Skip to content

MS Amlin launched a special purpose reinsurance vehicle Phoenix 3 Re

MS Amlin launched Phoenix 3 Re, a special purpose reinsurance vehicle

Lloyd’s global specialty (re)insurer MS Amlin has strengthened its Asian reinsurance business by floating a local special purpose reinsurance vehicle (SPRV) with US$45 million collateralised capacity. MS Amlin has launched a Singapore-based special purpose reinsurance vehicle (SPRV) known as Phoenix 3 Re.

Phoenix 3 Re will also provide a quota share to MS Amlin Asia Pacific (MS AAP) for its select reinsurance portfolio written via its underwriting platform in Singapore.

It also complements MS Amlin’s existing SPRV, Phoenix 2 Re, in terms of ceded business and structure.

Phoenix 3 Re has secured over US$45 million of collateralised capacity, exceeding that of its predecessors Phoenix 1 Re and Phoenix 2 Re. Alongside an increased underwriting risk appetite, this will give MS AAP close to US$83 million of capacity through its Phoenix vehicles, which will support local Asian cedents.

MS AAP worked with the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) again to establish Phoenix 3 Re, using an insurance-linked securities (ILS) catastrophe bond grant, with support from Hong Kong-based ILS specialist ILS Advisers, part of the HSZ Group.

Over the last two years, with the performance of Phoenix 1 and 2 Re, we have cemented our reputation and demonstrated our reinsurance credentials to investors, advisors, cedents and MAS.

Will Ho, CEO of MS AAP

This has enabled us to secure more investment and offer more capacity for local cedents.

With Phoenix 3 being the latest and largest supported issuance of the three Phoenix offerings from MS Amlin Asia Pacific, who again are leading the way in terms of developing investment offerings focused on emerging Asia growth.

This is a transaction that has been issued and arranged out of Asia, supported by Asia based service providers, sponsored by an Asia based underwriting team and directly provide capacity specifically for emerging Asia, which shows that Singapore can be a hub to attract alternative capital as a source of valuable capacity to support the significant insurance protection gap facing the largest growing and most natural catastrophe exposed region in the world.

by Yana Keller