value of new business of EUR 1.1 billion, which is in line with last year. And so overall, I clearly think an excellent development on the new business side for our Life and Health business. CSM, on page 25, I think also a really clean, clean quarter from a CSM development perspective. So first of all, the CSM release is in line with the 8%-9% range we expect for the year. Remember, for the year, we expect EUR 5 billion total year. The normalized CSM growth is close to our run rate. We always see as well, a bit of seasonality in the second quarter and third quarter, where the normalized CSM growth is expected a bit lower.
But first half of the year, if you look at it, we are at 3% CSM growth against 5% expected for the full year. And then if you look at the work of the development of our CSM, here we have negligible economic variances for the quarter, and we had slightly negative noneconomic variances, which are mainly linked to the lapse activity. And by the way, this is negative on a growth basis, but this is positive on a net basis because a lot of the lapses we have seen are actually part of the range and portfolio of AZ Life, so it's not impacting our net CSM ultimately.
What is also important, I think, is that our CSM sensitivities are unchanged, and they are as well confirming the robustness of our CSM against market movements. Let's move to page 27. And here you can as well see clean translation from our CSM release to operating profit. We have lower negative variances this quarter, and we have higher results from our pure unit link business, in particular, stemming from Italy and from Mexico. And this is leading us to a strong operating profit against our outlook and a 15% growth year-on-year. On the right-hand side, you can as well see our very well-diversified portfolio in terms of contribution to these outcomes, so I think it's visually very clear as well here.
So overall, on Life, we continue to see a strong growth at a very good margin level, together with growing CSM, which is positioning us well for the second half of the year, too. On Asset Management side, on page 29, as mentioned here, I really think that the bond markets have been a bit uncertain in the first half of the year, given the inflation landscape and the debate on the timing of central bank rate cuts. But we have seen EUR 14 billion of net inflows in that context, which together with the EUR 34 billion we saw in the first quarter, means a 5% growth of our third-party assets under management year to date. Clearly, very strong growth from that side.
On page 31, you see as well that basically, this growth is translating into a revenue growth of 5%, year-on-year. This growth is mainly driven by the asset under management, because our margin are slightly down, but still at a very strong level and very stable, I think, when you look at it also quarter after quarter. Our performance fees have normalized compared to last year. Remember, last year, in the second quarter, was an exceptionally high level of performance fees. If we go to page 33, our operating profit growth is at 6%. That's also supported by a stable Cost-Income ratio. Without performance fees, which are always a bit volatile, right? So I think it's always a bit difficult to do those quarter-to-quarter comparison with performance fees.
Our operating profit growth is at 10%, which is clearly very strong. And as mentioned by Oliver, so we have seen slight improvement in our Cost-Income ratio, but we also expect towards year-end, further improvement of our Cost-Income ratio to come through on Asset Management segment overall. So Asset Management, our operating profit is in line with our full-year guidance. We are very well positioned to capture the market momentum if the direction of rates clarify, and that makes us also confident for the second half of the year. Corporate segment, I'm going to skip. It's better than expected, and there is nothing I'd like to mention in particular.
And then if you go to page 37, which is also a very clean page, in terms of translation from operating profit to net income, we had... Sorry, we had less noise compared to last year on the non-operating item side. What I'd like to mention is simply the normalization of our tax rate, which is fully in line with our expectation for the year. Last year, we had pretty exceptionally low tax rate linked to some one-off events. So overall, this leads us to a shareholder core net income of EUR 2.5 billion, which positions us as well, very well, towards our yearly trajectory.
Also, maybe worth to mention the fact that our ROE at for the first half stands above 17%, which is also very strong performance in terms of return on capital. Let me wrap up on page 39. Overall, I clearly think a very pleasing first half of the year, both from a performance and a resilience perspective, given the strength of the contribution of both all our segments and also many, many business units across the group, when you look at it also in the further details we are providing. Our capital position is strong. And while I think you can always see volatility in our numbers, given the overall situation, mid-year, we are clearly confident to fully meet our financial trajectory for the year.
This confidence is as well reflected in the extension of our share buyback program by EUR 500 million. And as things stand now, for 2024, we have a total payout of EUR 6.9 billion, which is made of our newly agreed 60% dividend payout policy, with EUR 1.5 billion share buyback. This level of EUR 6.9 billion, I think, is a very strong level, and this is clearly demonstrating our commitment to attractive shareholder return, while in parallel, we continue to optimize the deployment of our capital, as well as through M&A, as already mentioned by Oliver and presented in more details. With that, I hand over back to you, Andrew.
Great. Thanks, Claire-Marie. Okay, we're ready for our Q&A session. Just some housekeeping. First of all, if you're dialing in, or if you're on the web call, there's a talk request button in the top right corner. If you've dialed in, it would be star five to make a request, and obviously make sure you're not muted. I'm afraid the housekeeping is as per last time, two questions, please. And then you can go back to the queue, and then I'll make a judgment on the queue as we go on. So, with that, the first question is from Andrew Sinclair of Bank of America.
Thank you very much, Andrew and, and everyone. Two from me then, and you'll be pleased to hear they're both focused on growth. So the first was actually on capital deployment. Like, you've been really good in terms of your capital deployment in terms of buybacks over last few years. I think you've exceeded your plan targets for buybacks. But just really trying to get an idea of actually how much you've net spent on M&A over the current plan period, so acquisition costs minus disposal proceeds. Back of the envelope, I think you've done well on your buyback targets, but not actually spent net that much on M&A, and just trying to get an idea of how much firepower you have left.
As I think you probably intended to spend around EUR 4.5 billion net in this plan, and that's before you outperformed your earnings target. So keen to understand on that. And then the second question was just on P&C. Great pricing again, but where and when are you looking to take a little bit more volume in P&C? It seems with results at this level, there's potentially scope to push a bit harder on exposure. Thank you very much.
Hi, Andrew. Maybe on your first question, so I would not have the exact effect on the on the M&A, but maybe I take your question slightly slightly differently. When you look at it, last year, for the full year, right, our cash generation was around EUR 8 billion. And out of that, we had EUR 1 billion that was more exceptional type of remittances. Still, we project similarly around EUR 8+ billion of of cash being generated for for us, because we also constantly have this type of logic of exceptional remittances actions, we we feel we feel strong about. And out of that, we are paying EUR 6.9 billion in terms of total payout for for the year.
So that leaves us with approximately EUR 1 billion that we are also actively deploying. And I'm sure, I mean, if we look at it historically, we will potentially be in this site of order of magnitude. I think the key point is as well the point that Oliver made previously, the fact that we are extremely rigorous when it comes to deciding how we deploy capital, either in terms of organic growth or in terms of M&A, and what is return the expected return on on investment associated to to M&As in particular, which will be double digit and with with an expected return that is fairly short term. And then, I'm sorry, I did not understood fully your question on P&C growth.
Was that related to the fact, is that pricing or volume and, and how this is more nuanced, or?
Just scope for pushing for a little bit more volume. I think pricing has been great and combined ratios are in really good places. Can you push a little bit harder to take a little bit more volume? And where in particular are you ready to push harder?
... Yeah, so I think the short answer is, yes, we are ready to push for more growth, definitely for more volume growth. I think you have to nuance also a bit between retail and commercial. I think clearly on the retail side, the majority of the growth has been pricing currently. Also, because we have seen higher inflationary effect coming through even compared to our projections. So we are balancing clearly the margin and the volume there. But what is super, I mean, super important for us, is that we consider that we are well positioned to capture more of the volume growth, given the fact that we have been ahead compared to many competitors in terms of pricing actions.
So that put us in a good situation in terms of volume growth as well. And that's what we see in some of our markets, like, so Germany would be an example of this, to mention one. Another dimension where we are clearly pushing is definitely the level of retention, where we have been doing okay, but not as good as we want. So we have definitely also focus actions associated with retention. And on growth, we will have also more actions that we will certainly cover in more details in the capital market day in December.
Thank you very much.
Mm-hmm.
Great. Thanks, Andy. The next question is from Michael Huttner of Berenberg. Go ahead, Michael.
Thank you. And yeah, fantastic results, and thank you for the EUR 500 million. I have two questions, which are, I hope a little bit. So, I thought that AXA almost like threw a gauntlet down, you know, like a challenge, saying: Well, we're Asset Management and then sell theirs a while back. And I just wondered how you see, particularly, not PIMCO, but particularly with AGI, which has been, you know, has lost part of its U.S. business, how you think about that there? And then the second question is, yeah, kind of a tricky one. There's been lots of headlines coming through about Income Insurance, your Singapore acquisition and the local concerns there. And I just wondered how you see that?
And I know it's a great franchise and a very strong local player, but it doesn't actually make a lot of money. So... And my feeling is if you try to address all the concerns which are local, you won't make much money either. So I just wondered how you'd see that. Thank you.
Let me, let me hit these two points. The first Asset Management is a super strong pillar. We're one of the largest and most profitable third-party asset managers in the world, so I don't want to comment on others. We are very happy with the business that we have, and it has continues to have great margin inflows and performance. That may not be the case in other play, in other places. So, I think we look very different from competitors. Actually, I think we're one of the very few left now in Europe that have a Asset Management business. In the U.S., there are a few, but not many in our industry.
Second, and we believe it's actually a strong combination for wealth management clients with what we're doing on the life side, as we in Allianz systematically have been pivoting from spread businesses and spread business in life to more modern products. I wish that would accelerate a bit more, but we can talk about it another time. So it's it's a very strong combination, and if you are performing both well on the life Asset Management side, maybe a third one on the health additional components, it makes a very powerful combination, not just for clients, but for shareholders. If you ever, Michael, run what is the return on assets under management from a client perspective, you need to add the margins of both businesses.
I think they look very strong and better than most wealth managers in the world. Just a small hint, and we're intending to build that out. Now, second, on Income, very important story. So the so-called messages, and I think you captured it nice, came a long time ago when the Singaporean community and NTUC Enterprise, in particular, thought about: How do we get this business to be more successful, both in terms of volume and margin? And they decided to corporatize it. So it was a mutual, a cooperative company that went through a long corporatization process, and already at that time, 2.5 years ago, a lot of local noise came up around, you know, will the purpose of this institution serving, particularly the working class in Singapore, be fulfilled?
As they are the market leader in P&C, and the number 3 in Health, and are still the number 5 in Life. They used to be much better. Exactly because they have been losing market share and profitability relative to industry leaders, we were approached by the community and says: How can we combine the capabilities that you have, by the way, in each of these segments, with the franchise that we have, and how do we bring Income into the 21st century and make them very successful? By the way, many things have already been done. For example, if you look at the digital capabilities that Income has to service clients, they're actually very, very good.
The key thing is there is a lot of upside in terms of underwriting pricing, there's a lot of upside in claims, there's a lot of upside in product design, and there's also a lot of upside in procurement, particularly on the health and the claim side, that we've been building out in Allianz over the last many years in order to make sure that the margins really improve. And that's actually the story. The story is to bring income back to be the leading franchise in the state of Singapore and combine that with what we are bringing. This is, by the way, why we are in partnership with Enterprise, right? So we're buying 51% at this point in time, with Enterprise, this is not a sellout.
They will be involved, and they'll make sure that all the franchise and the customer access are here to serve us. So we really believe in bringing the best of both things, and you can see that in, for example, life in Germany, where we have both the highest customer satisfaction, the lowest unit cost, the highest growth numbers, and the best margins.
Brilliant. Thank you.
Thanks, Michael. The next question is from Peter Eliot from Kepler Cheuvreux. Go ahead, Peter. Peter, are you on mute? Peter, are you still there? Okay, let's move on. I think, Peter, you might have to rejoin, or maybe you may be on mute. So let's move to William Hawkins from KBW. Go ahead, William.
Hello, all. Thank you very much. Can you just comment again, please, on your capital management decision-making cycle, how you've balanced it between annual decisions or opportunistic through the year? This time last year, I thought you were moving to an annual cycle, and now we've got this really nice surprise overnight. So can you just help me understand how your capital management cycle is working, please? And I suppose appended to that, should we extrapolate EUR 1.5 billion now? Is that the new normal? Thank you. And then the second question, on New Caledonia, does that EUR 260 million drop to profit, or have you done something to smoothen it away? I'm just not sure how excited I should get about underlying profits in the context of New Caledonia.
And if I may ask, Oliver, in your prepared remarks, you talked about the benefits of diversification, and I get those. Arguably, diversification can also lead to tail risk that's beneath the radar. And, you know, New Caledonia does feel a little bit like that. I'm wondering if you've, you know, learned anything further about portfolio or risk management, given that outsized loss from a very small region. Thank you.
Yeah, that's a great question. Let me start with that. No, no, no, I think it's a very good question, actually. The issue is very simple, and it's unrelated to others. We are helping the local community, and I really mean, you know, your shareholder, or shareholder representative. We're really helping the community that's been devastated by factually a civil war. And it's very important that what we learn from this. We have a wording there to cover man-made cat, so to speak, riots, which is, by the way, not just there for New Caledonia, but all of France, including the mainland. But if you have the military, the police, the fire brigade, and the emergency rescue not exiting for two weeks, and you leave the population completely alone, facing rioters, then the question is: Can insurance cover losses? And the answer is clearly no.
So we're obviously revisiting and rewriting the policy wordings to really make sure that we don't have to cover losses that emerge because public security is out of control or nonexistent. So that's the learning, but it has nothing to do whether that's in New Caledonia or in the middle of Paris. And that's something that is very, very important because we have, we always operate under the assumption, the rule of law. By the way, as you may know, we are suing the French government for negligence with other insurers on making sure that we get reimbursed because we don't want to leave our clients standing in the rain at the time when their buildings and their business have been totally destroyed.
So I don't want to go into any of the legal details, but your question, Peter, is a very good one. In the largest form of the portfolio of running something that is the biggest P&C portfolio in the world, it's an interesting learning experiences in terms of financially tail risk, with all due respect, that's very small.
It's William. It's William.
Yeah. Yeah, so, the second one, what was the second question? Sorry.
On capital management.
On capital management. Yeah, maybe Claire-Marie, because I don't want to dominate them.
Maybe, like, if you allow me just, maybe to add, William, on two points. So basically, I think as well on this, New Caledonia, situation, right? The way we do manage our SRCC accumulation is basically done against the total sum insured and the level of political stability we expect in a country, right? So I think in that case, which basically makes also the loss, pretty, pretty different, is the fact that the level of political stability was absolutely extremely different compared to what we were expecting also in terms of tail management.
So there will be follow-ups in terms of underwriting, but definitely I think in terms of logic of the way we are also underwriting and managing the accumulation, we will simply, if you want, maybe stress test further the level of political stability and level of expected destruction level we may expect, because also in that loss, what happens is that there were explicitly targeted buildings from a certain population that also led to a higher level of destruction of those buildings, which is a very specific profile of the loss compared to the scenarios we are traditionally running from that perspective. Then I think you ask also related to New Caledonia, if there was any specific effect related to runoff. Definitely not.
The level of runoff we have seen both in the first quarter, second quarter, is in line with our expectation. And by the way, if you look at the overall level of runoff at first half, it's actually slightly lower compared to our expectation for the year. What we have seen in the first quarter, in the second quarter runoff as well is, as usual, as an example, on trade, a lot of reserve recycling between PY and CY, as an example. Then I think you were asking the question on why the share buyback now. As you may remember, I think...
I mean, first of all, clearly, we, we are extremely committed to, to optimizing our capital deployment, and that's also what this share buyback is clearly about. When we, when we came out with our full year number, we had just announced a new dividend policy, moving from 50% payout to 60% payout, which was a commitment, right? And clearly also with uncertainty on how the year will be developing, also given the fact that we had seen, in particular, I think the very high level of inflation, but as well, the fact that the world is a pretty uncertain place, to put it this way.
But now with our first half numbers coming through, we feel more comfortable, and as such, that's why we have decided, as a sign of confidence as well, to extend our share buyback program by EUR 500 million. So should you read anything into that one in terms of future pattern and what would be the level? That I will not do, right? What I think is important is the fact that we are extremely committed at optimizing our capital deployment, whatever shape or form this is taking, as we have so far clearly demonstrated.
Great news. Fantastic. Thank you.
Thanks, William. Okay, Peter, let's try again. I believe your microphone's now working. So Peter, the next question is from Peter Eliot of Kepler Cheuvreux. Hello, Peter? Okay, let's not try again. Let's take the next question then from James Shuck from Citi. Go ahead, James.
Hi. Yeah, sorry, I was just getting an introduction at the beginning. Yeah, good afternoon. So, my first question is really on the capital deployed for organic growth through the SCR. So I think it's EUR 0.9 billion was deployed through that increase at 1H. It seems to be a relatively high number versus peers. It's kind of annualizing at about a 7-point absorption of your own funds generation. I'm just keen to know where that is being deployed. If I look at others, there's a really strong story about diversification, particularly on the P&C side, so you don't really see the SCR coming up through growth. So kind of keen to understand the mix between Life and Health and P&C and why that's not diversifying away.
And then secondly, on the topic of M&A, I often think that we kind of focus a bit too much on the insurance operations. When we think about PIMCO, there are some strategic gaps at PIMCO. I'm thinking about private credit or even on the passive side. How are you thinking about potentially transformative deals for PIMCO? And if that was needed, how would the funding come about? Thank you.
So thanks a lot, James. Let me start with the question on the capital deployed for organic growth. If you look at our quarter, basically, net capital generation, so net organic capital generation, we are 2 percentage points, which is well within the range of what we expect for the full year, right? For the full year, we expect 6-8 percentage points of Solvency II organic capital generation, so 2% is definitely in. And when you look at it for the first half, right, we are at 3%, three percentage points of organic capital generation. We have seen in that number clearly as well, a very strong level of growth, right?
Which basically is coming through all our, through all our segments, in particular, both P&C and Life and Health, right? So we have also a very strong fundamental growth. So from my perspective, that's the direction we should be taking also for basically further development of our Solvency II ratio. And what we do internally, clearly, we are managing very strongly in terms of what we call our Solvency II ROE, or basically also different type of KPIs, which are connected with Solvency II value creation both for our P&C and Life and Health business, and that's what we are using.
Then, when it comes to comparing the level of diversification of our model to competitors, that I cannot really do because I don't have the model of competitors. Still, maybe what you need to know as well is that we are constantly working on our capital deployment. And also, we are fine-tuning currently also with our further bottom-up and top-down initiatives that also will continue to come through in the rest of the year from that angle. Then on the M&A side, basically, we have three areas we are looking at in terms of M&A.
For P&C, we are clearly looking at further consolidation into our leadership markets, because we think that we need to be in a leadership position to be able to exercise the full power of our machine when we do own an entity. We have clearly appetite also for Asia and in particular ASEAN, but also eventually the Pacific area when it comes to further deployment more broadly. And when it comes to PIMCO Asset Management, I think there are two angles to it.
The first one is that we are also looking at opportunities in terms of distribution to further strengthen the logic of the convergence between Asset Management. As an example, the AlTi, AlTi deal we did at the beginning of the year is along those lines. Basically investing into platforms that basically provide us with wealth management opportunities that we can then capture for both our life Asset Management business. And then for PIMCO, I mean, we are open to find good opportunities as well for PIMCO.
Maybe more related to either smaller shops or to teams, because we believe also that teams are much better in terms of our ability to integrate them, as well from a culture perspective, also to earn quicker and better the benefits of our acquisition. So that's more the logic of what we are looking at for PIMCO.
Okay, James, thanks.
Yep, sure. Thank you very much. Thank you.
Thanks. The next question is from Will Hardcastle of UBS. Go ahead, Will.
Thank you. The first one is just on the extent of the combined ratio improvement. Clearly, the pricing and portfolio actions taken effect here. Is there more to go? I guess it looks like pricing is still in excess of inflation across the board, and so we've got some more earn through to come. And perhaps some specific questions there related to Germany and U.K. would be helpful, perhaps with some volume commentary. The second one's on PIMCO, and, you know, in light of recent interest rate changes, thinking about the opportunity here, can you try and explain what historically has been the time that PIMCO's attained the greatest net new net flows? So is that historically correlated to short or long end rates, steepening or flattening? Anything, perhaps on credit versus sovereign would be great. Thank you.
So on motor, so indeed, our overall combined ratio at the end of the second quarter standalone is at 93.9, which is clearly improving compared to last year, because one year ago, for the second quarter, we were at 99%, in terms of in terms of combined ratio. So clearly, we see here the benefit of the of the actions that have that have been that have been taken.
Across the board, we indeed continue to see a higher level of inflation, and we continue to take actions that we also pass on, well, also associated with the type of volume we would like to capture. Clearly, also, we continue to see the highest level of both inflation and rates on the Australian and U.K. portfolio. So, and also maybe just to help you to further reflect on the development of combined ratio in motor, I mean, a very significant positive effect that came into the development of combined ratio came from Australia and U.K. They...
Where both teams in the countries have done, I think, a splendid job at pushing through and taking the right actions, while also managing from a volume perspective, pretty nicely. For both, I think, at so Germany overall, we see both pricing growth and volume growth into coming through into the portfolio there as well. I think the team has done a very nice job on the motor side. And for U.K., overall, clearly, we have taken strong rate action, and also that came with a slight negative volume effect, which I think is normal, given the actions we have taken.
Let me add something that is, it's quite interesting because I expected even more questions. So we keep on seeing inflation, as I said earlier, still coming. But particularly in core Europe, Australia and others, we were one of the earliest movers on pricing, and that has two effects. One, exactly as you said, there is momentum coming as these price increases price them things through into earned premiums. That's still lagging a bit, so there's more to come. But more importantly, a lot of competitors, and you had some news today out of Germany and other places, have to still massively price up just to close the losses they are making, which provides opportunity for us to grab market share, as we can now be more specific and targeted in terms of further price increases.
This is why we said earlier, as we move forward, we're thinking about grabbing more customer market share for those that still have to catch up. In Germany, it's particularly the case, because the market leader was fairly late in that, but also some of our competitors were slow to come. So you get two effects. One, we will have better pricing coming in already, and we're trying to get more market share now when we are at the right level of profitability, not while we were still catching up. And that's a very important thing for you to know in the community. Thank you for asking the question.
Sorry, Will, could you clarify again your second question on PIMCO flows? Because you—I, I'm not sure, we're not quite sure exactly what you were after.
Yeah. Thanks, Andrew. Look, in simple terms, historically, the commentary will be, you know, rates going lower typically can generate more flows as the attraction comes onto the fixed income side. I was just trying to understand if there's any more detail on that. You know, is there anything in terms of steepening of curves?
Yeah.
or flattening of the curve? That, that... Is it sort of the perfect setup, or is it a bit more complicated than that?
Okay, thanks.
Yeah, it is more complicated, but it's a very good question. Typically, you need the curve to steepen in order for that to be case. But also people tend to forget that PIMCO, at least in terms of earnings profile, has changed a lot over the last 10 years. So the earnings component coming in out of structured product that we have are increasing, the share of performance fees is increasing, so it's no more as simple as that. So certain funds like the PIMCO Income Fund, that's the key driver. On some of our other products, it is not. But it is correct, as rates move forward and the yield curve steepen, that's generally a very benign environment.
It's also true that PIMCO does well when volatility is highest and certainty is highest, because then this is when people really look for somebody to protect their their value. So with high volatility, we also see a lot of flows into our top performing fund. Maybe that's an answer without being Dan Ivascyn and trying to even replicate 2% of what he would say here.
No, that's a great answer.
But I'm very happy to follow up on that.
Thank you.
Okay, thanks, Will. Our next question is from Andrew Crean of Autonomous. Go ahead, Andrew.
Okay.
Yeah, we can hear you. Go ahead.
All right. Let's do this.
Andrew, we can hear you.
Yeah. Two questions, I suppose. One, on U.S. commercial, where one of your peers is sort of going slightly against the grain and suggesting that that market is ready to harden further and should have improved results. Is that the way you're seeing it for AGCS? Or is it more about sort of holding the line? And then secondly, talking about capital, you've got a lot of senior debt, which doesn't qualify in terms of your capital. Is there a possibility of substituting some of that for qualifying debt and bolstering the capital position, and perhaps that could provide a source of funds for M&A?
So maybe on U.S... Hi, Andrew. So maybe on U.S. commercial-
Yeah.
So I think, here, I mean, as always, you have to be quite nuanced per line of business, sub-line of business, to really assess where the rates are standing. So I think it depends a bit, but we see some line of business where clearly the rate have softened quite a bit. That would be the case for cyber. That would be the case also for maybe public D&O would be another example of this one, or even like some part of some part of liability. But now you see some counter movements where indeed we start seeing some hardening.
But as well, I think there is a property side, which was really, really hard, where we expect also to see now some softening to start coming through on the property side. But we are now also well ahead of a strong... Sorry, of the Cat period on the U.S. side, that may also impact the rate structure on the U.S. commercial. But maybe so short story long, it depends a bit, but what we see is that some softening starting to happen maybe on the property side, and that's the most recent development here. Yeah. Then when you look at our capital structure, indeed, we have a bit more senior debt compared to some com...
Compared to some competitors. But overall, we are quite happy with, with our capital structure. We, we retain some flexibility, along those lines, and we, we are always, you know, carefully looking at what makes more sense given, given the level of capital we are at and what are the various elements we, we have to optimize always in, as well, in terms of, risk, if you want cost, cost, cost profile. Overall, I mean, let me remind you as well, right, our solvency ratio, I think, is at a very strong level of solvency ratio. We are above 200%, so we are, quite comfortable, from, from, from that, that perspective as well.
If we would have to do something, we are always open to do something, and so we retain that flexibility, and that's what we like in the structure we have.
Great. Thank you.
Okay. Thanks, Andrew. We got a follow-up question from Michael.
... Thanks very much. The two questions on—you talked at the beginning, and I think again now, on the cost income Asset Management. And I felt very vulnerable suddenly because I was thinking, "Oh, I'm going to become automated as I disappear, and somebody must, a much more efficient machine will replace me." But maybe you can talk a little bit about where the cost income ratio would come and whether it's now or later or something. That'd be fantastic. And then on the point of scale, I agree completely, but could you be... And you said you want to be bigger in the main markets and that thing. Could you be a little bit maybe more specific or give us a better feel?
You kind of alluded to it by talking about the capacity in debt, but any kind of indication where you would - how big a deal you would consider to become that much bigger in particular or any markets? I think you also mentioned, I think, indirectly, Australia. Thank you.
So, Michael, always nice to hear you. So the story on M&A hasn't changed. We hate large deals because they typically don't create value. We know that, and you've seen that, or at least takes forever if you run it really properly. What we like and have done the last 10 years is bolt-ons, exactly where we feel we'll build market share. If you compare the portfolio of Allianz today across P&C Life Health, it's much, much stronger because we exited the marginal players. Think about the Middle East, or we combined with partners. Think about Africa, we're now four times the size of anybody else, or we, we increased. There's one or two markets left in Europe where we are not at scale, and we are thinking about what to do. One, for example, is Belgium, right?
Where we are thinking about what to do, and we have no rush because we make good money there. So the point is always building local market share and then building market share in businesses that scale globally in terms of know-how or capital management, other commercial. So there's nothing new and nothing large. The point, I think, before on the sub-debt component was, if you want to really invest more, do we have some flexibility for EUR 1 billion or EUR 2 billion more? Yes, but it's nothing that is eye-watering, yeah. So we don't want to surprise the markets with something eye-watering unless it is a once in a lifetime, and I haven't seen one. So let's just go back to that.
The key thing is actually for us, now that we have spent many years now building our franchises in terms of productivity, in terms of profitability, and in terms of customer and employee satisfaction to benchmarks, how do we grow organically stronger? And just to give you a little bit of a peek, we are first quartile in terms of customer acquisition. Unfortunately, we're not first quartile in terms of customer retention. So the biggest opportunity for Allianz to grow is actually to reduce churn, right? So to tell you that. And the second one, which is an eternal issue in the industry, which actually, with technology, as you mentioned, will become easier and with a very strong brand, and that's what we're seeing, and I'll give you a data now.
As the Allianz brand gets stronger and stronger and customers seek us out, our ability to cross-sell, if we do it properly, increases massively. So I'll give you an example from the U.K. that is really stunning, and please treat it as an example, not as a general rule. As we now rebranded to Allianz in the flow business of LV, cross-selling ratios now from home, auto into home is 40%. That is eight times what it used to be. So there's a lot to be done, and we've worked on technology. It cannot be extrapolated. I use it as an anecdote. So there is a lot to be coming. We'll talk about it in the Capital Markets Day in more detail. So the biggest opportunity for Allianz is organic growth, and that we need to get much better at.
Sorry, Michael, I didn't quite understand your question on Cost- Asset Management. Are you talking-
Towards year-end, I think.
Are you talking year-end, or were you talking longer term? Because you talked about AI or.
No, I think my feeling was that there's more to come by the end of the year. That's, but if there's any other indications longer term, that'd be nice, too.
Yeah, we're hoping that it gets better by year-end also.
Yeah. So exactly, I think, like, so you will always have a bit of volatility also associated with the performance fees, right? What we had guided towards was 61, but I think, like, so I think would be, I mean, we'd say mid, mid-range between, around, around that level would be a good logic, between 60-61. Yeah.
Thank you.
Okay, our next question is from Vinit from Mediobanca. Go ahead, Vinit.
Yes, thank you. I hope you can hear me as well. I have two questions, please. One is on the Solvency II, capital generation on, motor insurance. On the capital generation, Solvency II, take the number back to where it should have been. I'm just curious that, while in one thing we talked about how the Allianz Life U.S. strong growth was kind of depending some of that, but in the second quarter, maybe you've done something about it. Obviously, growth is lower, but then you have German Life, 35% PA difficult. So I'm just curious, was there any management actions behind this? Within impact capital, or was it just US growth likely? Secondly, just, picking up back, comment please-
Sorry, sorry, Vinit.
You mentioned-
Vinit, your line's very, very hard to understand. Are you on a speakerphone or something?
... I don't have my headphones on. I'll get rid of it.
So, let's address your first question first. The first question, I think, just to summarize, is you want to understand a bit more about our capital generation, which in the second quarter was a bit higher than the first quarter, 'cause we'd mentioned some growth constraints in the first quarter, but we still had growth in the second quarter. So how come our capital generation was closer to normal? Is that roughly the gist of the question?
That's precisely it.
Okay, great. Let's answer that question, and we'll come on to your second question.
Thank you.
Yeah, so indeed, so we had, so basically growth in both quarter. In the first quarter, we had some seasonality effect, in particular related to some of our businesses that, you know, get the return beginning of the year a bit more strongly. So you will have in particular the health business in France. That would be a good example of those seasonal effect we saw. We also had a particularly strong effect coming from AZ Life, if I remember right, also in the first quarter, which is a bit explaining the difference between the two quarter in terms of growth profile, just associated with the seasonality effect.
Do-does that-
German Life also grew. Yeah, German Life also grew in Q2, right, 35%. That's quite big as well.
Then it's a different point because indeed we had also... I mean, we as mentioned, right? We had growth in the second quarter. I was more mentioning the fact that you had specific type of profiles, which basically generate different type of capital requirements linked to the way they are, they basically come into the model. So that's why you have a different effect. Then when it comes to explaining the German Life growth, we had indeed in the second quarter a particularly strong growth on the unit-linked side, which was related to both single premium and also recurring premium businesses. That's basically went in particular into our Perspektive product.
And what is also quite strong related to the recurring premium is linked to some of our corporate pension business. Because we see that more and more of our corporate clients needs to have good pension offering to basically retain their employees. So that's a very strong area of growth as well for Leben.
Yes, thank you very much, Claire-Marie. So I'll keep it brief. The motor question was more about earlier your comment that you're saving about EUR 1,000. You threw a number there, and passing on some of that to customers. Is it a correct understanding that you're probably going to be pricing motor a little lower than where the market is because you're already ahead of the curve, already having great-
No, no more differentiated. I think what will happen is the differentiation, and it is a great question, will accelerate now. The more we are able to target and to convince client to go into the steering tariff. Just to give you a number, if I remember correctly, about 55%, moving to 60% of our Casco clients are going into the steering tariff. I expect that to trend up over the next few years. The benefits that are coming through claims and the benefits we can pass on to clients will just increase. The issue is how many competitors have the ability to do that? There's not too many other than the market leader, so that competitive advantage should build itself out over time, and I think that's often not understood by investors. That's why I mentioned it.
Okay.
Now, it's nothing to do with capital consumption. Totally different story. We need to really analyze why we have more capital consumption P&C than others, but, we'll get back to that.
Okay, Vinit. And the final question today, it's a follow-up question from James. So James, you've got the honor of the last question. Go ahead.
Thanks a lot for the opportunity. I just wanted to ask about AZ Life. It's grown fantastically well as interest rates have gone up, and we've seen very strong flows and very attractive margins. I'm just keen to kind of hear a little bit about how you see the risks on this book, particularly as we move to kind of a rate cutting cycle eventually as that comes through, both in terms of the kind of risks to the life inforce of those lapses, and to the new business value outlook. Thank you.
Maybe Claire-Marie can pick this up. In fact, we're always transparent on lapsation across the portfolio globally, by the way. We have higher lapses over the last few quarters that we fully reflect, but nothing to be concerned about anything. In fact, on AZ Life, a huge part or significant part of the lapsation is happening on the ceded portfolio that we did in L&H in 2021. So that just confirms the power of the deal we did at the time, yeah, to really securitizing exactly what is not better placed on our balance sheet. So we are very comfortable with the business mix. We've also changed, James, a lot of the management levers.
I think we spent quite some time in the past explaining that, and IR can separately pick this up, but we are very, very comfortable with that. What we want to make sure going forward is that we leverage third-party capital intelligently even more, so we don't really grow the size of the balance sheet. So the strategic objective, we'll talk more about it at the Capital Market Day, is keep on growing in the U.S., keep on growing returns without growing the balance sheet too much. That's really the objective, and we'll detail that going further a little bit more. And we are obviously always looking at what happens if the business goes into a recession. We are happy to provide you with data, longevity data. Over the last 25 years, we have exceptionally strong performance on credit in the portfolio.
That's something that we are very, very carefully monitoring. So it's a very good question.
No, indeed, I agree. Maybe just like to mention overall on net flows, the second quarter was actually the first quarter where overall, I mean, since the interest rate went down, went up sharply, where we have seen overall, across the entire life portfolio of Allianz, positive net inflows, which I think is a very good situation to be at. When it comes to the specific situation of AZ Life, as I was mentioning, so if you look at it growth, we have negative net flows for AZ Life of minus 0.6. But if you look at it post-reinsurance, we are at least, we are in positive territory for AZ Life overall.
So that's really, I mean, again, demonstrating the strength of the management of the portfolio of AZ Life. And then exactly building on the point of Oliver, when you look at the track record of the AZ Life team, they are really, really good at managing, I mean, a diversified set of products across the market. And basically, they have a very good track record in terms of also managing the financial risk associated with those products. They are usually sophisticated. This is a usually sophisticated team that has been capable historically to manage that very well. And obviously, that's also part of our overall risk management framework, where we are engaging in details into their various exposure to various type of events, yeah.
Okay. Thanks, James. That concludes... That was our last question. So, thank you very much, everyone, for dialing in. Thanks on this busy day, and enjoy the rest of the summer. Thanks very much!