
What's New in
Cybertalk?
By Jean Gora
July 2000
Note: CyberTalk is a column that
appears monthly in LOMA's Resource, the magazine for insurance and financial
services management. To see more contents of the magazine and to see how to
subscribe, click on RESOURCE MAGAZINE.
European Insurance
Multinationals Expand Internet Activities
Insurance conglomerates typically publish annual
reports in the spring. This year, the annual reports of several European
conglomerates with large U.S. operations are particularly interesting. They
provide new information about the groups’ Internet strategies. In some cases,
they disclose statistics on their Internet sales volume. The groups are Zurich,
ING, AXA, Prudential U.K., Fortis, and Skandia. These reports show that the
groups are pursuing two important strategies.
First, they are making major commitments to
direct Internet distribution and customer service in multiple countries and
achieving impressive results in some cases. They take technologies and services
developed for one market and move them quickly to other markets around the
globe. Providers of Internet services typically have to invest a lot of up-front
money to develop the services; to make a profit they have to wait until volume
builds. A conglomerate that takes a service developed for one market and offers
it in multiple ones clearly has significant economy-of-scale opportunities that
are unavailable to its competitors operating in only a single market.
Second, the groups are using the Internet to
operate virtual diversified financial services conglomerates. What is a virtual
diversified conglomerate? Prior to the spread of the Internet, an insurance
group that wanted to diversify into banking went out and acquired a bank—often
a very large bank. Now, instead of acquiring a bank, the group starts an online
banking service. It does the same thing with online securities brokering.
Increasingly, the world’s largest insurance conglomerates will present
themselves via the Internet to the world as providers of all financial and
insurance services.
This issue of CyberTalk examines some of the
highlights of these companies’ annual reports as they relate to Internet
expansion.
Zurich
Zurich, a Swiss-British-U.S. conglomerate,
reports that it is establishing a global e-business exchange, which is a common
Internet platform serving all units. The exchange relies on technology from IBM
and ChannelPoint. Zurich hopes to use the exchange to take products from any
Zurich entity or third-party supplier, customize them, re-brand them, and
distribute them in any market where Zurich does business.
Some Internet-based Zurich units have achieved
significant success. In the U.S., Zurich Kemper Life generates 20 percent of its
total sales of term life insurance through the Internet. Zurich’s Scudder
mutual funds handle an impressive 47 percent of their customer transactions via
the Internet. Zurich’s U.K. unit, Eagle Star Direct, generates 11 percent of
its sales via the Internet. In Japan, the conglomerate operates a Zurich Direct
auto insurance site. This site binds a new insurance policy every 90 minutes. It
grew 200 percent in 1999 and now generates $85 million in annual premiums. One
out of 10 of Zurich’s Japanese auto insurance customers deals with Zurich via
the Internet. The company provides more than 300 Internet price quotations per
day. One reason for Zurich’s success in Japan is that it operates an
Internet-based online auto sales market, Zurich Automart, for the purchase and
sale of second-hand cars. Customers in 17 different markets can now communicate
with Zurich via the Internet.
Zurich, which has never previously pursued a
bancassurance strategy, is now using the Internet to diversify into banking and
securities brokerage. It plans to roll out Internet banks and securities brokers
in partnership with local banks and specialist providers in a number of
countries where it does business. In addition, it will allow its customers to
build personal Web pages, personalized to their needs. Zurich hopes to become
the preferred financial portal of its customers.
Zurich launched Switzerland’s first branchless
bank in 1999 and took in $170 million in deposits in the first nine months.
These activities suggest that Zurich could rapidly acquire a banking presence in
a wide range of countries—essentially by buying the technology and allowing
local partners to create the links to the country’s banking system. It is a
fascinating strategy.
ING
ING, the Dutch bancassurance conglomerate, is
also making a major investment in Internet-based services. It plans e-commerce
investments worth two billion euros or about 1.8 billion U.S. dollars between
2000 and 2002. In the U.S., ING plans to start E-insurance, a virtual insurer
with fewer than 20 employees. The unit, which is applying for licenses in all 50
U.S. states, will sell term life insurance on the Internet beginning in the
third quarter of 2000. ING performed a major restructuring in its U.S. life
insurance operations during 1999. ING also plans to bring ING Direct, its direct
bank, to the U.S. The U.S. represents the sixth market in which ING will offer
its direct bank.
ING has enjoyed significant success with ING
Direct, which was initially offered in Canada three years ago. It now has
250,000 Canadian customers. ING Direct Spain was launched in 1999. By the end of
that year, it had 30,000 customers and was growing at the rate of 10,000
customers and 50 million euros per month. ING Direct Australia started in August
1999 and had 8,500 customers at year end. Since the beginning of 2000, it has
been growing at a rate of 5,000-6,000 customers per month. ING Direct also
operates in France. In Germany, ING Direct (including its recently acquired
Allgemeine Deutsche Directbank) has 820,000 customers.
ING has also begun an online securities brokerage
operation, which presumably could be added to its direct banking and insurance
distribution services.
AXA
AXA, the French conglomerate, is also making
major Internet investments. It conducts online auto insurance sales in France,
the U.K., Germany, and Spain. It started online auto sales in Germany in October
1999. By the end of the year, it had sold 9,600 policies via the Internet, 14
percent of its total direct sales. It offers online P&C claim filing in
France, Germany, and the U.K. It plans to equip its claims adjusters with remote
appraisal tools that transmit digital photos on the Internet.
In Japan, AXA began selling property &
casualty insurance directly over the Internet in January 2000. By March, it had
sold 1,000 policies, 26 percent of its total direct sales.
AXA owns DLJDirect, a very successful online
securities broker in the U.S. This service currently has 750,000 accounts. AXA
made an initial public offering (IPO) of 18 percent of DLJDirect’s stock in
1999. It introduced the service in the U.K. in September 1999. By year end, it
had opened 14,000 U.K. accounts. AXA introduced DLJDirect in Japan through a
joint venture with Sumitomo in June 1999; by year end, the service had acquired
128,000 accounts.
Like ING and Zurich, AXA is also taking steps to
position itself as a virtual diversified financial services conglomerate. It
plans to operate integrated banking, securities, and insurance portals in the
U.K., France, Germany, and Belgium.
Prudential U.K.
Prudential U.K., which operates a very successful
U.K. direct bank and insurance operation called "Egg," is bringing
Internet banking and bill presentment to the United States during 2000.
Prudential U.K. already owned Jackson Federal Bank in the U.S. It recently
acquired Highland Bancorp and now has 13 branches in California and almost $1.1
billion in assets.
Prudential U.K. plans to conduct an initial
public offering for Egg this year. Deloitte Research reports that Egg attracted
$13 billion U.S. in deposits and 600,000 customers in its first 18 months of
operation in the U.K. Egg has acquired more than 20 percent of net new deposits
in the U.K. market.
Fortis and Skandia
Fortis is investing in e-commerce for securities
trading, savings accounts, funds transfer, and investment funds management. It
plans to offer a consolidated Internet statement. In addition, it plans to use
the Internet for procurement.
Skandia operates a direct and Internet bank in
the Nordic countries. That bank now has 320,000 customers.
Moving Aggressively
These developments show that these European
conglomerates are moving aggressively to implement Internet services on an
international scale. It is possible that they are moving more rapidly than their
U.S. counterparts in this regard. In some respects, the European conglomerates
have been fortunate to be based in countries that developed Internet
infrastructures after the U.S. did.
Five years ago, when the Internet first attracted
consumer interest in the U.S., no major insurance company and very few major
banks and securities firms took it seriously. Thus, they moved very slowly to
develop Internet services. By the time, they realized that the Internet was
important and began developing services for it, outsiders such as E*Trade, had
captured important shares of their traditional markets.
The European groups used their large U.S.
operations to monitor Internet developments. They began to take the Internet
seriously at about the same time as their U.S. counterparts did. However,
because of the delayed growth of Internet access in some European countries,
they were able to offer their services to consumers who had high levels of
unmet, pent-up demand for them. Because the groups enjoyed high levels of name
recognition, new Internet users gravitated readily to their sites. It was easier
for the groups to have a major impact in European countries than most
traditional competitors could have in the U.S.
Because the European conglomerates now have
considerable experience in taking Internet-based services from one national
market to another, they will be powerful competitors to both local organizations
and to other conglomerates with less diverse international operations.
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