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Financial status of insurers improves in Q2

Aug. 25, 2016 - 07:12 By 윤정현
[THE INVESTOR] Financial health of South Korean insurance firms improved in the second quarter thanks to increased net profits and higher bond prices they hold, data showed Aug. 24.

Risk-based capital, or RBC, the minimum required liquid reserves for a financial institution, of 56 life and non-life insurers averaged 288 percent at the end of June, up 14.1 percentage points from three months earlier, according to the Financial Supervisory Service.

The average RBC of 25 life insurers rose to 297.1 percent from 284.7 percent, while that of 31 non-life insurers hiked up to 269.1 percent from 251.4 percent.

Local insurers saw their available capital grow by 10.1 trillion won (US$8.9 billion), as the value of their ready-for-sale securities and earned surplus rose.

During the April-June period, the yield on benchmark five-year Treasurys fell 0.25 percentage point on-quarter to 1.3 percent, according to the FSS.

The RBC ratio, a key gauge of financial stability, measures an insurer’s ability to absorb losses and pay out to policyholders. Local insurers are required to maintain an RBC ratio of at least 100 percent under industry law.

(theinvestor@heraldcorp.com)