(Bloomberg) — China Taiping Insurance coverage Holdings Co. shares fell Thursday on issues over the insurer’s estimated HK$2.6 billion ($334 million) publicity to a Hong Kong residential challenge on the middle of a lethal fireplace.
The corporate’s shares fell as a lot as 8.1% in early buying and selling earlier than paring losses to lower than 1% as of 1:58 p.m. in Hong Kong. China Taiping underwrote third-party legal responsibility and worker compensation for obligatory constructing and window inspection work at Wang Fuk Court docket in Tai Po.
The HK$316 million building challenge, which relied on bamboo scaffolding and protecting netting, is underneath investigation for its function in a blaze that erupted 18 hours in the past and has but to be extinguished.
China Taiping’s coverage covers the complete contract sum plus an extra HK$50 million ($6.4 million) for accidents. The insurer additionally offers HK$200 million in worker compensation for the challenge.
Individually, China Taiping holds a normal property-all-risk coverage with protection of HK$2 billion. A consultant for the corporate declined to remark.
The overall property-all-risk coverage and the precise building protection are each “critically underinsured” given the dimensions of labor on the roughly 2,000-unit advanced, Hong Kong Insurance coverage Professionals Federation Chairman Philip Mak stated in a telephone interview.
Rebuilding prices for communal areas and elevator metal cables will nearly actually exceed the insured quantity, Mak stated. Particular person homeowners can declare loss of life and harm advantages underneath the HK$50 million accident portion of the coverage, however that sum is “nowhere close to sufficient” given the fatalities and lots of nonetheless unaccounted for, he added.
China Taiping’s publicity to the advanced might be HK$2.6 billion earlier than reinsurance — about 9.3% of consensus earnings this yr or 1.5% of shareholder fairness as of June, assuming 50% reinsurance restoration, in keeping with a Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Steven Lam and Joyce Ho.
–With help from Kelly Li, Felix Tam, Jiyeun Lee and Zhang Dingmin.
(Updates with feedback from Bloomberg Intelligence.)
Extra tales like this can be found on bloomberg.com








