AG Insurance

AG Insurance
Industry Insurance
Founded 1824 in Brussels, Belgium
Revenue EUR 522 million (2014)
Website aginsurance.be

AG Insurance is a Belgian insurance company providing life insurance and non-life insurance (auto, fire, accident, hospitalization, civil liability and other) and supplementary pensions. It has been present on the Belgian insurance market since 1824. It targets private individuals, as well as self-employed persons, SMEs and large companies. AG Insurance’s products are distributed exclusively through its partners (brokers, Fintro agents, BNP Paribas Fortis branches and bpost bank).

At the end 2014, the group managed over 60 billion euros of financial assets. Its solvency margin (Solvency I) was a little more than double the level required by the supervisory authorities.

AG Insurance is part of the Ageas international insurance group.

History

1824: AG Vie

In September 1823, King Willem I authorized the creation of a Dutch company life insurance, established in Amsterdam, under the name of Nederlandsche Algemene Levens-Verzekering Compagnie.

The idea of creating a life insurance company seduced two members of the Brussels Chamber of Commerce, its vice-chairman François Rittweger and banker Jacques Coghen.[1]

The project received royal assent on 12 June 1824 [2] with the company adopting the name of Compagnie d’Assurances Générales sur la Vie, les Fonds Dotaux et les Survivances (AG Vie).[3] Coghen himself took charge as "general agent”. The capital was set at 600,000 florins divided into 300 shares. At the end of February 1825, the company AG Vie opened its office, after its five employees had sworn loyalty in front of the members of the Board of Directors.

1830: AG Incendie

In April 1830 AG Vie’s directors decided to create a fire insurance company, the Compagnie d’Assurances Générales contre les Risques d’Incendie (AG Incendie).[4] In September 1830, following Belgium’s declaration of independence, general agent Jacques Coghen was appointed Financial Administrator-General of the provisional government. In July 1831, Leopold I entrusted him with the Finance portfolio in his first government.[5]

1909 stock exchange listing

With the extension of the company's activities to related branches like casualty insurance and mortgage operations, AG Vie’s premium income rose from 2.4 million Belgian francs at the end in 1889 to 20 million in 1912, and the number of employees from 12 in 1890 to 140 in 1924.[6]

In 1909, AGVie’s shares were listed on the Stock Exchange.[7]

From 1919 onwards, collective pension insurance, a new branch of insurance primarily for company employees, contributed largely to the increase in premium income. AG Vie made this one of its specialties, creating for this purpose a separate "Pensions" division.[8]

1969: creation of the AG Group

In 1969, the insurance company converted itself into a holding company, having under it a number of specialized companies, enabling it to make better use of its human and financial resources.

In May 1971 the Dutch company Nationale-Nederlanden launched a hostile takeover bid on the shares of Antwerp company Securitas. Under the general direction of Maurice Frère, the AG Group launched on 21 May a counter-bid bid for Securitas. With a strong franchise in the Flemish part of Belgium and branches in the Netherlands, a portfolio of 400,000 policies and an annual premium income of 900 million francs, Securitas, specializing in property and casualty insurance, was an attractive acquisition for the AG Group, that had at the time only insufficient market shares in Flanders.

In two years, from 1975 to 1977, the number of companies active in Belgium fell from 540 to 348. AG Group played an important part in this rationalization movement. In 1973 it acquired the Belgian branch of Swiss life insurer La Genevoise. The following year, it took a majority stake in Belgian insurance company Le Recours Belge and its subsidiaries Athéna and Démocratique-Vie (80 employees and 3,500 agents), further strengthening its position in property and casualty. In 1976, the AG Group also purchased La Médicale. In 1977 it concluded an operation on a totally different scale by purchasing PR-Phenix-1821 group, a holding company having under it 7 insurance companies and a real estate company. 750,000 customers joined the company in the process. Following these acquisitions, the AG Group had 3,414 employees.

1990: creation of the Fortis Group

In 1990, AG Group merged with Dutch company AMEV/VSB 1990, itself the product of the merger of bank VSB bank and the insurer AMEV. Following this first cross-border merger in the financial world, the Fortis Group became a reality. This double nationality would continue until 2012.

In 1999, AG 1824 celebrated its 175th year of existence and changed its name to Fortis AG.

2009: birth of AG Insurance

In 2006, Fortis Insurance Belgium was born of the merger of Fortis AG and FB Insurance, which held the insurance activities of Fortis Bank.

Following the collapse and dissolution of the Fortis Group in late 2008, Fortis became an international insurance group focused on Europe and Asia. It had a significant presence in Belgium via Fortis Insurance Belgium. The latter changed its name in 2009 to become AG Insurance.

Today, with 75% of the shares, Ageas is the main shareholder in AG Insurance, with the remaining 25% held by BNP Paribas Fortis.

Logo

Structure

Subsidiaries

AG Insurance also holds 100% of AG Real Estate. The latter is responsible for the Group's real-estate activities.

Executive Committee

Board of Directors

Distribution and market share in 2014

The company's products are not distributed directly to customers but via different channels :

With an overall market share of 21.6%, AG Insurance was in 2014 the leader on the Belgian insurance market. In Life, its share expressed in terms of assets under management amounted to 27.7%, confirming AG's leading position in both individual and collective life insurance.

A 16.5% share of the non-life insurance market (gross premiums written) confirms AG Insurance's number two position in the non-life segment. In 2014, the company also acquired the group life portfolio of Belgian insurer Fidea, which has contributed to the Group’s growth in this market.

References

  1. G. Kurgan, Notitie 'F.L. Rittweger', in G. Kurgan, S. Jaumain, V. Montensus, Dictionnaire des patrons en Belgique, Leuven, 1996, p.528.
  2. D'AG à Fortis: 175 ans d'assurance en Belgique, Anvers, Mercatorfonds, 1999, p.15.
  3. E. Cogen, Jacques André comte Coghen. Ses origines, sa vie, ses activités et sa descendance, Gent, 1998, p.152
  4. Brochure AG, Compagnie Belge d'Assurances Générales sur la Vie, les Fonds Dotaux et les Survivances, 1824-1924, Bruxelles, 1924
  5. C. Tulkens, A. Vincent, La Société Générale de Belgique et la Générale de Banque. Intégration dans deux groupes distincts, Bruxelles, Crisp, «Courrier hebdomadaire, 1613-1614», 1998.
  6. D'AG à Fortis: 175 ans d'assurance en Belgique, Anvers, Mercatorfonds, 1999, p.46
  7. Répertoire des décisions du Comité des Assureurs Belges, 2sd édition, période du 3 octobre 1863 au 8 novembre 1910,Bruxelles, 1910
  8. La Compagnie d'Assurances Générales sur la Vie, 1919-1919, Paris, 1920
  9. "Structure d'organisation". AG Insurance. 5 February 2016.
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