First Financial Holding Co (第一金控) said yesterday it wasn’t aware of Aviva PLC’s plan to withdraw from Taiwan by selling its 49 percent stake in First-Aviva Life Insurance Co (第一英傑華人壽) after the British insurer said on Tuesday it was pulling out because it didn’t expect to meet group financial targets.
“This is all media speculation. We haven’t officially heard anything from them [Aviva],” Chou Po-chiao (周伯蕉), acting spokesman for First Financial, said by telephone, adding that it was only one-sided information from the British insurer.
The two-year-old First-Aviva Life Insurance, a joint venture in which First Financial holds a 51 percent stake, also refused to comment, saying it was “a dispute between shareholders.”
“We cannot represent the Aviva headquarters in making a comment on the matter as we are just a subsidiary of the British insurer in Taiwan,” a manager at First-Aviva Life Insurance said by telephone.
On Tuesday, Aviva chief executive Andrew Moss said in a statement that the company intended to withdraw from Taiwan and focus on more profitable markets after the British insurer released its earnings in the first nine months.
“In Asia-Pacific, we will continue to pursue franchise growth through organic investment, focusing on our key markets, such as China and India, and exiting low return markets, such as Taiwan,” Moss said in the statement.
However, First-Aviva Life told the Taipei Times that the statement was only an expression of Aviva’s “intention,” which means it was not written in stone yet.
“It is hard to predict when that will happen,” it added.
Even if Aviva decided to sell its stake, it needs to reach a consensus with First Financial and obtain regulatory approval from the Financial Supervisory Commission before it can change the shareholding structure, First-Aviva Life said.
The Chinese-language Economic Daily News reported in September that First-Aviva Life had incurred about NT$700 million (US$21.85 million) in losses and that the two partners had disagreed over its products and sales strategy.
The commission said yesterday it had not received official notice from Aviva about its intention to exit Taiwan and thus would not comment on the matter.
It added, however, that it hoped any financially healthy foreign companies would continue their business in Taiwan.
“Taiwan has a very good [insurance] market, which can be further explored,” a commission official said by telephone.
If the British insurer were to pull out of Taiwan, the rights of policyholders must be protected, the official said.
Aviva is the largest insurer in the UK and the sixth-biggest in the world. It signed an agreement with First Financial to form First-Aviva Life in 2007.
The British insurer had hoped that its entry into Taiwan would extend its leading position in global bancassurance, a combination of banking and insurance services.
Vincent Wei led fellow Singaporean farmers around an empty Malaysian plot, laying out plans for a greenhouse and rows of leafy vegetables. What he pitched was not just space for crops, but a lifeline for growers struggling to make ends meet in a city-state with high prices and little vacant land. The future agriculture hub is part of a joint special economic zone launched last year by the two neighbors, expected to cost US$123 million and produce 10,000 tonnes of fresh produce annually. It is attracting Singaporean farmers with promises of cheaper land, labor and energy just over the border.
US actor Matthew McConaughey has filed recordings of his image and voice with US patent authorities to protect them from unauthorized usage by artificial intelligence (AI) platforms, a representative said earlier this week. Several video clips and audio recordings were registered by the commercial arm of the Just Keep Livin’ Foundation, a non-profit created by the Oscar-winning actor and his wife, Camila, according to the US Patent and Trademark Office database. Many artists are increasingly concerned about the uncontrolled use of their image via generative AI since the rollout of ChatGPT and other AI-powered tools. Several US states have adopted
A proposed billionaires’ tax in California has ignited a political uproar in Silicon Valley, with tech titans threatening to leave the state while California Governor Gavin Newsom of the Democratic Party maneuvers to defeat a levy that he fears would lead to an exodus of wealth. A technology mecca, California has more billionaires than any other US state — a few hundred, by some estimates. About half its personal income tax revenue, a financial backbone in the nearly US$350 billion budget, comes from the top 1 percent of earners. A large healthcare union is attempting to place a proposal before
KEEPING UP: The acquisition of a cleanroom in Taiwan would enable Micron to increase production in a market where demand continues to outpace supply, a Micron official said Micron Technology Inc has signed a letter of intent to buy a fabrication site in Taiwan from Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp (力積電) for US$1.8 billion to expand its production of memory chips. Micron would take control of the P5 site in Miaoli County’s Tongluo Township (銅鑼) and plans to ramp up DRAM production in phases after the transaction closes in the second quarter, the company said in a statement on Saturday. The acquisition includes an existing 12 inch fab cleanroom of 27,871m2 and would further position Micron to address growing global demand for memory solutions, the company said. Micron expects the transaction to