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Asia’s 69% NBV surge helps drive Generali’s record 2025 results, but regional P&C combined ratio edges past 100%

The Italian-headquartered insurer posted a record €8bn operating result globally, with Asia life business outpacing every other region in terms of growth.
Asias 69 nbv surge helps drive generalis record 2025 results but regional pc combined ratio edges past 100  rein asia

(Re)in Summary

• Asia drove Generali’s strongest life insurance growth in 2025, with savings premiums surging 46.3% and delivering the highest growth in new business value compared to other regions.
• Region’s P&C segment saw a deterioration in CoR to 100.3%, from 99%, and a 6.8% drop in operating result.
• Group GWP rose to €98.1bn, with P&C the headline performer at 7.6% growth and the combined ratio improving to 92.6%, down 1.4 percentage points.
• Global life net inflows hit €13.5bn, up 42.5%, as protection, health, and unit-linked products gained traction; new business margin expanded 25 basis points to 5.66%.

Asia has emerged as the fastest-growing engine for Generali’s business in 2025. The region’s life segment in Asia delivered a stellar 68.7% growth in new business value (NBV) while life savings business posted a 46.3% premium increase in 2025, more than four times the pace of the group’s overall life growth, even while the region’s P&C segment saw a deterioration in combined ratio last year.

The NBV for the life segment in Asia rose by 68.7% to €535m in 2025 compared with €317m in 2024. In comparison, the group’s NBV from Italy and Germany contracted by 9.6% and 1%, respectively, according to the update. Another major highlight was savings products, which registered a 10.7% jump, driven heavily by Asia’s 46.3% spike.

Group-wide gross written premiums (GWP) rose 3.6% to €98.1bn (approx. US$113.3bn), with life business inching up 1.4% to €61.9bn.

New business volumes, measured in present value of new business premiums, rose 1.5% to €55.6bn as solid production in France, Germany, and Asia drove the gains, the company said. NBV grew 6.2% to €3.1bn while the new business margin widened 25 basis points to 5.66%, reflecting both higher volumes and improving profitability on new policies written.

Life net inflows for the group continued their strong upward trend. At €13.5bn, they were 39.5% ahead of the prior year, driven by protection and health products as well as unit-linked and hybrid solutions. Net inflows in savings reached €2.4bn, with Asia alongside Italy and Germany among the key contributors. The life contractual service margin (CSM) rose 10.8% to €33.6bn.

Property & Casualty delivers standout profit

For the P&C segment, GWP for the group climbed 7.6% to €36.2bn, growing across both motor and non-motor lines in every major market. The combined ratio (CoR) across all regions improved significantly to 92.6%, down 1.4 percentage points, as natural catastrophe losses fell sharply to 1.7% of premiums on an undiscounted basis, compared with 3.6% the prior year.

However, CoR for Asia deteriorated to 100.3% from 99% the previous year. In line with this, the operating result for the region fell by 6.8% to 68m in 2025.

Nonetheless, the group’s P&C operating profit jumped 20% to €3.7bn, the standout segment result across the group.

“The focus on excellence in core capabilities is reflected in the outstanding P&C performance, with strong underlying technical profitability, and in the best-in-class life net inflows, which highlight Generali’s European leadership in this segment,” said group CEO Philippe Donnet.

The group’s operating result rose 9.7% to a record €8bn, with every segment contributing positively. Adjusted net profit climbed 14.5% to €4.3bn. Total assets under management reached €900bn, with third-party AUM at a record €273bn, supported by €9.6bn in net inflows into the asset management business.

The solvency ratio rose to 219% from 210% a year earlier, supported by €5.2bn in normalised capital generation. The board will propose a dividend of €1.64 per share, up 14.7%, and has confirmed a further €500m share buyback for 2026, pending regulatory and shareholder approval.

Donnet credited the results to the first year of the group’s “Lifetime Partner 27: Driving Excellence” plan, under which Generali has identified Asia as a priority growth market alongside protection, health, and capital-light savings solutions. The group is also accelerating deployment of AI and automation across its operating model, a push it says is progressing ahead of schedule.

Looking ahead, Generali flagged the recent US and Israeli strike on Iran as the primary macro risk, projecting a 0.2 to 0.3 percentage point drag on euro area GDP in a limited-escalation scenario. A prolonged conflict, it warned, could produce stagflationary conditions that constrain central bank flexibility.

In February, Generali Group and Swiss Life Global Solutions struck a long-term partnership under which Generali Employee Benefits will acquire Swiss Life Network, creating what the firms describe as the world’s largest employee benefits network.

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