Large Medium Small |
HONG KONG - An investing arm of Goldman Sachs is in the final stages of an agreement to buy AXA's $1.05 billion stake in Taikang Life, according to sources close to the matter, a deal that could give Goldman a substantial stake in China's No 4 life insurer.
A deal would allow France's AXA to shed a non-core asset, while granting Goldman a piece of China's growing insurance industry.
Several private equity firms, including Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co and Blackstone Group, competed in the Taikang auction, as did Singapore's Temasek Holdings, sources previously told Reuters.
AXA and Goldman declined to comment.
AXA acquired Switzerland's Winterthur in 2006 and through that deal gained the stake in Taikang. Sources previously said AXA had little control over management decisions at Taikang and that tensions between AXA and Taikang Chairman and Chief Executive Chen Dongsheng had been growing.
AXA hired Morgan Stanley late last year to handle the auction.
Taikang's total assets are worth $28.12 billion, according to an auction-related document obtained earlier by Reuters. The document also said French insurer AXA's 15.6 stake was worth $1.05 billion and Taikang's 2008 net income reached $247 million.
|
It goes on to say that Taikang had a 7.9 percent share of China's life insurance market as of 2008, ranking Taikang No 4 behind China Pacific Insurance (Group) Co Ltd, which is partly owned by the US buyout giant Carlyle Group.
Another Singapore investment fund, Government of Singapore Investment Corp, owns 8 percent of Taikang, the document states.
China Life Insurance Co Ltd is the market leader in the world's most populous country.