How a Global 500 insurer’s $1.6 billion Singapore deal fell apart
The headquarters of Allianz SE in Munich. · Fortune · Alexander Pohl—NurPhoto via Getty Images

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German insurance giant Allianz withdrew its bid to acquire a majority stake in Income Insurance, a Singapore-based insurance company, on Monday. Income Insurance confirmed in a separate statement that Allianz withdrew its bid.

The proposed acquisition has been hanging in the balance since October, after Singapore's government said it would block the deal in the form that was initially proposed. But the withdrawal formally ends a deal that stirred passionate public discussions over whether a foreign insurer should be taking over a Singaporean company with a social mission.

Earlier this year, Allianz, ranked No. 82 on the Global 500, offered to acquire a 51% stake in Income Insurance. The deal, valued at 2.2 billion Singapore dollars ($1.63 billion), was announced on July 17, and would have made Allianz the fourth-largest insurer in Asia.

But the proposed deal quickly drew public backlash, including from high-profile Singaporeans. At the heart of the outcry was Income Insurance's role in Singaporean society and its roots as a cooperative. On Oct. 14, Singapore's government called off the deal, citing concerns over the proposed structure and Income's ability under Allianz to continue its social mission.

What was the debate?

Income Insurance was launched as a cooperative in 1970, and was founded to fill the need for affordable insurance in Singapore. The insurer was corporatized in 2022, but almost 73% of the firm is owned by NTUC Enterprise, a holding cooperative.

When Income changed its status, the government allowed it to move a surplus worth 2 billion Singapore dollars ($1.48 billion) to the new corporate entity, rather than be donated to the country's "Cooperative Societies Liquidation Account," a pool of money used to support the broader co-op movement.

Yet when Allianz offered to buy Income Insurance, it agreed to pay out almost $1.4 billion over three years to shareholders. That raised eyebrows in Singapore's government.

“The proposed capital reduction runs counter to the premise on which the exemption was given,” said Edwin Tong, Singapore’s minister of culture, community, and youth, to the country’s parliament in October.

Prominent Singaporeans also spoke out against the deal, questioning whether Income Insurance could fulfil its social purpose under a new owner.

Tommy Koh, a veteran Singaporean diplomat, expressed worries that a foreign owner like Allianz would not devote resources to create products that serve the needy, like Income Insurance’s 2010 scheme that offered free insurance to families with young children, or its 2013 decision to provide insurance coverage to children with autism.