Suncorp Group's New Zealand insurance division lifted first-half profit 81 per cent as the Australian owner of Vero Insurance faced fewer claims in a period when there were no major earthquakes.
After-tax profit rose to $67 million in the six months ended December 31 from $37m a year earlier, Brisbane-based Suncorp said in a statement to the ASX.
The bulk of that came from the general insurance division, which consists of Vero and the AA Insurance joint venture, which more than doubled profit to $50m, as net incurred claims shrank 6.5 per cent to $348m from the year-earlier period which included the Kaikoura earthquake. Gross written premium rose 7.6 per cent to $768m, with auto and home insurance premiums growing at a double-digit pace.
"The New Zealand general insurance business has maintained strong growth and underlying performance," Suncorp said. "Natural hazard experience is significantly lower than the prior year's earthquake-affected result."
The result echoes that of larger rival Insurance Australia Group, New Zealand's biggest general insurer, which more than tripled first-half earnings on the absence of earthquake claims.