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AXA reports lower 2018 net profit after IPO costs and natural disasters

AXA said its net profit fell 66% in 2018 from a year earlier to €2.14 billion
AXA said its net profit fell 66% in 2018 from a year earlier to €2.14 billion

Net profits at AXA, Europe's second biggest insurer, fell sharply as a result of charges related to its US unit's initial public offering (IPO) and a spate of natural disasters, although AXA hoped for higher earnings this year. 

Its 2018 net profit fell 66% from a year earlier to €2.14 billion, below the €2.47 billion expected by analysts polled by Infront Data for Reuters. 

The company had to book a €3 billion write-down on the value of its US Unit AXA Equitable which was listed in May 2018 at a price below its worth in AXA's books. 

The company also had to book costs related to the restructuring of its Swiss business and to the $15 billion acquisition of XL. 

Under chief executive Thomas Buberl, AXA is undergoing a deep restructuring aimed at making the French group more international and stronger on health and property and damage insurance. 

Natural disasters cost AXA about €2 billion in 2018, of which €600m corresponded to Hurricane Michael in the US and wildfires in California during the fourth quarter. 

"In terms of natural catastrophes, this was a year like we see every ten years," AXA's chief financial officer Gerald Harlin told reporters. 

He maintained the company's targets for underlying earnings per share to rise by 3-7% this year and next year. 

Earnings rose 3% in 2018, while AXA also raised its dividend by 6% to €1.34 per share.

Earlier this month, Allianz - which is Europe's biggest insurer - also posted higher earnings and added it might slow down its share buyback programme.