Good morning, and welcome to the Chesnara Half Year 2024 Results Presentation. I'm Steve Murray, Group CEO, and with me today for the first time at a Chesnara results presentation is Tom Howard, our Group CFO.
Tom and I are hosting the presentation today in London from RBC's offices. And as well as those of you in the room with us here today, we've got a great many people dialing in from across the world, including Chesnara colleagues from the UK, the Netherlands, and Sweden. Thanks for joining us today. So what will we cover this morning? Well, I'll start by looking at our headline financial results and some of the key activity we've undertaken so far this year. Tom will then cover those results in more detail, and then I'll finish by looking at some of our future areas of focus, including M&A.
We'll have plenty of time for questions at the end of our presentation. For those of you online, you can submit your questions during the presentation, and for those of you with us in the room, we'll come to you directly with microphones. Now, the four key areas that we set out on this slide remain at the heart of what Chesnara is all about. Firstly, we've strong line of sight to future sources of value growth and long-term cash generation, which in turn supports our long-standing progressive dividend policy, and the first six months has shown organic economic value growth and continued strong cash generation. Our Solvency II balance sheet remains robust and continues to be highly resilient to market volatility, and that provides significant headroom for strategic activity. Thirdly, we've a great track record of delivering acquisitions, and this provides our investors with a further opportunity for growth.
We've worked on a number of opportunities during the first part of the year, and we continue to see a positive acquisition pipeline in 2024 and beyond. Finally, we've a management team and board that are highly focused on creating sustainable shareholder value. Let's look at our financial headlines, and it's been another successful period for the group. We've delivered strong cash generation again, with group commercial cash generation of GBP 29 million, providing great support for our progressive dividend policy. Our Solvency ratio remains robust at 201%, substantially above our operating range of 140%-160%, and that provides significant headroom to support acquisitions. We've seen economic value earnings growth of GBP 20 million, despite no acquisitions landing in the period.
We also delivered commercial new business profits of GBP 5 million, with an improved contribution from Movestic in the period. And on the back of our strong cash generation and robust solvency position, we've yet again announced a 3% increase in our interim dividend. Now, that 3% increase means that we've now grown the dividend each and every year since we listed over 20 years ago. That consistent delivery is unrivaled across UK and European-listed peers, and based on some research that we asked RBC to do for us, we believe that we're one of only seven companies across the main European indices that has a 20-year track record of uninterrupted dividend growth. This overall growth have been well above inflation over this period, and our 3% increase in the interim dividend is also above both current short-term and medium-term investment rates.
We continue to have good line of sight to future areas of cash generation that will support our progressive dividend policy in the future, as Tom will highlight shortly. Our teams across Chesnara have also continued to be busy on operational delivery. In the UK, the formal legal transfer of UK individual protection policies from Canada Life into our UK insurance carrier, Countrywide, remains on track, and we expect this to complete in Q1 2025. The work to transfer the majority of our existing UK books of business also continues at pace, and we're targeting the end of 2025 for its completion, and like many others in our industry, there was extensive work conducted to meet the initial UK C onsumer Duty deadline of the 31 July 2024 for closed books.
Further work is now underway to execute the fully funded plan that we have in place, and this will include us removing any remaining exit charges. There continues to be no material commercial impact on the group at this stage from this program of work. In Sweden, Movestic has expanded its distribution partnerships for our custodian business, alongside further work in automation, customer experience, and connectivity with brokers. While we haven't announced any further M&A in the period, our teams have been very active on a number of material M&A processes, and we continue to have readily available firepower of around £200 million to support acquisitions. I'll talk about M&A a little later in our presentation.
On sustainability, we started the work on our transition plans and have joined a number of leading organizations and associations in this space, and this will enable us to tap into their expertise and also support a positive sustainability rating for Chesnara. And last but not least, we welcomed Tom to the group in April, and we're already seeing the benefit from his skills and experience across a number of areas. And I'll now hand over to him to take you through the numbers in more detail. Over to you, Tom.
Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. Look, it's great to be here with you today and to be presenting these results to you for the first time. Before I get into the numbers, I do wanna say that one of my priorities as CFO is to simplify our financial metrics and to make our investment story easier to understand for a broader audience. This is something we'll be focusing on pretty heavily ahead of the year end, but I hope you see we've also taken some steps in that area in the presentation today as well. So today, I'm gonna run through the key results for the H1 , focusing on three areas: firstly, our cash result, secondly, the capital position, and thirdly, our outlook for future value generation.
Starting with the cash result, our cash generation of GBP 29.2 million in the period is significantly higher than the prior year. This has been helped in part by positive economics, but also by robust performance in each of our business divisions. At 201%, our Solvency II coverage ratio sits comfortably above our operating range of 140%-160%, and it's also resilient, having remained in excess of 200% over the last 12 months. Our leverage ratio is in line with our long-term target of 30% or less, and the quality of our book remains strong. Finally, whilst our EcV and IFRS balance sheets didn't benefit from M&A activity in the H1 , we are reporting positive EcV and IFRS earnings for the period.
We continue to have a clear line of sight on reliable, recurring sources of future cash generation, as I'll illustrate later. Putting all of this together, this combination of strong cash generation, balance sheet strength, and confidence in future value generation supports a 3% increase in the interim dividend to 8.61p per share. As Steve pointed out earlier, this is the 20th consecutive year that Chesnara has increased returns to shareholders. Our operating divisions returned a total of 30.4 million in commercial cash generation over the H1 of the year. Now, as a reminder, commercial cash generation is the surplus emerging from our business units, adjusted for cyclical Solvency II factors. After allowing for foreign exchange impacts and central adjustments, this equated to a commercial cash result of 29.2 million for the group.
This is significantly ahead of the prior year result of £21.8 million and more than covers group center costs over the H1 and the upcoming interim dividend. At a divisional level, all business units had positive commercial cash generation over the half year. The UK was the most significant contributor and reported strong year-on-year growth, driven mainly by the impact of positive markets. The Netherlands also reported higher year-on-year cash generation, with benefits coming from favorable operating variances and positive market conditions. And finally, our Swedish division reported positive cash generation, albeit lower year on year, mainly from the impact of adverse short-term persistency experience. Moving next to center liquidity. Our holding company cash position remains strong. Allowing for the receipt of our divisional remittances, the group holding company balance increased from £124 million to £137 million.
This increase is after the payment of the 2023 final dividend, as well as debt servicing and other group center costs incurred over the H1 of this year. This illustrates that we have a strong source of operating cash generation to meet our ongoing cash flow requirements without impacting our existing Solvency II coverage ratio. Turning now to the balance sheet and to Solvency II. So after allowing for the impact of dividend payments and measurement adjustments to our Tier 2 assets, the group held surplus assets of £330 million over minimum requirements at the half year. This coverage ratio of 201% is significantly above our operating range of 140%-160% and has remained above 200% over the last year.
This illustrates the resilience of the balance sheet to changing market conditions and the ongoing effectiveness of our foreign exchange hedging arrangements. The strong capital position gives us significant flexibility to support future M&A activity and to invest in our businesses over time. And it's also worth reiterating that no significant capital management actions were applied across the group over the H1 of the year. A range of actions remain available to us to further support the solvency position and the cash position of the group going forwards. Moving now to value, so one of the measures we use to assess the value of our in-force portfolio is economic value. This is an assessment of the assets we have on hand, plus a prudent projection of the future cash flows from the in-force book.
The main area of prudence in the projections is within the estimate of future investment returns. Here, lower risk-free returns are assumed rather than estimates of higher real world returns. The group generated economic value earnings of 20 million in the period, driven mainly by positive market conditions, partially offset by group center costs and the impact of assumption changes. After adjusting for foreign exchange and dividends, economic value reduced by 3% from 525 million to 508 million. Turning to IFRS. So by way of reminder, the IFRS capital base is made up of the IFRS net equity position of both our insurance and investment-classified business. To this, we add the contractual service margin, which is the estimated stock of future profits from our insurance business only.
It's worth noting that around 60% of our in-force portfolio is classified as investment under IFRS. So while the IFRS capital base includes the net equity associated with these investment portfolios, it excludes any measure of future profits from this part of our business. So looking at the numbers, on a pre-tax basis, we're reporting IFRS profits of GBP 13.4 million. In our insurance business, the CSM increased, with positive contributions from new business and experience variances more than offsetting the amortization of the CSM over the period. Taken in aggregate, these led to an increase in the IFRS capital base to GBP 493 million at the half year, before adjustments for foreign exchange and the interim dividend.
The stability in the CSM means that we have a clear line of sight on the future value associated with our insurance portfolio, and we also expect that the total IFRS capital base will benefit from future M&A and other management actions. Our ability to generate reliable sources of cash generation over the long term has been key to our dividend track record over the last 20 years. Here, I want to show that we're well positioned to continue to do so into the future, initially focusing on the items that recur from year to year. So moving from left to right, firstly, as the in-force book runs off, we release both the Solvency Capital Requirements and the Risk Margin we're required to hold against the portfolio.
Secondly, the excess returns we generate on our assets over and above the risk-free rates assumed in our projections emerges a significant source of additional value, and thirdly, as I mentioned earlier, we have a range of actions available on both the asset and liability side of the balance sheet to optimize the capital position, and we monitor those on an ongoing basis. Taken together, we expect that these three sources of recurring value will comfortably cover our debt servicing costs and our shareholder dividends into the longer term, and then finally, and importantly, continued delivery of our disciplined M&A strategy will generate new sources of reliable long-term value from capital and cost synergies as we integrate new portfolios into the group, and so, to conclude, we've seen another period of strong cash generation for the group, providing ongoing support for our long track record of dividend growth.
The group has generated organic economic value growth despite no acquisitions completing in the period, and we have a range of management actions available to generate new sources of future value, and finally, we've got a robust and resilient balance sheet with significant headroom to capitalize on future M&A opportunities, so with that, I'll pass back to Steve.
Thanks, Tom. So I want to remind people about the strong foundations we have here at Chesnara and the opportunities they provide us as we move forward with our three strategic areas of focus. Namely, maximizing the value from our in-force books of business, delivering value-adding acquisitions of portfolios and businesses, and writing focused new business where we've a good level of confidence that we can make a profit. Now, we already have good scale as a business, looking after nearly one million customers who rely on us for their life cover, pension savings, and other products. We've further opportunities to drive synergies and take further management actions in the future that will enhance value or accelerate cash generation, such as reinsurance, hedging, or internal restructuring. On M&A, we've clearly reinvigorated the M&A machine here, and we see no material barriers to us doing M&A in the future.
We've been acting active in this period, and we remain confident in our ability to execute. We also believe this period demonstrates that we will remain disciplined in our approach to M&A. On new business, we've seen stronger sales momentum in Movestic, both through their occupational pension unit-linked business and the custodian offering. And while we've continued to see some outflows in our occupational pension business, our overall net client cash flows remain positive. The UK new business contribution in the period has been helpful, particularly offsetting lower life insurance sales in the Netherlands. And in the medium term, there may well be opportunities for us to increase the volume of new business, albeit we expect the main growth in Chesnara to continue to come from M&A.
Finally, we remain committed to becoming a sustainable Chesnara, and work continues on the planning and implementation of our net- zero transition. We continue to believe that it's crucial for all businesses in society to become sustainable, and we'll continue to make our decisions based on the needs of all our stakeholders. Let's turn now to M&A. As I said earlier, there's been lots and lots of activity across multiple deal processes this H1 of the year, and that included us progressing to detailed due diligence and legal negotiations. When we look at both the short and medium-term pipeline, it remains positive against a very large UK and European M&A market.
At our full- year results presentation, I flagged that we were seeing pipeline opportunities ranging from single-digit millions of consideration to around the £150 million plus mark, and that remains the case today, and against that backdrop, we believe it's important to retain material firepower to ensure that we can access these value-enhancing opportunities for our investors. On the left-hand side of the slide, we've again set out what we continue to see as the main drivers for insurers reshaping their books, and these are the simplification of product sets, operational and technology platform simplification, a desire to release capital from the disposal of non-core products to reinvest elsewhere, for example, into BPA. A nd we also see people refocusing on specific geographies.
We're also seeing a large number of the available deals in our market being portfolio transactions, where there are a smaller number of counterparties competing for these opportunities, as an existing operating platform and regulatory license are required. This is an area that we've got great experience, alongside the other strengths that we set out on the right-hand side of this slide, and we'll, of course, continue to maintain our disciplined approach in assessing future M&A, as you've seen from us again in this period. We also continue to have the flexibility and available financing options to deliver a wide range of deals in terms of their product set, structure, and size.
We'll continue to ensure that any deals result in us, firstly, operating within or above a steady- state solvency ratio range of 140%-160%. Secondly, maintaining our investment grade rating from Fitch. And thirdly, also ensuring we maintain appropriate levels of cash reserves, including consideration of capacity for further M&A. On the bottom left-hand side of this slide, you can see the main actions that we've taken during the period to both solidify and enhance our financing options. These are the renegotiation of our RCF facility, getting shareholder approval to allow the potential issuance of our T1 debt up to around £120 million, and the receipt of dividends from our divisions that's well in excess for the Tier 2 debt coupon and final dividend payment.
So overall, we continue to feel very positive about our ability to find and execute value-enhancing M&A opportunities. And before we finish the presentation, I wanted to take a moment to remind investors of some of the actions that we've been taking, what's happened as a result of us taking those actions, and what investors can expect from Chesnara in the coming months and years. So we've already taken some steps to simplify the investor story and improve our disclosures around future sources of cash generation, including within the presentation today. As I just highlighted, we've significantly enhanced the financial firepower available to support the group's M&A strategy, and we've invested more time, energy, and resource in M&A discussions and processes. We've also taken action to ensure the UK operating platform is modernized and can support our growth ambitions.
We've strengthened the senior leadership team across the group, and that new senior leadership team has been far more proactive when looking at potential management actions that will enhance value or accelerate cash generation. And the results from this work have been pleasing. Four deals executed, adding over £50 million of economic value already to the group, as well as additional cash generation. With immediately available firepower to support M&A of around £200 million, and options to supplement that further through RT1 debt or equity. And our investment grade rating from Fitch has been an important external benchmark for us. We've continued to see strong cash generation as a group, delivering 20 years of uninterrupted dividend growth that's unrivalled in the UK and European-listed insurance sector.
Our increased activity and focus on M&A has supported a more positive M&A pipeline than we've certainly seen in previous years. What can investors expect from us next? Firstly, more value-enhancing M&A, with a focus on ensuring we drive further value from the M&A executed to date, as well as bringing in further acquisitions. We'll clearly maintain our disciplined approach here. Secondly, we'll further focus on more proactively allocating capital and enhancing the investment returns that are available to us. Thirdly, we're also going to ensure that we drive more value from the constituent parts of the group. Finally, as Tom highlighted earlier, we're looking to simplify and likely reduce the number of financial metrics we have, making our investor story easier to understand for a wider range of investors.
So in summary, we've seen strong cash generation, a robust solvency position, organic EcV growth, and the 20th consecutive year of dividend increases. We continue to see a positive M&A pipeline, both short and medium term, and we remain optimistic about the prospect of delivering value and adding acquisitions in the future. Our teams have also continued to deliver some of the required operational changes that we need to be fit for the future, and I wanted to say thank you again to them for their efforts already this year. And as we look towards the remaining part of 2024 and beyond, I know they believe, as I do, that there continues to be a lot to look forward to here at Chesnara. Thank you for listening at the presentation. What we'll now do is open up for questions. I suggest that we start here in the room.
Roddy, I think you're gonna be microphone man for us today, and that will also allow people online to type questions into their computers. So, Abid, you were incredibly fast up there, just beating Michael, so we'll start with you, Abid.
Good morning, all, and thanks for taking my questions. I've got three questions, if I can, please. Two on M&A. So first one is on the M&A firepower. You've stated that you've got, I think, £200 million or over £200 million standalone capacity for M&A. Just wondering, what does that... what does the £200 million constitute of? Where is it sitting at the moment? Is it readily available? How readily available is it, and what sort of additional capacity do you have on top of that? You touched upon the RT1. Just wondered sort of how much additional capacity do you have in total above the £200? And then secondly, again, on the M&A, but this time on the deal pipeline.
Just wondering, what sort of deals did you walk away from? What didn't work? And then going forward, what sort of deals would hit the sweet spot? What sort of deals are in your sort of line of sight without sort of giving away anything that you shouldn't? And then the final question is on the FX hedges. I noticed there was quite a bit of FX movement through some of the numbers. Just could you remind us, which you put a hedge on in place last year, which balance sheet were you trying to protect? Was it the IFRS, the EcV, or the Solvency II balance sheet, and why? Which one and why?
Yeah.
Thank you.
Shall I have a go at the M&A questions, and then you can pick up the FX one, Tom?
Yeah.
Thanks for your note this morning. Abid, I enjoyed the headline, as always. So in terms of that M&A firepower, we put a slide in the deck just to try and give a little bit more color around sort of where some of those potential sources are. But I think if we look at what's immediately available, you'll see we've got very material amounts of cash at bank at the half year, over GBP 130 million. When we look at then what we like to hold at PLC, we tend to say we like to hold a year's worth of dividends, a year's worth of sort of central working capital, and then enough to pay the debt coupon. So that gets you to sort of 50, 55, 60 million, that sort of number.
We've got a lot of cash at bank that we can utilize, and we also have an RCF facility in place, which is immediately available to us, that we can draw down up to £150 million. There are other pockets of capital around the group that we could draw upon as well. When we talk about that sort of £200 million, it's probably slightly on the conservative side, but we're confident that we have that immediately available. You're right to say we can kind of supplement that with other things. I think one of the obvious items is something like an RT1.
We're one of the only kind of UK peers in our space that hasn't raised debt in that sort of space. We've seen the sort of pricing for that come back in, and we took the step at our AGM to get shareholder approval to ensure that we could issue that. You'll probably know, but others might, that that doesn't sort of impact the leverage ratio, and actually, if anything, it would bring it slightly down because it counts as equity. So that could be interesting for us. And there are some management actions that we can take, so reinsurance can help to free up sort of capital resources as well, and then ultimately we can ask shareholders for equity.
And so if you think, when we think about the two hundred, that's around half the market cap today, so that does allow us to do some pretty material things, but that's not a ceiling. We think we can. You know, if there are bigger opportunities that are right for shareholders, we can sort of extend before that. So that's how we think about that kind of financing position. On pipeline, what and what do we walk away from and the sort of things we've been looking at. So, as you say, I sort of I'll try and sort of walk the tightrope here of giving a little bit more disclosure without falling off the tightrope and telling you what are things that I shouldn't.
So what I would say up front is, from the, we've looked at multiple files, been involved in multiple processes, most of those sort of bilateral. So these are things that we've been going out and working with other insurance companies on, as opposed to necessarily it being a process run by a corporate financial advisor and a bank. So trying to find solutions together. There's been nothing within those processes that we've turned around and said, "Goodness me, we've now got a problem with the model we don't think we can execute." One of the opportunities, ultimately, the counterparty's priorities changed, so it didn't make sense for them. We'd all put quite a lot of work in. Those things sort of happen sometimes.
Another opportunity, as we progressed through due diligence, it was very clear there was going to be a valuation gap that emerged that couldn't be closed, and we weren't prepared to move our pricing to meet that valuation gap, to give you a sort of a sense of some of the things that have been coming through. In the UK opportunities, one of the things that's been a little bit easier as we start to look at UK opportunities this year is the fact that this closed book deadlines landed in July, because everybody now has done a full assessment of their books. They've got a plan in place to address any challenges.
And obviously, we've done UK M&A before, but I think that does give a slightly more sort of solid basis to move forward on and assess those sorts of risks as well. So when we've taken sort of the number of things we've been involved in, we're seeing the sort of things that might be coming to market, our overall firepower. Bringing Tom in, he has some additional expertise in this space. He's got a bunch of contacts that enhance what we do as a group. That's why we're talking positively about the pipeline, not just in 2024 and beyond. Do you want to pick up the FX?
Yeah. So the FX is on the Solvency II balance sheet. So I think if you step back and think about actually how we run the business, I mean, the primary metric for us is the Solvency II balance sheet, cash generation. Now, it's almost impossible to hedge every single basis, so we have IFRS and other bases as well. So we don't even try, frankly. But actually, where we see the best value from the hedging strategy is it's on a Solvency II balance sheet. What it does is it significantly reduces the solvency capital requirements that we need to hold in a stressed FX situation. That's effectively what it does.
Actually, to give you some sort of context around this, you know, at the half year, the SCR benefited to the tune of £37-£38 million as a result of putting that hedge on, and the impact of that hedge, you know, increased slightly over the half year as well. So the cash result that we announced today of £29.2 million, there's an element of the FX benefit within that cash number as well.
But you also asked just about what might be in the sweet spot for us as well. So I think I said in the presentation, we can look at a very broad range of opportunities, not least because the operating platforms we have across our territories can deal with a wide range of product sets. So that's probably one of the first things that we look at is say: Do we have the operational capability and the skills within the businesses that we have to run these books of business? And we certainly have, and the SS&C outsourcing deal that we've talked about before sort of enhances that platform capability in the UK quite helpfully.
Some of the deals that we've done recently, there's been a very fast sort of recycling of cash round. So while we've deployed over GBP 100 million of the Tier 2 that we've raised, you can obviously see most of that sort of being replenished. You can see PLC cash at bank is looking very, very strong. And we like those deals, but I think that gives us the opportunity as well to look at deals that supplement sort of the dividend profile and the cash payment profile a little bit longer out as well. So actually, having the ability to look at longer tail liabilities as well is something that we're quite interested in so that we can continue this unrivaled track record of dividend growth that you see from us.
So it's, I suppose, what we're saying is we'll look at a wide variety of things. What we're not proposing at this stage on an organic basis is going into things like BPA. I think you've heard from that before. We think that's a really interesting market. Other people are already there. There's about 12 major insurance companies now in the UK, with a 13th probably about to join as well. We think we're seeing better returns for us from M&A. That's not to say that isn't a good market opportunity for others. Michael?
And just to could you possibly give us a feeling for the total value of this cash, the management action pool that you have? Just to get a feel for it. The other one, this was what my sales were asking this morning, is who are your competitors? They want to hear that you have no competitors, but maybe that's a little bit optimistic. And then for me, I had two more, but I'm not sure if I'm overstaying my welcome. One is, the feeling I have is you have a clear line of sight of for your dividend growth of five years, but I wonder if you can maybe give some outline of that, if I'm right. I don't know.
And then the final one is on Sweden. My feeling is that was one of your really early deals, so maybe give a feel for, is there likely to be progress to stop the kind of early lapses a little bit? Thank you.
Yeah. Why don't I pick up sort of M&A in Sweden? I'll make one comment on the five-year piece and then hand over to you, and maybe you can deal with management actions as well. Does that work? So, and firstly, Michael, thanks for the initiation from Berenberg. It was great to see that, and so we welcome to the... I don't know if this is your first Chesnara presentation, but certainly your first since I've been here, so we're delighted you're here. We would love to say there's no competitors as well, that wouldn't quite be true. But I think when we look at the overall competitive environment, we certainly feel like the competition has lessened.
If I think about sort of three years ago when I first joined Chesnara before then becoming CEO, I think you were seeing a lot of private markets, private equity money in sort of UK. insurance and European insurance as well, and we've probably seen that die away a little bit, I think, in part because of what's happened in Italy with Eurovita and what have you as well. Not to say that there still isn't money, but I think what we're seeing is probably some of that money looking to partner with trade players like ourselves or others looking at those opportunities. And then we've perhaps seen in the UK, you know, some organizations that have been very keen on M&A, finding other opportunities to deploy their capital as well.
If anything, I think when we're looking at files, we're probably feeling a little bit less competition. We've said before, I think at this presentation, that we've always felt sort of the smaller deals, there's a lot less competition 'cause it really is just ourselves, possibly some of the smaller mutuals. For the bigger deals, less competition at that sort of billion plus sort of size because few people can afford them. So the real competitive landscape is in the sort of one fifty through to, you know, seven fifty type range, and we're probably feeling, if anything, that competition has lessened a little bit, in part because some people have done M&A, in part because you're not seeing private equity, and in part because I think others will be more opportunistic, perhaps, rather than being proactive.
If we look at the Netherlands, it really is some of the other trade buyers. I mean, ASR are a very, very fierce competitor in that market, but the reality is they've done this huge transformational deal with Aegon. So I think then doing sort of the smaller deals that we're probably known for, perhaps, isn't going to be in their sweet spot, and then you may see some of the other life insurance providers. So overall, we think the competitive dynamic is good. We actually like the fact that there are other people there as well because we think that leads to a more buoyant M&A market. That might sound a bit strange, but I think actually having a bit of competition there works for everybody.
And what we're certainly not seeing is any sort of lessening in the larger insurance companies being more focused with their strategy. And I think I've talked about this misnomer in our market, that there's this closed book opportunity that ultimately gets consumed because everything is consolidated. If you look at some of the deals that have happened more recently, these are quite recent books. The Canada Life deal that we did was a book that's been written in the last five or 10 years. So I would look at the opportunity as books that are core or non-core to their insurers, rather than thinking about it as a sort of a legacy back book opportunity, only. On Sweden, want to say up front, I mean, Sweden's been a fantastic investment for us.
So if you look at the return on value that's been created for shareholders, it's over 600% from that initial investment. We should probably do a better job of continuing to remind people around that. I think what's been pleasing in the H1 is the top-line sales momentum that the team there have delivered under Sara's leadership. You might remember that we changed CEO last year, and I think Sara's done a terrific job of driving that sales momentum and broadening some of the distribution partnerships. But as Tom talked about and I alluded to, we are still seeing more outflows in that sort of occupational pension business than we'd like. It's a market feature we're not seeing...
I think when we talked about this a few years ago, we felt that we were probably being impacted more than others. I think if we look at that now, it's a higher level of kind of churn that brokers are creating in that market that's impacting everybody. Now, we don't like that. Ultimately, we'd like that to reduce. We're engaging with both brokers and other parties in the market to see what we can do, but I'd be more concerned if the sort of top-line growth wasn't as strong as it has been in the first part of the year, and the team are taking a number of actions to help with retention activity and things like that.
Tom can maybe talk about the five-year growth in a bit more detail. What I was going to say is, when I joined, one of the questions that I was getting from analysts and shareholders was: you've got this great dividend track record, so it has to stop, doesn't it? Because 'cause it always does. So we introduced a little bit more disclosure to explain to people why we felt more confident. And that five-year timeline happens to tie in with our business planning kind of process, rather than us saying it has to be five years because year six sort of gives us a problem. But maybe, Tom, you can just talk to that in a bit more detail.
Yeah, I mean, it's tied into your question about management actions as well, Michael. I'm gonna immediately disappoint you by not giving you a number, or guidance today. But actually, there's a reason for that, which is, look, we-- Steve mentioned earlier that one of the things we're doing as a management team is becoming a little bit more, I think he used the term, front-footed on management actions. And actually, you know, one of the great things about the balance sheet we have is that actually we have probably been, I would say, underweight in past management actions, which means there is more to go at. And look, you'll know the types of things that we'll be thinking about. On the asset side, we have de-risking options via review of the investment strategy. That's something we're looking at.
On the liability side, we've got ample opportunity to just re-evaluate some of the reinsurance structures we have across the group in each of our business divisions, and we're looking at that. And then on the capital side, in other words, the SCR side, I talked about the FX hedge earlier. We've done things like mass lapse in the past, but there's a huge amount of scope to do actually more of that across the group as well. So the two reasons I'm not giving you a number is, A, you probably get a sense that we're looking at those things. The second reason, actually, is that we haven't had to, I guess, pull the trigger on a lot of these things recently.
We've been quite judicious about where we've started to look at these things because, you know, if you look at the strength of the balance sheet right now and the sort of firepower it gives us to fund M&A and that £200 million-plus ticket, we actually don't really feel the need to be really actively out there right now, sort of chasing down a lot of these management actions. But, you know, without setting too many expectations, I expect, you know, we will come back and talk about these things in a little bit more detail over time. I mean, it does tie into the dividends point completely.
So what I was showing earlier, without the numbers, mostly, was that sort of perspective around how we see the growth developing relative to how we see the dividend and debt costs rolling out over the next five years. And on a prudent basis, which is what I feel we've presented, you can see that there's quite a cushion, actually, over that five-year period, and that's before M&A. So I almost think of that visual almost like a conveyor belt. So when you do an M&A on the right-hand side, it basically makes all of the bars bigger. So as we do more M&A, it brings that into the existing business. The existing business starts to throw off excess returns. It gives us the ability to do more management actions.
you know, so you can see that that becomes... That basically increases that headroom over and above the five-year, dividend and debt, cost projection. So right now, on the basis of where we are, we're comfortable we can, you know, we can meet those projections. Management actions are opportunities on top, and we have quite a few to look at.
Just as a reminder of some of the things that we've done to give you a sense of the sort of scale of these things. So the FX hedge that we did a little while ago now, you know, that there was an SCR benefit of around £30 million from that sort of action. So these can be pretty meaningful when you're looking at those sort of opportunities, reinsurance and other things. The other thing that we do with that list of management actions is that it actually forms. It's a formal part of our business planning process. So the slide that you see up on here, we use within our business plan as well.
We sort of like to have that inbuilt verification of some of these things, and as you might imagine, the board is pretty interested in what we're able to do. And as we do M&A, of course, the list of management actions that's available can change quite fundamentally as well. But we've got a high degree of confidence, and I think I've said this before. I'm delighted. If people are asking me about what happens in year six, I think we've done a good job of talking then about the cash generation that's happening, rather than, "Goodness me, I'm worried that there might be a problem next year." So thanks. We'll go Mandeep and then Barrie. If that's...
Good morning, Mandeep Jagpal, RBC Capital Markets. Three questions from me, please. First one, on EcV earnings. Operating variances and the substantive changes within the EcV earnings were negative in the period, and there were also some negative non-operating variances. Could you provide any color on what's included in these few lines and what the outlook is? On the operating side, at least, could we see results that are closer to zero or even positive in the future? And then on capital optionality, you talk about equity capital as an option for to provide M&A firepower. So for a large deal, how would you think about an equity raise in relation to the current share price? Dividend yield is well above the historic average, and the shares are also trading at a discount to EcV.
Then finally, Tom, you mentioned that one of your priorities is just to simplify the financial metrics. I know we'll have to wait until the full- year to see the outcome of this, but what can you say at this stage about what you intend to look at to make the metrics easier to understand?
Do you want to start with metrics?
Yeah.
And do EcV, and then I can maybe pick up the financing, please?
Yeah, look, I think there's Mandeep, there's two steps, I think, to the metrics. The first is actually determining which are the most appropriate metrics to use to talk about the performance of the business. So I think what we've had in the past, like many other insurers that have gone ahead of us, is we've had a preponderance of metrics across sort of the economic balance sheet, IFRS balance sheet, and so on. And so step one almost is actually looking at those and saying, "Well, okay, which ones really tell the story, the underlying story of the business?" And, you know, as I said in my piece, I think we've taken an initial step to sift through those and really focus on the ones that we feel matter.
And of course, all the other KPIs are readily available to anyone who wants to use them for modeling purposes. So that's step one, which I think we've actually pretty much worked through. I think, and you know, obviously we need to do the work and come back and really talk about this in some more detail. But I think more of an emphasis on operating metrics is important, so actually really looking through the performance of the business and really being able to understand, look, to what extent has this been driven by economic variances? To what extent has it been driven by true operating performance? And again, some of our metrics are not far off. I mean, the commercial cash metric, for example, you know, it sort of gets us almost there.
But actually, I think there's scope for us to maybe refine metrics like that a little bit more. And actually, from a comparability perspective, then I think it allows, you know, people like you to sort of assess our performance a little bit more easily against some of the other listed insurers, particularly in the UK. So that's the thought process, but work to do ahead of the year end. I mean, I'm happy to pick up the EcV point now as well.
Yeah.
Yeah, okay. So I mean, you're right. So we did have negative EcV variances in the H1 . Look, no sort of systemic one issue rolling across, an EcV basis that we're concerned about. A smattering of things. We made. Steve made mention of the Swedish persistency experience. So we did. We had two impacts there. The first was we had actual negative variances coming through the H1 . We also took the opportunity to strengthen the longer term assumptions in there as well, and that's just, you know, I think that's just good financial management. We've looked at the trends and, you know, we've made a slight adjustment to the near term persistency expectation from Sweden. You know, otherwise, we had some mortality strengthening elsewhere.
Again, it was a smattering rather than a kind of systemic adjustment across the piece. And thirdly, I mean, I talked about the fact that we didn't do material management actions in the H1 . We did some uprisking in the Netherlands, and you know, the nature of that action is that it can have an upfront EcV negative, but basically it earns through on a real world basis. So if you remember when I spoke earlier, I talked about the EcV being a very prudent basis. So basically, one takes the capital impact through, which you can't actually recognize the expected additional return you're going to get from the new asset strategy within the numbers.
The numbers reflect that upfront capital hit, if you like, but they don't reflect the additional return that we expect to come from those assets. We would expect to see those emerge as positive investment variances, you know, from the H2 onward. That's a bit of a temporary effect, I would say.
So I think you asked, I suppose, equity capital, when might we use it? Can we, can we raise it ultimately at this sort of valuation? So, I suppose the way that we think about this is we look at, the available cash that we have, other levers that we can pull in, including equity. I think we would see it as, as part of rather than the, the total solution for something that was more, more transformational. It would clearly need to be an attractive transaction that meets the, the hurdles and things that we, that we do, but we don't see, you know, a bit of an equity issue and kind of as a supplement to the other sources being a barrier at the current share price.
'Cause actually, if I think if we see some of the opportunities that we've that we've worked on, we would have seen a very attractive return for our shareholders coming through, and we think it's our responsibility to take those opportunities to shareholders and say, "Look, we need a little bit of support for this. And, we're using the cash off balance sheet, we're using some of the debt resources that we have, but to actually attract this very attractive deal for you, we need your support as well." So we'd be happy to look at that, albeit we are absolutely cognizant of where the share price is.
As a shareholder myself, I would like the share price to be better than it is, as we'd like to do across the sector, but we don't see that as a complete barrier to us to just potentially supplementing the financing options that we have with equity. And then in terms of how that might work, I mean, it just depends on the opportunity and the nature of what we might be doing as well. It'll depend on the long-term nature of liabilities, the sort of how fast cash comes back, all those sorts of things.
I suppose the other way that we might use equity and depend on the opportunities, we've talked before about entering partnerships, and if we look at some of the deals that have happened in the market, I mentioned the ASR, Aegon one, you know, that involved, Aegon ultimately retaining quite a material stake in, in ASR. I think that gives them sort of future upside as value is created, gives them a nice dividend stream, but clearly helped the overall financing package. So that's something that we would clearly be open to, and when you're dealing with large international groups, could be quite attractive for, for them as well. So when we talk about equity, it wouldn't necessarily just be speaking to existing shareholders, it might be us considering some of those more strategic, strategic options as well. On the simplification, just what...
One of the other things that we've, Tom and I have been talking about is some of the metrics we've used. If you think about EcV, that's now moved far, far closer to own funds. When we first had that metric, it was designed to show where some of the upside value was, almost create a bridge between this disjoin around sort of the way that risk margin was treated. Now that you've seen the risk margin changes coming through in the UK, EIOPA are potentially talking about risk margin changes coming through as well. You know, we'll look at all these things, but that's clearly one of the things that we need to consider, is if we've got two metrics that sort of do now almost exactly the same thing, is it - does it really make sense for us to continue with those things?
But, Tom will be back to tell you more, certainly, if not before the full- year results, at the full- year results on that. Barrie?
Morning, Barrie Cornes from Panmure Gordon. Just got a couple of questions, really. We've asked you, and you've talked about firepower for transformational acquisitions.
Yeah.
Just wondered, would- d o you have to think about integration issues, be it culturally or the actual physical integration? Would that be a hurdle that would preclude you from actually doing an acquisition? And secondly, Tom, you've been at Chesnara almost six months, I think, and just wondered what surprised you. Obviously, you've talked of simplifying the investment case for us and investors. Just what else do you think is a priority on your to-do list? Thank you.
You want to start? Any surprises?
I'll start, and then I'll-
Shall I, Steve, start that question?
Start back of the room, possibly, yeah.
I mean, look, I clearly can't take too much credit for the last 20 years of dividend growth, but I think - look, the priority. Actually, we've covered a couple of priorities. I mean, I think there's a big opportunity for us to simplify the investor story. I think that's a really important priority. I mean, I think we have, you know, at its core, actually quite a simple business model. You know, a business that generates cash in quite a reliable, predictable, simple way. But we, you know, I guess like many in our industry, have contrived perhaps to overcomplicate the story in the past, so I think that. I think that's a huge opportunity.
I think the second thing is around just the - y ou know, I come back to the topic of capital management. I mean, it's so core to what we do, effective management of the balance sheet. Now, Barrie, you mentioned I'm in six months. It's actually five months, but yes, but actually, you know, one of the things I've been massively impressed by genuinely has just been the capabilities, the core capabilities of our people when it comes to capital management. So there's sort of actuarial firepower and so on. We have a lot of people who do this, you know, as well, if not better, than many people I've come across in the industry. So that sets us up hugely.
But as I said earlier, I think we've probably been just a little bit quiet in that space, so I think there's a huge opportunity, you know, for us to do that. And I think the third thing is, look, a major reason, frankly, for me coming here was the M&A opportunity, the opportunity to grow the business, make the business better. You know, I've spent a bit of time, as Steve said earlier, in M&A and sort of. You know, I know what a good pipeline looks like. It's slightly frustrating. It's the one thing we can't talk to you guys about openly, but, you know, it is there. You know, so when you're, as a CFO, coming into a business which is really well capitalized, you know, the technical capabilities are there.
We've got enough firepower to really start punching, I would say, a little bit above our previous weight, if you like. That's quite an exciting proposition.
Yeah, on, I suppose, on other things that might be constraints, Barrie, I think is your point on integration. So it could be, I mean, we do think carefully about that, and there's a slight difference actually between, I suppose, the way things work in the UK and overseas. So in the UK, actually, one of the things that we look at is the sort of available landing slots, as it were, for these Part VII transfers.
So those of you that might not be quite as familiar with the UK market, so if you are transferring insurance policies from one insurance carrier to another, you need to speak to the regulator, but there's a formal court process that you have to go through and complete with an independent expert to satisfy the court and ultimately the regulator as well, that the policyholder's interests are being sort of upheld and supported, and that is quite a long process. I mean, in the UK at the moment, that is taking somewhere between sort of 12 to 18 months at times.
So when we're thinking about deals, we're thinking about sort of the landing slots we have, but also trying to look further out in the pipeline and ensuring that we don't have a deal that we do now that might take up a slot, then we say later, 'Goodness me, I wish we hadn't consumed a slot in 24 months' time.' So there's a little bit more complexity, probably just in terms of without doing this analogy to death, sort of managing, you know, the planes that are circling and landing. On the integration side in the UK as well, it's a little bit different because we're clearly working with our outsourcing partners on that, on that side of things.
Part of the reason that we do that is they should have a sort of bigger pipe than ordinarily we would be able to afford and run ourselves if we were a standalone business. So we don't see material constraints there. We've been really pleased with the work that SS&C have been doing alongside Jackie's team when we've looked at M&A opportunities. I think having them up front, being able to map that into our existing plans is really important. In the Netherlands, as I say, it's slightly different. You know, most of the work that we've done is to kind of move portfolios onto the Waard operating platform. That's an in-house team. So the constraint there tends to be the available opportunities rather than that sort of integration challenge.
But we're always mindful, particularly if these books come with people. A number of the deals we've done haven't. The kind of life deal didn't come with any people. But being cognizant of the sort of cultural issues that you face and manage that carefully has got to be important. And in Waard, it's actually, w e had three businesses coming into one 18 months ago with the Robein Leven transaction and Conservatrix, and there was a kind of a relatively even portion of people that came together. So that really is now a new team, a new target operating model. We've learned quite a lot from those teams coming together. But I don't see that as a binding constraint for us.
I think we've got to be careful around how we stage these things, but it's a first-class problem to have if we're worried about those landing slots, Barrie, is how I'd talk to that. Scott, should we just check in to in case there's questions online?
I have a couple of questions on the webcast. Marcus Rivaldi from Jefferies.
Ah.
Your comments on M&A activity in H1 2024, have those processes concluded without a transaction being agreed, or are they ongoing? Any color you can provide on areas of M&A focus, i.e., by geography, liability type? And would successful M&A help with removal of Fitch's negative outlook on your rating? Thanks.
So on processes, as I talked about, a number of the things that we've been doing, and thanks for the question, Marcus. Thanks for dialing in to the results. A number of those processes have been sort of bilateral. So ultimately, if we're not talking about them, they haven't concluded because a number of them haven't been run by investment banks. They can sometimes come back. It might be people's priorities can change again, or things can happen in the fullness of time. But certainly most of the things that we're working on the first part of the year, we're not expecting them to conclude, or certainly not with us.
In terms of other things that are ongoing, I can't really comment on that for obvious reasons. What I can say is that we're not expecting sort of Sam and the team to be quiet in the H1 of the year. You should assume that we'll be active, and we're doing our best to make sure he has even more gray hair than has emerged since his time at Chesnara already. On kind of areas of focus, I talked a little bit about that in the presentation.
I suppose if we had all of our dreams that came together, it would be useful, I think, if we looked at the range of deals, to have some deals that were adding cash in the sort of ten, fifteen, 20-year time horizon. You know, if you had that perfect sort of tapestry, having some of the deals we've had that have had that fast recycling is great, but I think actually we're at the stage in our development that actually bringing in some longer-term liabilities as well would be useful. So if we have the ability to choose, we'd have a sort of a bit of a balance in the portfolio that looks like that.
But our main focus ultimately is the total kind of value opportunity that's available, how that supports the dividend, our ability to integrate those things successfully. And quite often you're not really having to make a dynamic choice, being candid between opportunities. Not least because we've seen that we can do things in the Netherlands at exactly the same time as the UK, exactly the same time in Sweden. So the sort of three-pronged operating model that we have actually very often means that we're not being forced to choose between opportunities. We can do those at the same time. In terms of the Fitch outlook that you talked about, we don't see that as having any impact on the M&A process.
We're kind of very focused on ensuring that they can see the kind of progress of the group. We think the performance, again, at the half year has been strong, and we'll continue to engage with them as we always do. So we don't see that having sort of any material impact on the activity that we're undertaking at the moment.
Wonderful. Thank you for that. Brian Moretta from Hardman & Co. You mentioned the possibility of improving new business generation. What options do you see?
Thanks, Brian. Thanks for joining from Edinburgh. If I start with Sweden, so we've already actually changed some of the business mix. So until recently, we were almost entirely a sort of workplace pensions provider. So when I talk about occupational unit link pension, which is a very long phrase, that's a workplace pension really, for those of you in the UK. So we broadened some of the offering that we have with this sort of custodian offering, which is being distributed predominantly through private banks. That's been very successful already.
You know, we're seeing a lot of volume coming coming through there, and we do have some ambition as well to see if we can sort of reenter the sort of risk side of the market. We've actually got a pretty good product there. It's just something that we haven't been focused on historically. I don't think that's gonna mean that you're gonna see a doubling or tripling of the new business volume, but that could be a nice supplement and help with the progression that we've seen in Movestic. In the Netherlands, you've seen that sort of term volumes have been down a bit. That's both at a market level, and we have seen some pretty keen pricing in that market.
I've been pleased that sort of Pauli and the team have kept their discipline and been focused on margin. There are opportunities. We've got a reasonable annuity product in that market. We've got a pretty good wealth product as well. There are potentially opportunities for us to supplement, you know, what has been largely a sort of term insurance business with those things as well. Again, I don't think you'll see, you know, doubling and tripling in business from us, but there are some supplementals. Then in the UK, we acquired Sanlam Life and Pensions a couple of years ago now, and we kept the onshore bond that came with that business open.
That's connected to platforms such as Nucleus and the like, and we've seen some quite interesting commercial new business coming in for us. You know, last year, that was about GBP 1 million worth of VNB. We've had quite a lot of inbound inquiries from some of the other platforms asking if we could put that on their platform. So that might be something that we consider over time. That doesn't mean we'll be building a big sales force or anything like that. There's probably a little bit more support that we need to give IFAs, but we're certainly seeing that as a product that IFAs are quite interested in. So those are some of the things that we'll be considering when we go forward. And obviously, writing that new business have some other benefits. You get to spread costs.
You know, that should turn into cash in the future as well, and we certainly feel there's enough within the new business at the moment that it makes sense for us to continue to write new business, albeit in a focused manner.
Thank you. I have no further questions at the moment, so, Steve, back to you for any closing remarks.
We've just got one more question from Ming.
Hi, and thank you for taking my questions. Since I'm not a broker anymore, I'm going to ask something slightly more harsh than usual. And I only care about M&A, and you've always said you see sort of positive pipeline in the near to midterm. I think that's what everyone says when they say about M&A. And the macro environment, you know, for the past five, six years, have been changed. I've always believed market volatility creates opportunity. However, in terms of the M&A you've delivered, they seem to be quite sort of smaller end of the deal size, that I'm kind of thinking, you know, given where the interest rate is heading, and I'm thinking, is that it? And how should I I mean, how confident are you now versus you were, say, three years ago?
Right.
From the comments I've just sort of heard, you indicating, say, Sam, it's gonna be busier in H1 of the year, and am I right to think, you know, are you actually more closer to a slightly larger deal than what you've done before, or am I sort of a bit ahead of myself?
Yep. So probably since the last time we saw each other, Ming, you can see I have even more gray hair than I did last time. And with that gray hair, I think it's hard for us and not right for us to try and predict when things will land. And, again, we're aware that probably everybody says, "Yes, there's the positive pipeline." I think the thing that gives us our confidence and, well, one, we've got a new CFO that's come in and sort of given us some external verification, which is great.
Tom's done a number of good things, but actually it's useful for somebody to come in and say, "Hey, guys, actually, I'm really quite impressed with the number of things and the number of conversations that you're having." The quality of conversations has definitely improved from three years ago to now, Ming. I think that people recognize us even more as a very credible counterparty. Maybe that's 'cause we've been telling everybody we are. But I think 'cause of some of the transactions that we've done, some of the work that we've done, we can be quite flexible in our approach. I don't think. Quite rightly, people don't see us as a direct competitor.
So if you're thinking about removing a portfolio in the UK, do you wanna give that to a direct competitor to sort of fund capital and their strategy?
Mm-hmm.
or might we be a better option? And the sort of SS&C capability that we have now is different. We're not on the same outsourcing platforms that others are, so perhaps that gives us a bit more capacity. So we try and look at this through a sort of data lens. We look at the number of opportunities that are coming in through the top, the activity that we're working through, and I think what we've done a better job of since three years ago is trying to map the pipeline out over the next three years. So we're starting to get a far greater sense of when action might be taken in other organizations, having those conversations early, and making sure that we're trying to position ourselves with those sort of things in mind.
As you know, these things are never done until they're done, and lots of things can come up. As you say, I think volatility can sometimes create opportunity, but it can also mean that organization's priorities kind of change as well. But what you shouldn't doubt from us is we're gonna work incredibly hard on this. We're gonna be very active. We'll maintain our discipline. So I'm happy that we haven't done a deal because one of the opportunities that we had in the H1 of the year would not have been right for our shareholders, and I'd far rather stand here and talk about the pipeline rather than saying, "Hey, aren't we clever?
We've done a deal that wasn't right for us and wasn't right for our shareholders." So it's those sorts of things that give us that level of confidence, and actually having Tom's set of connections and his experiences, again, just adds a little bit more to the capability that we have within the team and the investment that we've already made. So hopefully that answers your question. Well, if there's no more questions from the floor, I think we'll call time. We're just over 10:30 A.M. Greenwich Mean Time. I just want to say thank you again for joining the presentation. As I said upfront, we believe that there's a huge amount to look forward to here at Chesnara.