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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAllianz CEO says all its segments are strong: 'We have a lot more resilience'Oliver Bäte, CEO of Allianz, discusses the financial services company's earnings.
Persons: Oliver Bäte Organizations: Allianz
A trader works during the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on March 17, 2020 at Wall Street in New York City. Global markets hit record highs this week as the frenzy around artificial intelligence boosted risk sentiment and hopes of a return to economic growth. But some investors have urged caution, suggesting that high tech valuations could put the rally at risk. European markets extended gains Friday after the Stoxx 600 index closed at an all-time high in the previous session. In Asia Pacific, Japan's Nikkei 225 closed at a new all-time high of 39,098.68 on Thursday, surpassing the previous record of 38,915.87 set in 1989.
Persons: Oliver Bäte, CNBC's, Germany's DAX Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Wall, Global, Allianz, French CAC, Nikkei, U.S Locations: New York City, Europe, U.S, Asia
Former U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Wednesday that the U.S. and other powerful nations must "persuade countries, not dictate to them" in an increasingly multipolar world. Much of the conversation at this week's World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, has focused on a breakdown of trust between populations and world leaders, and how to restore it. Allianz CEO Oliver Bäte told CNBC Tuesday that an "increasing detachment of the political elite from the working class" was the "number one risk for our societies." It's no longer neoliberal economics, it's more mercantilist economics, states doing their own thing, and protectionist trade policies have become 'in' and we've seen a retreat from globalization," Brown told CNBC on the sidelines of WEF. Brown told CNBC Wednesday that he still believes this should be the template for establishing lasting peace in the region, but that it is "incredibly difficult because nobody is trusting each other at the moment."
Persons: Gordon Brown, Oliver Bäte, Brown, Tony Blair, you've, we've, Netanyahu, Mahmoud Abbas, Ehud Olmert, Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud Organizations: Economic, Allianz, CNBC Locations: Davos, Switzerland, WEF, America, Africa, Ukraine, Gaza, Israeli, Saudi, Israel, Palestinian
Oliver Bäte, chief executive of German insurance group Allianz. Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty ImagesA growing detachment between political leaders and populations presents the biggest risk in a busy election year, according to Allianz CEO Oliver Bäte. The Allianz Risk Barometer published this month noted that political risk was already at a five-year high in 2023, with some 100 countries considered at high or extreme risk of civil unrest. This is expected to deepen in 2024, amid continued economic hardship, particularly in "debt-crisis countries." "We have an increasing detachment of the political elite from the working class and the people that actually go to work every day, and that, I see as the number one risk for our societies," Bäte said.
Persons: Oliver Bäte, you've, Emmanuel Macron's, Nahel, Viktor Orbán, Bäte Organizations: Allianz, Nurphoto, Economic, Sweden Democrats Locations: Ukraine, Davos, Switzerland, Netherlands, France, Slovakia, Italy, Hungary, Sweden
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email'Detachment of the political elite from the working class' is a major risk, says Allianz CEOAllianz CEO Oliver Bäte discusses the main risks to the global economy in 2024, namely simmering political tensions ahead of a slew of elections.
Persons: Oliver Bäte Organizations: Allianz
“China’s economy has been deeply integrated into the global division of labor.”Li pledged that the country will align with international economic and trade rules, give equal treatment to foreign investment and facilitate trade and investment by removing government controls. Worries about foreign investmentConcerns about foreign capital leaving China have grown. To boost business confidence, China’s new economic leadership is trying to reassure foreign business and the domestic private sector. “You are not foreigners, but family,” Wang Wentao, the commerce minister, told attendees at the China Development Forum. In a meeting with Cook on Monday, he said China is willing to “provide a good environment and services” for foreign enterprises including Apple.
Germany's Allianz on Friday swung to a fourth-quarter net profit, marking a return to the black after taking big charges a year earlier for a U.S. funds scandal. Net profit attributable to shareholders of 2.007 billion euros ($2.13 billion) in the three months through December compares with a loss of 292 million euros a year earlier. Analysts had expected a net profit of 2.034 billion euros. "We just run a very, very good company," Allianz CEO Oliver Bäte told CNBC on "Squawk Box Europe" Friday. Bäte also highlighted that the interest rate environment is "really good" for the bank and that Allianz would be making the most of that.
The chief executive of Allianz on Tuesday said that the German insurer proved to be "very resilient" through what he described as one of the worst market environments imaginable in 2022. Bäte said that 2022 saw Allianz post record customer satisfaction levels and claimed its employee satisfaction was "beating almost every company in the world." Asked how difficult it is for the company to invest, Bäte replied, "2022 was one of the worst, in terms of environment, that you can imagine. "We are now benefitting tremendously from rates rising in the insurance business … but it has not been priced yet. It is recently that people have come to understand that the higher rates are really, really good for us as a life insurer," Bäte said.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAllianz CEO says company ‘benefitting tremendously’ from rising rates in the insurance businessOliver Bäte, CEO of insurance and asset management giant Allianz, reflects on what he describes as one of the worst imaginable market environments last year, but says the company is “benefitting tremendously” from rising rates in the insurance business.
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