Chatswood serves the life and health insurance sector in New Zealand with market intelligence, data, and bespoke consulting services. Some of these are provided in conjunction with Quality Product Research Limited - a subsidiary that brings you Quotemonster.

We believe that good decisions are more likely to occur when we have good information about the market environment in which we operate. Intuitive leaps and creative decisions are always required, of course, but the more they are based on a firm foundation of observation, the better they tend to be.

Kelly O Kelly O

Fidelity Life appoint new Independent Director

Scott Pickering has been appointed as an Independent Director on Fidelity Life's board.

Scott Pickering

Scott Pickering has been appointed as an Independent Director on Fidelity Life's board. Pickering has a wealth of governance and insurance experience, currently serving on the boards of IAG New Zealand, IAG Australia and Bowls New Zealand, and he was previously on the board of Chubb Life in New Zealand and Australia.

Fidelity Life Interim Chair Lindsay Smartt says,

“Scott’s passion for the insurance industry and his dedication to mentoring make him a perfect fit for Fidelity Life.

His leadership and strategic insight will be invaluable as we begin deploying our new strategic plan, and chart a course for long term success.”

 

More news:

Chubb makes multi-benefit discount permanent, extends 2 months’ FREE and 15% Lifetime Reward offers

Jon-Paul Hale espouses the need for Golden Life policies

The federal treasurer has approved of the sale of Suncorp Bank to ANZ

BNZ provides targeted support for customers affected by severe weather

Derek Chen has joined Strategi Group as Head of AML/CFT

ASB is teaching students how to spot fraud and scams in its new ScamWise workshop in schools

Government announces up to 26 cancer treatments to be funded as part of an overall package of up to 54 more new medicines

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Craig Stobo appointed as chair of FMA

Craig Stobo has been appointed as the new chair of the Financial Markets Authority (FMA).

Craig Stobo has been appointed as the new chair of the Financial Markets Authority (FMA). Stobo has been appointed for a five-year term and takes over from Mark Todd, whose term expired at the end of April.

Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Andrew Bayly said

“Mr Stobo brings a significant depth of experience to the role, having worked as a director, diplomat, economist, and chief executive.

The FMA will benefit from Mr Stobo’s understanding of market issues and regulation, as well as the importance of informed participation from businesses and investors.”

 

More daily news:

The FSC brings the industry together to respond to the Contracts of Insurance Bill

Anna Schubert discusses ways AIA help advisers manage stress

AIA launch a Neurodiversity Toolkit

Southern Cross Healthcare have joined the New Zealand Disability Employers' Network

MAS is a finalist in the Ethical and Impact Investment Awards

Submissions open for the ANZIIF industry awards

Kiwibank welcome Anne Haira to the Kiwibank board

Westpac won the Corporate ESG award at the INFINZ awards

ASB has joined the Hidden Disabilities Sunflower programme

People seeking help from financial mentors jumps 40% in a year

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AIA appoint new National Sales Manager, ASB

AIA have appointed Nick Brunner to the role of National Sales Manager, ASB.

AIA have appointed Nick Brunner to the role of National Sales Manager, ASB. Nick was previously the Strategic Accounts Business Development Manager at AIA NZ and has held a variety of roles over the 11 years he has worked for AIA.

AIA NZ Chief Partnership Distribution Officer Sharron Botica said

“We are incredibly proud to promote Nick into National Sales Manager, ASB. We have a long-term distribution partnership with ASB, and this role plays an important part in supporting the ASB team.

Nick’s experience within the insurance industry and proven track record of achieving excellent outcomes for AIA NZ's distribution partners makes him a fantastic fit.”

 

More daily news:

FSC webinar 'Māori engagement in the financial services industry' 16 June

The New Zealand branch of Million Dollar Round Table kicks off a plan to grow membership and activities locally

Doctors warn health funding is lagging behind inflation and demand; union calls for an independent inquiry into health funding

How to spot the signs of mouth cancer

Study finds eating ultra-processed meat is linked to an increased risk of early death

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FSC report finds 70% of kiwis are worried about money

The Financial Services Council’s (FSC) latest Financial Resilience Index tracker has found New Zealanders to be increasingly under financial pressure.

The Financial Services Council’s (FSC) Financial Resilience Index tracker has found New Zealanders to be increasingly under financial pressure.

  • The Index tracker revealed 70% of New Zealander's are worrying about money daily, weekly or monthly, the highest level since 2020 which reached 60%.

  • Inflation and interest rates are concerning New Zealanders, at 89.6% and 75.6% respectively.

  • Confidence in job security has started to fall, down to 85% from a high of 89% in 2023.

  • More kiwis are reporting having personal debt than last year, up 6%.

  • More kiwis have one month or less of savings on hand to maintain their current lifestyle should they lose their job.

  • 60% of non-homeowners have reported meeting living expenses is somewhat or very difficult.  

  • 48.5% were very or somewhat unconfident with the overall economy at the moment. 76.4% of respondents were somewhat or very concerned about house prices.

The survey took place in March 2024, with 2002 respondents. FSC members can download the full report in the FSC members area.

 

More daily news:

Fidelity Life are running e-app training webinars

FAMNZ held launch party, another in Christchurch May 30

ASB win Canstar 2024 Innovation Excellence Award for their KiwiSaver Digital Advice & Projections Tool

BNZ win Canstar 2024 Innovation Excellence Award for their Digital International Payments

Moody’s pick out the top 10 major risks shaping insurance

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A year in review

We look back at some of the big industry news, mergers, acquisitions, court cases and people changes in 2023.

2023 has been a difficult year for consumers and businesses alike. Conditions are similar to last year, with inflation remaining high, resulting in a continuing cost-of-living crisis, the OCR set at 5.5% and the RBNZ not ruling out a further hike next year, and housing prices only just starting to rise. How has that affected the insurance sector? Combined with an increase in regulatory red-tape tangling up banks, there has been a spike in lapse rates that very much looks like it is driven by the same forces.

NZ was badly affected by natural disasters this year, with insurers having to fork out $3.5 billion in general insurance claims for the Auckland Anniversary Weekend floods and Cyclone Gabrielle. Such heavy claims have impacted general insurers, perhaps part of the reason why Tower is looking to do a strategic review of its ownership structure.

It is this situation which greets the new National-Act-NZ First coalition government. They  have outlined a 100-day plan that includes: stopping work on the Income Insurance Scheme; introducing legislation to narrow the Reserve Bank’s mandate to price stability (removing the mandate to ensure maximum sustainable employment); signing a memorandum of understanding with Waikato University to progress a third medical school; disestablishing the Māori Health Authority; taking the first steps to extend free breast cancer screening to those aged up to 74; repealing amendments to the Smokefree Environments and Regulated Products Act 1990 and regulations; and setting five major targets for the health system. National promised to roll back the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act (CCCFA) and to make changes to allow kiwis to split their KiwiSaver savings between different providers during the election campaign, so we will be watching how this plays out next year. In August, then National Party Leader, Chris Luxon, told the Financial Services Council conference that it was also their intention to repeal the Financial Markets (Conduct of Institutions) Amendment Act 2022. That hasn’t explicitly made it into the coalition agreement, but may possibly be covered by the planned regulation sector reviews to which the coalition commits under the Act Policy Programme. Although regulatory relief is often welcomed by the sector, so is long-term stability, so we have found views split on the proposed changes to the conduct law.

As of March 2023, all financial advice providers needed to have obtained their level 5 certificates to continue operating this year. We wrote about the impact of this on the market and just how many financial advice providers and financial advisers there are in the September 2023 Quarterly Life and Health Sector Report.

Accuro and Unimed members voted in favour of combining operations. Approval from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand is likely to come early next year. The Lifetime Group acquired Protection Solutions. Fidelity Insurance, formerly known as Westpac Life, was integrated into the Fidelity Life Assurance Company. In March 2023 Cigna NZ changed its name to Chubb Life Insurance New Zealand Limited (Chubb Life NZ) and is now trading under the Chubb brand. nib have told customers they are planning to amalgamate, with their health insurance company ‘nib nz limited’ and their life and living insurance company ‘nib nz insurance limited’ combining to form one single company known as nib nz limited. The acquisition of Partners Life by Dai-Ichi has been made more real by the appointment of new personnel and the announcement of Naomi Ballantyne’s change of role to come in 2024.  The Association of Financial Advisers (AFA) and the Financial Planning Association of Australia (FPA) have announced they will merge to form the Financial Advice Association of Australia. The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC) denied the sale of Suncorp Bank to Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ).

There were some interesting court cases, with AMP settling with Australian advisers for A$100 million; MAS were penalised $2.1 million for making false and misleading representations to customers; Cigna was fined $3.575m for false and/or misleading representations.

There were lots of new faces joining the industry or changing roles this year.

  • AIA New Zealand appointed Michele Embling as an independent non-executive Director; Ben Lovelock as Chief Risk Officer; Shaun Baird as Chief Financial Officer; Maddie Sherlock as Head of Customer Operations; Andrew Anisi as Senior Manager Contact Centre & Business Solutions; Aaron Gilmore and Katie Hunter as AIA Vitality Coaches; Calvin Romeo to the role of head of ASB Partnership.

  • Asteron Life appointed Kirsten Young as the National Manager Adviser Distribution.

  • Chubb Life board chairman Steven Fyfe retired and Paul Brock took over his role as Chairman while Linley Wood joined as an Independent Director to the board. Chubb appointed Monique Ravening as its new Head of Underwriting and Erica Hamer as Chubb's new Wellington-based Business Partnership Manager. Adit Witjaksono was appointed as property manager for Australia and New Zealand.

  • Fidelity Life made some new appointments to key roles.  David Winspear was appointed as Head of Channel Strategy, Michelle Doyle appointed as the new Head of Solutions and Kylie Oldham appointed as Senior Group Insurance Business Manager.  Leigh Bennett was promoted internally to the role of Head of Underwriting and Mat Bark was appointed as Head of Channel Enablement. Giselle Baker was appointed as Head of Data and Analytics. In October, Ian Clancy acted as the Acting CEO until Campbell Mitchell was bought on board as the new CEO after Melissa Cantell resigned. Sam Kelly was appointed as Head of Regulatory Affairs.

  • MAS appointed Matt Harvey as Chief Distribution and Marketing Officer, Craig Ward as Chief Innovation and Digital Officer, Dan Mead as an Investment Manager.

  • nib appointed Stu Crowther as new National Manager – Adviser Distribution; Ian Sargeant as National Manager – Group, Partnerships & Strategy; Chris Carnall as Head of Distribution; Stan Bennetto as Group Health Business Development Manager.

  • Partners Life appointed Gemma Vivian as GM Adviser Engagement; Gareth Allen as Senior Manager Adviser Partnerships. Naomi Ballantyne announced her retirement from Partners Life in March 2024.

  • Southern Cross Healthcare appointed Mark Phillips as Chief Digital Officer; Dr Erica Whineray Kelly as Transformation Lead for Women’s Health; Jo Fair as Chief of People & Culture; Monica Goldwater as Chief Nursing Officer.

  • Suncorp New Zealand appointed Suraiya Phillimore-Smith as its new Chief Customer Officer. Lindsay Tanner was appointed as an independent director of the firm’s three boards.

  • Justine Gilliland was appointed to Unimed's board.

  • ASB appointed Carl Ferguson Chief Financial Officer and Rebecca James as its new Executive General Manager of Business Banking.

  • Westpac welcomed a new GM of Consumer Banking and Wealth, Michael Norfolk.

  • Kiwibank appointed Julia Jack as chief purpose and brand officer.

  • TSB appointed Kerry Boielle as new CEO after Donna Cooper resigned. Penny Burgess was appointed General Manager Customer Delivery; Molly Auva'a-O'Brien as General Manager Operational Excellence.

  • AMP appointed Blair Vernon as CFO.

  • Tim Grafton announced he’s stepping down as chief of the Insurance Council of New Zealand next year.

  • Tony Dench started as Financial Advice NZ’s interim CEO following Katrina Shanks’ departure to head up The Australian and New Zealand Institute of Insurance and Finance (ANZIIF). Sonja Barrett was appointed as Financial Advice New Zealand’s Board Member Director (Risk) and Peter Fa’afiu was appointed as an Independent Member Director on the Financial Advice NZ Board. Stefanos Boulieris joined Financial Advice NZ, communicating online webinars and the upcoming conference in 2024 and Sarah Maxwell joined as Communications and Social Media Manager.

  • Tim Tez and Sarah Phillips joined ANZIIF’s Board of Directors.

  • Anna Scott, Ana-Marie Lockyer and Campbell Mitchell all joined the board of the Financial Services Council (FSC). David Bishop was appointed to the Chief Marketing Officer role.

  • The FMA appointed Daniel Trinder as Executive Director – Strategy and Design; Michael Hewes as Director for Deposit Taking, Insurance and Advice; John Horner as Director of Markets, Investors and Reporting; Peter Taylor as Director Specialist Supervision and Response; Stuart Johnson as Chief Economist; Sharon Thompson as Executive Director – Transformation and Operational Delivery.

  • Graeme Edwards took on the role of Lifetime Group director and chairman and David Haintz was appointed as an independent chairman of Lifetime Group Holdings and its subsidiaries.

  • Craig Wagstaff joined New Zealand Home Loans (NZHL) as its new general manager for franchise, distribution, and marketing.

  • The Adviser Platform (TAP) appointed Pooja Shetty as Senior Operations Specialist and Naz Mistry as a Compliance Specialist and Adviser Support.

  • Some big names in the industry have retired, with David Haak, Tony Arthur, and our very own Rob Dowler retiring

Here’s to another exciting year in 2024!

 

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Asteron Life and AIA awarded at the ANZIIF NZ Insurance Industry Awards

The Australian and New Zealand Institute of Insurance and Finance (ANZIIF) held the 11th New Zealand Insurance Industry Awards on 22 November. Asteron Life were awarded the Life Insurance Company of the Year award. AIA were recognised as winners of the Excellence in Workplace Diversity and Inclusion (D&I) and Excellence in Environmental, Social and Governance Change categories.

The Australian and New Zealand Institute of Insurance and Finance (ANZIIF) held the 11th New Zealand Insurance Industry Awards on 22 November.

Asteron Life were awarded the Life Insurance Company of the Year award. It is the fourth time they have won this award, having also won it in 2013, 2014 and 2021. Judges were impressed by Asteron Life’s Voice of Customer program, which provides insights into the customer experience; their high customer satisfaction scores overall; their policy wordings being accredited with the WriteMark standard; and attention to helping customers with affordable levels of cover. In particular the judging panel praised the variety of customer and people initiatives Asteron Life have implemented, ranging from Connected Care to Kids Cover to a Professional Supervision Programme.

AIA were recognised as winners of the Excellence in Workplace Diversity and Inclusion (D&I) and for Excellence in Environmental, Social and Governance Change. At AIA all leaders are expected to take responsibility for DE&I measures in recruitment, development, remuneration and the overall workplace environment. AIA recently achieved the Accessibility Tick and implemented a Menopause Tookit initiative. AIA has a five-pillar ESG strategy that incorporates sustainable operations, investment, health and wellbeing, people and culture and effective governance. They have committed to being net zero by 2050 and have already put in place many actions to work towards that goal, including new buildings aligning with green standards. They are committed to ethical investment and have a co-created employee wellbeing strategy in place.

 

More daily news:

Fidelity Life are holding three Adviser practice manager and admin summits across NZ in February

Fidelity Life are accepting registrations of interest for Adviser Edge 2024

Fidelity Life's last commission run for 2023 is 28 December

Fidelity Life introduce more streamlined procedure for policy alterations where a customer is the sole policy owner

Southern Cross announce winners of the 2023 Southern Cross Health Insurance Wayfinder Awards

ASB launch two new Aggressive Funds

Pinnacle Life voted Most Trusted Online Life Insurance Company

Graeme Edwards takes on role of Lifetime Group director and chairman

FSC circulate submission template for feedback on FMA's approach to outcomes focused regulation

Bell Gully highlight areas of interest in the FMA’s proposal to adopt an outcomes-focused approach to regulating

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Fidelity Life release financial results

Fidelity Life has released its annual report and financial results for the year ended 30 June 2023.

Fidelity Life has released its annual report and financial results for the year ended 30 June 2023. Highlights include:

·         Insurance premium revenue of $450.4 million, up 33% from FY22

·         Total comprehensive income (net of tax) of $3.2 million, an improvement from their FY22 loss of $24 million

·         Underlying profit, excluding the impact of government bond rate changes (net of tax), of $19 million

·         Claims paid out in FY23 $209.7 million, up 27% from FY22

·         304,867 customers

·         Market share of 15.7%

Fidelity Life resumed payment of dividends, with Fidelity Life’s shareholders receiving a full-year dividend of $8.013 per share. The dividend is unimputed as the Group continues to utilise brought forward tax losses.

Fidelity Life Chair Brian Blake says

“We expected the benefits of our Westpac Life acquisition to start materialising in FY23, and that’s proven to be the case. Our performance shows the business is in good shape and proving resilient against a weak economy and the high cost of living.

…In response to adviser feedback, we’re introducing a raft of new initiatives spanning the digital, product and service spaces to make it easier for advisers to do business with us, focus on growth, and together take our respective businesses to the next level.”

 

More daily news:

Quality Product Research are holding an in-depth discussion on medical insurance non-surgical claims on 7 November

Accuro members support proposal to transfer Accuro insurance portfolio and operations to UniMed at first special general meeting

Deloitte Top 200 Business Awards finalists include staff from ANZ, ASB, The Co-operative Bank

ANZ Chief Marketing Officer Astrud Burgess named Effective Marketer of the Year at Effie Awards

Kiwibank received 6 awards, including the Grand Effie, at the 2023 Aotearoa Effie Awards

Ainsley McLaren talks about the investment needs and behaviours of women

CERT NZ create Own Your Online website, to raise understanding of cyber security issues

The unemployment rate rose to 3.9% from 3.6% in the September quarter

Fraud Awareness Week is taking place November 13-18

Cancer patient advocates say health system reforms are taking too long

Read More
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PWC publish New Zealand Workforce Hopes & Fears Survey 2023

PWC have published their New Zealand Workforce Hopes and Fears Survey 2023, exploring views on business viability, worker sentiment, workforce skills, emerging technology, work environment and climate action. 1,000 respondents shared their views and in general, kiwis were more optimistic than others Asia Pacific countries, with 72% believing that their employer will still be in business in the next decade.

New Zealanders were consistent with the rest of Asia Pacific in terms of 57% of both areas being very or moderately satisfied with their jobs, however kiwis were less likely to ask for a pay rise (37% vs 43%), ask for a promotion (23% vs 38%) or change employer (20% vs 28%).

Only 25% of kiwis believed the skills for their job would change significantly in the next 5 years (versus 44% of those in the Asia Pacific region). In terms of technology, kiwis seem to think AI will be less disruptive and provide less opportunities than Asia Pacific respondents: 35% don’t think AI will impact their jobs, much higher than Asia Pacific as a whole at 16%; 22% believe AI will help them increase their productivity/efficiency at work (vs Asia Pacific 41%); only 18% think AI will create opportunities for them to learn valuable new skills (vs Asia Pacific 34%); only 12% believe AI will create new job opportunities for them (vs Asia Pacific 25%); and 44% think that digital skills are important to their career (vs. Asia Pacific 59%).

 

More daily news:

Southern Cross are reviewing the way they communicate changes

Early bird tickets for FSC’s Trans Tasman Strategic Leaders Summit on 4 - 6 March 2024 available now

Tony Vidler talks about how financial advisers are navigating the market while helping clients make important choices

mySolutions webinar - Richard Sewak shares his adviser story, 4 October, 9am

NZIER Consensus Forecasts predict subdued economic growth over the next two years

The Westpac McDermott Miller Employment Confidence Index (ECI) fell by 7.4 points to 98.3 in the September quarter

ASB awarded Digital Banking, Bank of the Year by Canstar NZ

Chapter Zero says professional services firm can have an important role to play as early adopters of climate-conscious business planning

Study finds having a healthy lifestyle reduces risk of depression by 57 per cent

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Southern Cross responds to accusations it dropped a $60k benefit without informing customers or advisers

Southern Cross has refuted a Good Returns article where advisers complained about not being informed about Southern Cross dropping a $60,000 a year benefit for non-surgical hospitalisations.

Southern Cross removed the non-surgical hospitalisation benefit as part of the Society’s benefit review in 2020, and Southern Cross’ head of customer strategy and experience, Nic Johnson has said that “Members were communicated with at the time of the benefit change.”

Johnson said that Southern Cross advisers were informed of the changes at the time via a virtual meeting, and that the company’s adviser gateway portal to manage their customers’ policies had information on the changes also.
Johnson said

“The original intention of the non-surgical hospitalisation benefit was as a 'catch-all' for eligible healthcare services that required in-hospital medical treatment. Based on a 2019 review of our claims data, which showed that the benefit was not widely utilised, it was assessed that this benefit was no longer fit-for-purpose.”

“The majority of medical (or hospitalisation) claims at the time were already covered under existing benefits, such as the surgical procedures, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and diagnostic tests/imaging benefits.”

We have commented on the change here

Quality Product Research are in the process of conducting a review of the score for the feature, giving Southern Cross time to respond with more details of equivalent benefits being present in other parts of the medical insurance. We will raise the results of the review with our Southern Research Advisory Board next month – and update research subscribers immediately.

More daily news:

Katrina Shanks writes about whether cryptocurrencies are a safe investment

Rob Hennin talks about why he loves working in the insurance sector

Southern Cross funds the ‘Under One Umbrella’ report on mental health and addictions

nib publishes their top five medical claims for July

KiwiSaver topped the $100 billion mark in the June quarter

ASB publish their 2023 Climate Report

Read More