>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / BUSINESS / STORY
Prudential chairman says no heads will roll over AIA
Fri, Jun 04, 2010
AFP

LONDON - Prudential chairman Harvey McGrath said in an interview on Friday that no heads would roll at the British insurer after it abandoned an ambitious takeover of AIG's Asian unit AIA.

"The board is completely behind the management team. No one has offered to resign and no one has been asked to resign," McGrath told the Financial Times.

The aborted takeover had been masterminded by Prudential chief executive Tidjane Thiam and many commentators said his career had been badly tarnished.

"There are a couple of shareholders calling for change, but they are outliers. The vast majority of our biggest investors are saying they don't want to see change at the top," McGrath added.

"They are supportive of management and of Tidjane, who they have seen as (chief financial officer) help to drive the performance of the group."

Prudential's decision on Wednesday to abandon the takeover came after AIG refused to cut the price tag from 35.5 billion dollars (S$73.1mil) to nearer 30 billion dollars(S$61.7bil).

McGrath said the top team at Prudential was "quite devastated" when it heard AIG had rejected the renegotiated price. "But we were not worried at all about our positions," he said.

Thiam, who became chief executive in October 2009, was formerly Prudential's financial chief.

He told the Financial Times: "It is a clever thing to try and connect my inability to seal a 35-billion-dollar deal with my broad ability to run a company, but it is a fallacy.

"To say I'm inexperienced in running a 35-billion-dollar transaction, that's true. Not many have experience of running a 35-billion-dollar transaction."

The collapsed AIA deal cost Prudential around 450 million pounds (S$4.5bil).

McGrath said: "This was an 'in-strategy' transaction and was an acceleration of the focus on growing the business in Asia.

"Just because this transaction ... did not work - or failed if you want to say that - it doesn't mean that the underlying strategy has a problem.

"The board understand that and are behind the strategy and were behind the transaction."

Despite the collapse of the AIA deal, Thiam had stressed earlier this week that Prudential would maintain a strong focus on growing its business in Asia.

He also said the group's existing Asian business had helped it deliver a "record performance" in the first quarter of 2010.

The acquisition of AIA would have doubled the size of Prudential and transformed it into the world's top non-Chinese insurer by market capitalisation, ahead of major competitors Allianz and AXA.

Sales in Asia make up half of Prudential's new contracts across a number of countries including China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand. The company also has a strong presence in Britain and the United States.

-AFP

Bookmark and Share
 
 
STORY INDEX
 
  Prudential chairman says no heads will roll over AIA
   
 
  Toyota slashed directors' pay by 11% last year
   
 
  S'pore shares finish higher
   
 
  Telkom sees $1.2 bln tower deal with SingTel
   
 
  Laura Ashley UK retail revenue up as online sales grow
   
 
  Banker fired for being 'too attractive'
   
 
  STI lower at midday
   
 
  Indonesia's Telkomsel to get $325-$435mil (S$4.59-6.12Bil) bank loan
   
 
  Honda to resume China car production on Friday
   
 
  NAB in talks to sell AXA Asia retail platform
   
>> RELATED STORY
Shocked friends say British killer was a 'normal bloke'
Prudential re-examines Asian insurer buyout
Former UK minister stabbed at his office
UK exit poll gives no party overall control
Britain's Tories launch 'people power' manifesto

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Health: Get a grip on stress

Motoring: BP chief admits 'not prepared' for spill

Business: AIG snubs lower Pru offer, deal in jeopardy

Multimedia: Police detain G20 protesters

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search AsiaOne: