Magazine

Read the latest edition of AIR and MEIR as an Interactive e-book

Apr 2024

Takaful - Malaysia: Takaful continues to outpace industry growth - Fitch

Source: Middle East Insurance Review | Feb 2016

Malaysia’s takaful sector saw strong growth in 2015, expanding faster than conventional insurance, said Fitch Ratings in a report.  
 
   General and family takaful recorded growth rates of 8.3% and 9.7%, respectively, at end-June 2015, compared to conventional general and life insurance growth of 6.6% and -0.4%, respectively.
 
   Family takaful represented 29.7% of total new life insurance business in the first half of 2015, while general takaful accounted for 11.6% of gross direct contributions. The growth potential for the sector is favourable, particularly due to encouraging demographics and government support. Wider product innovation and distribution coverage is likely to drive sector growth as public acceptance increases. 
 
   Family takaful represents almost two-thirds of the industry in Malaysia. Family takaful operators’ expense rates are likely to remain stable but will gradually absorb growing claims from medical inflation and bonus payouts to policyholders. Total net claims payout rose 18% y-o-y in 2014. Most products are distributed by the agency channel, but with the adoption of the life and family takaful framework in 2015, the life industry is likely to gradually diversify to bancassurance, the internet and other direct channels.
 
   Minimum capital requirements and risk practices are now extended to Malaysian takaful operators after the adoption of a risk-based capital for takaful regime in 2014. The new regulations and capital requirements, and the need in many cases to independently finance and run insurance units, mean takaful operators with limited scale and capital burdens are likely to exit or merge over time.
 
   The regulatory, legal and accounting environments are key areas of development for the takaful and retakaful industry. Fitch views the recent regulatory reforms extended to the takaful sector in Malaysia, including the introduction of internal capital adequacy assessment process, the Financial Services Act and gradual deregulation of tariff rates, as positive developments that could cement its status as a takaful hub.
 
   Fitch expects Malaysian takaful and insurance sector M&A activities to continue, due to attractive growth prospects and new regulatory pressure. Regulatory changes in recent years aim to enhance the sector’s global competitiveness as the market is being liberalised. However, evolving regulation may put some pressure on operators’ capitalisation in the short term. Fitch expects operators’ capital profiles to eventually improve, although smaller ones are likely to seek strategic investors or alternative capital.
 
   According to Bank Negara Malaysia, Malaysia dominates the takaful market in ASEAN with about a two-third market share (71%). The country has 12 registered takaful operators.
 
| Print
CAPTCHA image
Enter the code shown above in the box below.

Note that your comment may be edited or removed in the future, and that your comment may appear alongside the original article on websites other than this one.

 

Recent Comments

There are no comments submitted yet. Do you have an interesting opinion? Then be the first to post a comment.