Admiral: FTSE 100 firm hikes diviend as profit surges thanks to higher UK motor insurance premiums

Admiral Group has reported a 43 per cent jump in turnover in the first half of its financial year thanks to a strong performance at its UK motor insurance division.

The group reported an overall turnover of £3.2bn for the six months to 30 June. Profit before tax also jumped. The figure rose 32 per cent to £310m.

The group revealed the results were driven by a “record 5.5m vehicles on cover in the UK and nearly half a million more customers across other product lines in the UK”.

Admiral’s board declared an interim dividend of 71p per share, up 35 per cent from the same period in 2023.

As of 30 June, the group had nearly 11m customers, a 12 per cent increase driven by its UK motor arm. The group attributed the growth to its “very competitive” prices.

Admiral’s UK household division reported a pre-tax profit of £11m (2023: £9m), which it stated was “driven by favourable prior year development and an improved current year combined ratio”.

Milena Mondini de Focatiis, group CEO said Admiral: “Delivered a strong set of results in the first half, growing profits, revenues and customer numbers, demonstrating our resilience and agility in changing market dynamics.”

“Given our earlier pricing response to inflation in previous years, we have been able to be more competitive in the first half and this helped grow our customer base 12 per cent to 10.5m. This was driven by a record 5.5m vehicles on cover in the UK and nearly half a million more customers across other product lines in the UK.”

“Our group turnover increased 43 per cent to £3.2bn and Group profit has increased by 32 per cent to £310m, led by strong UK Motor performance. We maintained a strong capital position with a solvency ratio of 198 per cent after a higher interim dividend per share of 71p.”

“We continue to evolve our core technical competences leveraging new data and technology. Our focus now is on unlocking the benefit for our customers of scaled agile for faster delivery and enhancing our capabilities in AI application,” she added.

Related posts

Ryder Cup flavour as DeChambeau and Rahm clash in Chicago

Sally Rooney Intermezzo review: Normal People author’s shift to the male perspective comes at a cost

Hawkish Bank of England? Don’t be so sure.