Brookfield Turns Focus to Insurance

 Brookfield Corp. is planning to refocus itself into an investment-led insurer, marking a turn for the Canadian money manager that built its name as an owner of real assets.



For years, Brookfield used its capital to mostly invest in real assets alongside its clients in the asset management business, Chief Executive Officer Bruce Flat


t wrote in a letter to shareholders on Thursday, alongside reporting second-quarter results.


“In our next evolution, we are focusing our balance sheet to back our growing insurance operations, me


aning that our capital will increasingly come from individual investors via our insurance float,” he said.


Another growth target is the property and casualty insurance business, which currently makes up a small portion of its book.

The new m


odel partly emulates Berkshire Hathaway Inc., which uses its insurance businesses to buy whole companies.


Brookfield, which has $177 billion of capital, has been aggressively


growing its insurance and wealth business, snatching up companies in the US and more recently, pushing int


o the UK market. The Toronto-based firm plans to allocate further equity


capital to its annuity business, which will allow the book to grow to as much as $750 billion over time, according to Flatt.


Another growth target is the property and casualty insurance business, which currently makes up a


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small portion of its book. Flatt expects to grow that book to betwe


en $100 billion and $150 billion in the long run by writing up policies fo


r real estate construction, industrial warehouses and renewable power facilities.


On the asset side of the balance sheet, Brookfield plans to stay focused on the same asset classes, including infrastr


ucture, renewable energy, real estate, credit and private equity.


Shares of Brookfield Corp. fell 1% to $66.84 at 9:53 a.m. in New York.


Alternative asset managers have increasingly plowed into the insurance industry lured by permanent ca


pital, which can be ultimately deployed into their own vehicles. Apollo Global Management Inc. spearheaded this trend


over a decade ago when it launched its insurance platform, Athene.


Brookfield is also digging deeper into artificial intelligence with the launch of a strategy dedicated to investing in AI infrastructure development. T


he firm owns or is working to assemble seven major AI computin


g sites — including power and data center shells — which will be built out over the next five years in the US, UK, Canada and


Europe and require around $200 billion of capital, the CEO said. He likened the strategy to the split-off of Brookfield’s tran


sition business from its infrastructure group five years ago.


Brookfield’s distributable earnings rose to $1.25 billion, or 80 cents a share, excluding gains on asset sales, accordi


ng to a statement Thursday. That was an increase of 12.5% compared to the prior year.


The firm originated over $4 billion of retail and institutional annuity sales during the quarter, increasing insuran


ce assets to $135 billion, according to the statement. Last week, Brookfield Wealth Solutions agreed to buy UK insurer Just Group Plc in a deal that value


s the equity of the London-listed company at £2.4 billion.


Flatt said market sentiment is improving and is “increasingly supportive for high-quality transactions,” adding the firm has sold $55 billion of assets since the beginning of the year.

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