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Agnellis in Talks to Sell PartnerRe to Covea for $9 Billion

The acquisition of PartnerRe would help Covea diversify its business beyond home, auto, life and health insurance coverage.

Agnellis in Talks to Sell PartnerRe to Covea for $9 Billion
A stethoscope sits on an examination table in an exam room at a Community Clinic Inc. health center in Takoma Park, Maryland, U.S. (Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- French insurer Covea is in advanced talks with the Agnelli family’s Exor NV to buy the Italian company’s reinsurance business PartnerRe for about $9 billion in cash, according to people familiar with the discussions.

Covea approached Exor with an offer for the Bermuda-based reinsurer and is in exclusive talks with the holding company, which also controls Fiat Chrysler NV and Ferrari NV, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the discussions are private.

Exor and Covea confirmed the exclusive discussions, which were first reported by Bloomberg. Talks “are ongoing and there is no certainty that they will result in a transaction,” Amsterdam-based Exor said in a statement late Sunday.

Exor shares rose as much as 4.9% in Milan trading, giving the company a market value of 17.6 billion euros ($19.3 billion).

Agnellis in Talks to Sell PartnerRe to Covea for $9 Billion

Exor, led by Agnelli scion John Elkann -- who’s also chairman of Fiat and Ferrari -- agreed to buy PartnerRe in 2015 valuing the company at about $6.9 billion. That was part of a plan to diversify assets away from the capital-intensive automotive industry. A sale for $9 billion in cash would mark a significant gain for the Italian billionaire clan.

The Agnelli family owns 53% of Exor through a separate holding company which takes its name from Fiat founder Giovanni Agnelli and pools dozens of his descendents as its investors.

Exor won a hostile takeover battle for PartnerRe in 2015, breaking up a merger agreement between the reinsurer and Axis Capital Holdings Ltd. A sale of the company would be another major deal for Elkann just months after Fiat Chrysler agreed to combine with PSA Group to create the world’s fourth-biggest carmaker.

“A disposal of PartnerRe would increase the M&A appeal on Exor on top of the Fiat-PSA deal and CNH Indutrial’s spinoff plan,” Mediobanca analysts wrote in a note to clients. Fiat will pay a special dividend of 5.5 billion euros with the completion of the PSA deal and CNH Industrial plans to separate its truck unit at the beginning of next year. Exor owns 27% of CNHI and 29% of Fiat Chrysler.

The acquisition of PartnerRe would help Covea diversify its business beyond home, auto, life and health insurance coverage. Insurers and reinsurers are under pressure from low to negative interest rates at which they have to invest a large chunk of their premiums. Insurers thus have turned to deal-making and ways of diversifying their revenue streams, including moves into reinsurance and asset management.

If successful, it would be biggest deal in the industry since Axa SA bought XL in 2018 for $15.3 billion. Covea abandoned efforts to buy its French rival Scor in 2019, ending one of the country’s most acrimonious takeover attempts in recent years. Reinsurers insure risks of primary insurers such as Covea and have themselves been subject to pricing pressure and consolidation in the industry.

--With assistance from Chiara Remondini.

To contact the reporters on this story: Tommaso Ebhardt in Milan at tebhardt@bloomberg.net;Geraldine Amiel in Paris at gamiel@bloomberg.net;Jan-Henrik Förster in London at jforster20@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net, Jerrold Colten, Guy Collins

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