Old Mutual
Old Mutual Limited is a premium African financial services group headquartered in Cape Town, South Africa, offering life assurance, investment solutions, asset management, banking, and short-term insurance products to retail and corporate customers across the continent.[1][2] Founded on 17 November 1845 by Scottish educator and advocate John Fairbairn as The Mutual Life Assurance Society of the Cape of Good Hope—South Africa's inaugural mutual life insurance provider—the company began operations without initial capital, relying on policyholder premiums to build its foundation amid the uncertainties of colonial frontier life.[3][4] Over 180 years, Old Mutual has expanded significantly, demutualizing in 1999 to become a public limited company listed primarily on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE: OMU) with secondary listings elsewhere, enabling broader capital access and growth into diversified financial offerings.[5][4] Key achievements include its enduring resilience through economic upheavals, such as wars and market crashes, and strategic unbundlings like the 2018 separation of its emerging markets business to refocus on African operations, positioning it as one of the continent's largest insurers by assets under management.[1][6] Notable controversies encompass the 2019 dismissal of CEO Peter Moyo amid allegations of conflicts of interest, sparking protracted court battles resolved in the company's favor but highlighting governance tensions, as well as a 2024 regulatory fine of nearly R16 million for Financial Intelligence Centre Act (FICA) compliance lapses and public backlash over delayed policy payouts perceived as defying judicial orders.[7][8][9]History
Founding and Mutual Origins (1845–1990s)
Old Mutual originated as the Mutual Life Assurance Society of the Cape of Good Hope, established in 1845 in Cape Town, South Africa, by Scottish educator and journalist John Fairbairn along with 166 initial policyholders.[3][10] The society commenced operations without initial capital, relying solely on premiums collected from members to fund life assurance policies, embodying the mutual principle where policyholders owned the entity and shared in its profits through bonuses rather than distributing dividends to external shareholders.[3][10] This structure addressed the need for financial security amid the uncertainties of 19th-century colonial life, with the motto "a certain friend in uncertain times" reflecting its foundational ethos of collective risk-sharing.[3] In 1885, the organization renamed itself the South African Mutual Life Assurance Society, commonly shortened to Old Mutual, marking its consolidation as a prominent insurer in the region.[10] Over the subsequent decades, it expanded its footprint within South Africa and beyond, opening branches in Zimbabwe in 1927 and Kenya in 1930, while maintaining its mutual governance.[10] By the mid-20th century, Old Mutual had captured approximately one-third of South Africa's insurance market, issuing its one millionth policy in 1954 and launching the South African Mutual Unit Trust Company in 1966 to diversify into investment products.[10] Throughout the late 20th century up to the 1990s, Old Mutual adhered to its mutual origins, growing premium income to exceed R1 billion annually and ranking among the world's top 40 insurers by assets under management.[10] The company navigated challenges such as competitive pressures and domestic economic constraints under apartheid-era policies, focusing on domestic life assurance and emerging savings products while policyholders retained ownership control.[10] Initial forays into international markets, including the 1986 acquisition of Providence Capital in the UK, signaled broadening scope without altering its core mutual framework.[10]International Expansion and Growth (1990s–2000s)
In the early 1990s, Old Mutual began laying the groundwork for international operations by establishing Old Mutual Investment Advisors in Boston, United States, in 1995, alongside opening offices in Hong Kong and Guernsey to support offshore investment services.[10] These moves diversified revenue streams beyond South Africa, focusing on asset management and life assurance for expatriates and international clients.[10] Expansion accelerated in the UK during the mid-1990s, with the 1997 acquisition of Capel-Cure Myers, a prominent private client stockbroker, followed by the 1998 purchase of Albert E. Sharp for over £40 million, which merged with the former to create Capel-Cure Sharp and bolstered wealth management capabilities.[10] These acquisitions enhanced Old Mutual's European footprint, providing access to institutional and high-net-worth clients amid regulatory liberalization in South Africa post-apartheid.[10] The 1999 demutualization transformed Old Mutual into a public company, relocating its headquarters to London and enabling listings on the London Stock Exchange, Johannesburg Stock Exchange, and others, which unlocked capital for aggressive global growth.[10] This shift reduced reliance on the domestic market, where it had dominated life assurance, to pursue opportunities in mature economies.[10] In the early 2000s, Old Mutual targeted the U.S. market with major deals, including the 2000 acquisition of United Asset Management Corporation for $2.2 billion, adding specialized asset managers and approximately $188 billion in assets under management as of mid-2000.[11] The company also bought Gerrard Group in the UK for £525 million that year, expanding private banking, though it later sold parts to Barclays in 2003.[10] Further U.S. entries included the 2001 purchases of Unified Life Insurance for $45 million and Fidelity & Guaranty Life Insurance for $635 million, strengthening annuity and life products.[10] By mid-decade, the 2006 acquisition of Skandia, a Swedish insurer, for $6.5 billion marked a pinnacle, integrating operations across the Nordics, UK, France, Italy, and other regions, and adding significant savings and investment businesses.[12] These efforts diversified Old Mutual's portfolio, with U.S. operations comprising about 30% of business by 2003 and UK around 10%, down from South Africa's 60% dominance, though integration challenges arose from rapid scaling.[10]Demutualization and Public Listing (1999–2010s)
Old Mutual, originally structured as a mutual life assurance society since its founding in 1845, initiated the demutualization process in the late 1990s to convert into a shareholder-owned public company, enabling access to capital markets for expansion.[12] The proposal required approval from at least 75% of voting members, which was achieved, followed by endorsement from the High Court of South Africa in early 1999.[13] This restructuring distributed shares to approximately 3.2 million eligible policyholders, who received an aggregate of 2.8 million free shares, transforming them into shareholders while ending the mutual ownership model.[14] [15] On July 12, 1999, the newly formed holding company, Old Mutual plc, executed a simultaneous listing on five stock exchanges: the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE), London Stock Exchange (LSE), Frankfurt Stock Exchange, Zimbabwe Stock Exchange, and Malawi Stock Exchange.[14] [16] The primary listing was on the LSE, with secondary listings elsewhere, and the company relocated its headquarters to London to meet FTSE 100 eligibility criteria, where its market capitalization exceeded £5 billion.[17] [18] This multi-exchange debut marked one of the largest initial public offerings from an emerging market firm at the time and facilitated immediate global investor access.[19] As a public entity through the 2000s, Old Mutual pursued aggressive international growth, leveraging listing proceeds and equity financing for acquisitions that diversified its portfolio beyond South African life assurance into asset management and banking.[16] Notable transactions included the 2000 acquisition of United Asset Management Corporation for enhanced U.S. exposure and the Gerrard Group in the UK for £525 million to bolster wealth management capabilities.[16] These moves aligned with a strategy emphasizing long-term savings, protection, and investment products across emerging and developed markets.[20] However, the period also saw volatility; shares experienced significant fluctuations post-listing, with investors noting peaks and troughs amid global economic pressures, including 2008 losses of $135 million from U.S. mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, prompting the resignation of a key executive.[21] [22] By the early 2010s, Old Mutual plc had established itself as a FTSE 100 constituent with operations spanning South Africa, Europe, the U.S., and Asia, reporting integrated financials that reflected sustained progress in its core businesses despite market challenges.[23] The transition to public status shifted governance toward shareholder accountability, with annual reports emphasizing value creation over mutual policyholder priorities, culminating in board changes such as Patrick O'Sullivan's appointment as chairman in 2010.[23] This era laid the groundwork for further strategic realignments in subsequent decades.[12]Managed Separation and Refocus on Africa (2016–2020s)
In March 2016, Old Mutual plc announced a managed separation strategy to divide the group into four independent, publicly listed businesses: Old Mutual Emerging Markets, Old Mutual Wealth (later Quilter plc), Old Mutual Asset Management (OMAM), and Nedbank Group.[24][25] The strategy aimed to unlock shareholder value by allowing each entity to operate autonomously, tailored to its regional strengths, while eliminating the inefficiencies of the London-based holding structure, including central costs estimated at around £100 million annually.[26] This restructuring was driven by underperformance in non-African segments, regulatory pressures in Europe and the US, and the recognition that the group's diversified model had diluted focus and growth potential in its core African markets.[27] The separation progressed through phased divestitures. OMAM, the US-focused asset management arm, was fully separated by December 2017 via a demerger and listing on the New York Stock Exchange under BrightSphere Investment Group.[28] In June 2018, Old Mutual Wealth was demerged as Quilter plc, distributing 86.6% of its shares to Old Mutual plc shareholders and listing on the London Stock Exchange, thereby isolating the UK and European wealth management operations.[29] The final major step occurred on October 15, 2018, when Old Mutual unbundled its 53.5% stake in Nedbank Group to shareholders, distributing shares valued at approximately $3.5 billion and completing the banking segment's independence on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.[29][30] By the end of 2018, the managed separation was materially complete, with Old Mutual plc delisted from the London Stock Exchange and the remaining entity, Old Mutual Limited, relisted solely on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange as a focused African financial services provider.[31] This refocus positioned Old Mutual Limited to prioritize growth in sub-Saharan Africa, leveraging its historical roots in South Africa while expanding insurance, investment, and banking products across 13 African markets, including Kenya, Namibia, and Zimbabwe.[32] Into the 2020s, the company emphasized organic expansion and digital transformation in Africa to capitalize on rising middle-class demand for financial services, reporting value of new business growth in life insurance segments exceeding 10% annually post-separation.[24] The strategy yielded improved operational efficiency, with the streamlined group achieving a return on equity above 15% by 2020, though challenges persisted from economic volatility in African markets.[27]Recent Strategic and Operational Developments (2021–2025)
Old Mutual continued its strategic refocus on African markets through targeted acquisitions in the short-term insurance sector. In January 2022, Old Mutual Insure concluded the acquisition of a 51% stake in ONE Financial Services, a provider of embedded insurance solutions, to bolster distribution capabilities and product integration.[33] In September 2022, it signed an agreement to acquire 100% of Genric Insurance Company Limited, a specialist in accident, health, and non-life insurance, with the transaction completing in January 2023 following regulatory approvals; this move enhanced Old Mutual's expertise in niche underwriting and insurtech partnerships.[34][35] The company advanced its integrated financial services model by developing a digital-first banking arm. Old Mutual invested approximately R2.8 billion from 2022 to 2024 in building OM Bank, securing a banking license from the Prudential Authority in April 2024.[36] The bank launched in phases, becoming operational in August 2025 with a focus on low-fee digital accounts, financial nudges, and integration with Old Mutual's insurance and investment products; initial running losses are projected at R1.1 billion in 2025 and R1.3 billion in 2026, with breakeven targeted within three years.[37][38] This initiative leverages cloud migration completed in 2024 to enable AI-driven services and data analytics for customer personalization.[39] Operational expansions included securing R5.25 billion in sustainability-linked funding from Standard Bank in November 2024, comprising a multi-currency revolving credit facility to finance pan-African growth and green initiatives aligned with economic, social, and governance priorities.[40] In October 2025, Old Mutual Uganda rebranded from UAP Old Mutual to align fully with the group's unified identity, following similar transitions in Rwanda (2021) and Kenya (2023), emphasizing digital innovation and financial wellness across East Africa.[41] These efforts supported robust performance, with adjusted headline earnings rising 14% to R6.69 billion in 2024 and 29% to R4.2 billion for the first half of 2025, driven by 16% operational growth in core African segments.[42][43]Business Operations
Core Products and Services
Old Mutual provides a range of financial services primarily focused on retail and corporate customers across Africa, encompassing savings, protection, investments, lending, and banking solutions.[1] These offerings are delivered through subsidiaries like Old Mutual Insure for short-term insurance and Old Mutual Investment Group for asset management, with products tailored to address life assurance, retirement planning, and risk mitigation needs.[44] In the protection category, the company offers life insurance policies, including funeral cover, disability benefits, and critical illness coverage, designed to provide financial safeguards against unforeseen events.[45] Short-term insurance products cover property, casualty, and vehicle risks, distributed via Old Mutual Insure, which reported underwriting premiums of R15.2 billion in the first half of 2025.[46] Savings and investment solutions include unit trusts, retirement annuities, and flexible investment plans starting from R500 per month, with options like the Core Balanced Fund aiming for inflation-beating growth through diversified equity exposure up to 75%.[47] [48] [49] Lending and banking services feature personal loans, home loans, and transactional banking products, integrated with savings vehicles to support credit access for individuals and small businesses.[46] The group's Old Mutual Wealth division manages investment funds and portfolios, including yield-enhanced options like the Core Income Fund, which prioritizes liquidity and low volatility via money market instruments and bonds.[50] [51] Corporate offerings extend to employee benefits, such as retirement funds and group risk products, emphasizing long-term wealth accumulation and protection.[52] Overall, these services generated value-adjusted earnings of R6.4 billion in the first half of 2025, reflecting the company's emphasis on diversified, customer-centric financial products.[53]Organizational Structure and Subsidiaries
Old Mutual Limited operates as a holding company overseeing a network of subsidiaries focused on insurance, investment management, lending, and banking services, primarily in South Africa and other African markets.[54] The group's structure emphasizes operational efficiency through distinct business pillars: Savings and Protection (encompassing life assurance and short-term insurance), Investments (asset management and fund platforms), Lending (personal and debt consolidation loans via Old Mutual Finance), and Banking (transactional services through partnerships like Old Mutual Transaction Services with Bidvest Bank).[54] This segmentation allows for specialized management while maintaining centralized oversight from the Johannesburg-headquartered parent entity, which employs over 27,000 people across 12 countries.[44] Key South African subsidiaries form the core of operations. Old Mutual Life Assurance Company (South Africa) Limited handles life insurance products, including savings, protection, and retirement solutions, serving as the group's largest revenue generator.[55] Old Mutual Insure Limited provides short-term insurance for personal and commercial risks, such as vehicle, property, and liability coverage.[55] The Old Mutual Investment Group, wholly owned by Old Mutual Limited, manages assets through multi-boutique platforms, offering equity, fixed income, and alternative investments to institutional and retail clients.[56] In the Rest of Africa, the group maintains regional subsidiaries under Old Mutual Africa Holdings, adapting products to local regulations and markets. Notable entities include Old Mutual Namibia Holdings (Pty) Ltd for insurance and investments in Namibia; Old Mutual (Zimbabwe) operations for similar services; and Old Mutual East Africa Holdings, which oversees Kenyan activities through Old Mutual Kenya Limited, a provider of life assurance and pensions.[54] Operations extend to Botswana, Malawi, Ghana, Uganda, Rwanda, eSwatini, and South Sudan, often via joint ventures or wholly owned units focused on underserved segments.[54] Additional group entities include NEXT16, an innovation subsidiary targeting emerging economies, and specialized units like Old Mutual Alternative Investments for niche strategies.[44] The structure supports a capital-light model post-2018 managed separation, with the executive committee—led by the CEO—coordinating strategy across segments, while subsidiary boards handle day-to-day governance.[57] As of 2025, this framework prioritizes African growth, with limited exposure outside the continent following divestitures from Europe and Asia.[44]Geographic Markets and Presence
Old Mutual's operations are predominantly concentrated in Africa, where it serves as a leading financial services provider across life insurance, savings, asset management, banking, and property and casualty segments. The company's primary market is South Africa, accounting for the majority of its revenue and customer base, with headquarters in Cape Town and extensive distribution networks including over 11,000 tied agents and brokers.[1] Beyond South Africa, Old Mutual maintains a presence in 11 additional African countries through its Old Mutual Africa Regions (OMAR) division, spanning Southern Africa, East Africa, and West Africa, targeting retail, corporate, and institutional clients with localized products.[58] In Southern Africa, Old Mutual operates subsidiaries in Namibia (Old Mutual Namibia), Botswana (Old Mutual Botswana), Eswatini (Old Mutual Eswatini), Zimbabwe (Old Mutual Zimbabwe), and Malawi (Old Mutual Malawi), offering comprehensive insurance, investment, and banking solutions tailored to regional economic conditions, such as pension funds and short-term insurance amid varying regulatory environments. These markets contribute to diversified revenue streams, with Namibia and Botswana representing established growth areas supported by cross-border synergies from the South African core.[59][55] East Africa forms a key growth region, with operations in Kenya (via Old Mutual Kenya and UAP Old Mutual), Uganda (Old Mutual Uganda), and Tanzania, focusing on life assurance, health insurance, and asset management to tap into rising middle-class demand and urbanization. Expansion here emphasizes digital platforms and partnerships to address infrastructure challenges and regulatory harmonization under bodies like the East African Community.[60][61] In West Africa, Old Mutual has a foothold in Nigeria (Old Mutual Nigeria) and Ghana (Old Mutual Ghana), providing life insurance, pensions, and general insurance amid high population growth and low insurance penetration rates below 1%. These operations leverage joint ventures and local expertise to navigate currency volatility and political risks, contributing modestly to overall group value but with potential for scale through micro-insurance products.[1][59] Outside Africa, Old Mutual's international footprint is limited following its 2016-2018 managed separation, which divested European and U.S. assets to refocus on the continent. A niche presence persists in Asia via a joint venture in China for life insurance distribution, though this represents under 5% of group operations and is managed for strategic diversification rather than core growth. The company is listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, with secondary listings in Namibia, Zimbabwe, and Malawi, facilitating regional capital access without broader global exchange presence.[58][12]Financial Performance
Historical Financial Trends
Following demutualization and dual listing on the Johannesburg and London stock exchanges in 1999, Old Mutual's embedded value expanded 74% to £5.4 billion from £3.1 billion at the end of 1998, capturing the unlocked shareholder value from the transition to a public entity.[18] Operating profit, based on long-term investment return assumptions, grew 23% to £656 million in 1999 from £534 million the prior year, supported by premium income and investment gains in the core South African life insurance operations.[18] The 2000s marked a period of aggressive international diversification via acquisitions, driving revenue expansion amid favorable global markets, though exposed to cyclical risks. Revenue peaked at $36.81 billion USD in 2006, reflecting contributions from asset management and banking arms in Europe and the US, before contracting amid the 2008 financial crisis, which reported negative revenue of -$0.26 billion USD due to realized investment losses and fair value adjustments.[62] Recovery followed, with revenue stabilizing around $30 billion USD in 2009-2013, fueled by embedded value growth and premium inflows, but strategic refocusing amid underperformance led to disposals and revenue volatility in the mid-2010s.[62] The managed separation process from 2016 unbundled non-core assets like Quilter plc and Nedbank Group, refocusing Old Mutual Limited on African operations and resulting in a structural revenue contraction to $7.49 billion USD in 2018.[62] Post-separation, financial trends emphasized organic growth in gross written premiums and value of new business, with revenue fluctuating between $7-15 billion USD annually through 2021, influenced by currency volatility, COVID-19 disruptions, and market recoveries—dipping to $3.86 billion USD in 2022 before rebounding to $10.76 billion USD in 2024.[62]| Year | Revenue (USD Billion) | Key Context |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 7.49 | Post-separation baseline, Africa-centric.[62] |
| 2019 | 12.43 | Market rebound aids investment income.[62] |
| 2020 | 9.92 | Pandemic impacts premiums and claims.[62] |
| 2021 | 15.58 | Strong recovery in equities and premiums.[62] |
| 2022 | 3.86 | Currency weakness and economic headwinds.[62] |
| 2023 | 9.96 | Stabilizing growth in underwriting.[62] |
| 2024 | 10.76 | Continued premium expansion.[62] |
Key Metrics and Shareholder Returns
Old Mutual Limited's key financial metrics reflect steady operational growth amid African market focus, with results from operations reaching R8,709 million in 2024, a 4% increase from R8,343 million in 2023.[64] Adjusted headline earnings rose 14% to R6,685 million in 2024, driven by core business performance up 10%.[65] For the first half of 2025, results from operations grew 16% to R4,940 million, while adjusted headline earnings increased 29% to R4,204 million.[53] Return on net asset value (RoNAV), a proxy for equity efficiency, improved to 12.7% in 2024 from 11.1% in 2023, and further to 15.5% in H1 2025.[64][53]| Metric | 2023 | 2024 | H1 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adjusted Headline EPS (cents) | 129.0 | 150.6 (+17%) | 96.6 (+31% vs H1 2024) |
| Basic EPS (cents) | 158.4 | 176.2 (+11%) | 96.1 (-20% vs H1 2024) |
| Total Revenue (R million) | 219,610 | 243,005 (+11%) | N/A |
| RoNAV (%) | 11.1 | 12.7 (+160 bps) | 15.5 (+290 bps vs H1 2024) |
2025 Performance and Outlook
Old Mutual Limited reported adjusted headline earnings of R4.2 billion for the six months ended June 30, 2025, a 29% increase from the prior-year period, primarily driven by robust underwriting results at Old Mutual Insure and gains from strong equity market performance.[70][71] Revenue rose 5.6% to R55.5 billion, while return on net asset value improved to 15.5%.[72][70] The group declared an interim dividend of ZAR 0.37 per share, reflecting a 9% year-over-year growth, supported by these operational strengths.[73] In parallel, Old Mutual initiated a R3 billion share buyback program to enhance shareholder value amid favorable market conditions.[74] Subsidiary performance varied regionally; for instance, Old Mutual Holdings in Kenya recorded a profit before tax of KES 380 million, though claims payouts rose to KES 452 million due to economic pressures.[75] Overall group results benefited from a 17% return on the JSE All-Share Index and net investment returns climbing 22% to R84.39 billion.[76] Looking ahead, Old Mutual anticipates a constructive outlook for the second half of 2025, with sharpened strategic priorities centered on execution, capital optimization, and leveraging its African market position under new CEO Jurie Strydom.[71] This includes sustained focus on insurance growth and investment returns, tempered by potential macroeconomic headwinds such as interest rate trajectories and regional economic variability.Controversies and Criticisms
Fidentia Scandal and Related Litigation
The Fidentia scandal, erupting in 2007, centered on the fraudulent misappropriation of trust assets by directors of Fidentia Holdings, including convicted fraudster J. Arthur Brown, totaling billions of rand from entities like worker benefit funds.[77][78] Among the victims was the Living Hands Umbrella Trust (LHUT), which administered death benefits for over 50,000 beneficiaries, predominantly widows and orphans of deceased Mine Workers Provident Fund members; Fidentia entities looted approximately R1.1 billion from LHUT after gaining influence over its management in 2004.[79][78] Old Mutual Unit Trust Managers (OMUT), a subsidiary, faced claims for its administrative role in LHUT's investments. Between 22 October and 10 November 2004, OMUT transferred R1,130,319,447.32 from LHUT's unit trust portfolios—constituting the bulk of its assets—to LHUT's designated bank account, acting on a written instruction purportedly authorized by LHUT's then-trustees, who were aligned with Fidentia interests.[80] These funds were promptly diverted and misappropriated by Fidentia Holdings and Fidentia Capwise, exacerbating the trust's losses.[80] LHUT trustees initiated delictual proceedings against OMUT in 2017 (instituted after delays attributed to regulatory inquiries), seeking damages for pure economic loss on grounds of negligent omission: specifically, OMUT's alleged failure to verify the instruction's legitimacy, inquire into the trustees' authority, or impose safeguards despite red flags about Fidentia's involvement in related entities.[80][79] In a July 2022 judgment, the South Gauteng High Court held OMUT liable for R854,650,643 in capital losses plus interest at 15.5% per annum from the date of judgment (accruing roughly R722,000 daily and exceeding R1.7 billion total), reasoning that OMUT owed a direct, non-contractual duty of care to LHUT and its vulnerable beneficiaries under delict law, breached by inaction that foreseeably enabled the fraud.[79] OMUT contested this, arguing compliance with its administrative mandate under the Collective Investment Schemes Control Act (CISCA) and that any losses stemmed from Fidentia's criminal acts, not its own omissions; it also raised prescription defenses, unsuccessfully at High Court level.[79][80] OMUT appealed successfully to the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA), which on 16 May 2024 set aside the High Court order and dismissed the claim with costs. The SCA ruled no legal duty of care extended beyond OMUT's contractual and statutory obligations to LHUT as unitholder—CISCA section 71 imposed no fiduciary safeguards for end-beneficiaries—and OMUT's reliance on the facially valid instruction was reasonable, with no wrongfulness in its conduct given public policy considerations against expansive liability for administrators.[80] Causation further failed: while factual causation linked to the transfers, legal causation did not, as the direct cause was Fidentia's unforeseeable theft, rendering OMUT's omission too remote.[80] LHUT sought Constitutional Court review, but on 10 December 2024, it dismissed leave to appeal, deeming no reasonable prospects of success and affirming the SCA's exoneration of OMUT.[81] The rulings underscored limits on imposing extra-contractual duties in financial administration amid third-party fraud, without implicating Old Mutual in the underlying scandal.[80]Client Payout Disputes and Public Backlash
In March 2024, Old Mutual South Africa encountered significant public backlash following a viral social media complaint by Busisiwe Molefe, who accused the company of defying a court order to release her deceased mother's pension funds, reportedly valued at around R3 million.[82][83] Molefe's posts on X (formerly Twitter) garnered millions of views, amplifying grievances from other clients who shared experiences of delayed or denied payouts on life insurance, funeral policies, and retirement annuities, particularly after policyholders' deaths.[9][84] This incident triggered widespread calls for boycotts and policy cancellations, with users urging mass exodus from Old Mutual products amid perceptions of bureaucratic obstruction and unresponsiveness.[85][86] Old Mutual responded by asserting that it intended to process the payout but faced administrative hurdles related to tax compliance and beneficiary verification, denying any deliberate defiance of the court ruling.[87][84] The company clarified that media reports overstated the payout amount, as it does not publicly disclose such figures, and emphasized ongoing engagement with the complainant to resolve the matter.[84] In a statement, Old Mutual's head of public affairs, Celiwe Ross, acknowledged communication shortcomings, stating the firm had "learnt lessons" on handling social media scrutiny and vowed improvements in client service transparency.[88][89] Despite these assurances, the episode eroded trust, with consumer platforms like HelloPeter recording thousands of negative reviews citing similar payout delays and claim rejections as of mid-2025.[90] Broader patterns of disputes emerged from client reports between 2020 and 2025, including denials for alleged non-disclosure of pre-existing conditions, such as high blood sugar in a 2018 case rejecting a R2.4 million life policy claim, and ongoing 2025 complaints over funeral policy refusals despite premium payments.[91][92] A 2019 retirement annuity delay similarly prompted regulatory review by the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA), which advised against hasty cancellations but highlighted scrutiny on processing timelines.[93] Old Mutual countered these narratives by reporting R14.7 billion in risk claims paid out in 2024, a 4.3% increase from 2023, attributing delays to verification requirements under South African financial regulations rather than systemic refusal.[94] Independent analyses, however, suggest that while outright fraud is rare, opaque processes and stringent underwriting—often justified by risk mitigation—fuel perceptions of unfairness, particularly among lower-income clients reliant on group policies.[9] The backlash underscored vulnerabilities in Old Mutual's claims handling amid digital amplification of grievances, prompting internal reviews but no formal regulatory sanctions by mid-2025.[89] Client advocacy groups have called for streamlined dispute resolution, noting that while payout success rates exceed 90% per company data, unresolved escalations to the Ombudsman for Long-Term Insurance remain elevated compared to peers.[94] This episode reflects recurring tensions in South Africa's insurance sector, where economic pressures exacerbate sensitivities to delays, though Old Mutual maintains adherence to legal obligations over expediency.[84]Regulatory Sanctions and Compliance Issues
In September 2024, the Prudential Authority (PA) of the South African Reserve Bank imposed administrative sanctions on Old Mutual Life Assurance Company Limited for multiple violations of the Financial Intelligence Centre Act (FICA), following an inspection initiated in 2020. The breaches included failures to perform adequate customer due diligence (CDD), deficiencies in the risk management and compliance programme (RMCP), inadequate verification of client identities and transaction purposes, and shortcomings in ongoing monitoring of business relationships.[95] [96] These lapses spanned the period from 2017 to 2021 and involved high-risk clients, though the PA emphasized that the sanctions addressed administrative compliance failures rather than evidence of actual money laundering or terrorist financing activities.[8] [97] The total financial penalty amounted to R15.9 million, with R5.9 million conditionally suspended for 36 months provided no further contraventions occur during that period, resulting in an immediate payment of R10 million.[98] [99] In addition to the fine, Old Mutual received four cautions against repeating the non-compliant conduct.[96] The company acknowledged the findings, stating it had already implemented remedial measures, including enhanced training, system upgrades, and independent audits to strengthen its FICA compliance framework.[97] This penalty formed part of a broader enforcement trend in South Africa's financial sector, where regulators imposed over R36.9 million in FICA-related fines on multiple institutions in 2024 alone.[99] Separately, in 2024, the PA levied a minor administrative penalty of R30,000 on Old Mutual Insure for a specific FICA contravention related to inadequate reporting obligations. No significant regulatory sanctions were recorded against Old Mutual's operations in other jurisdictions, such as the UK or Namibia, in recent years, though historical investigations by the UK's Financial Conduct Authority into pension transfer practices in 2016 did not result in formal penalties.[100] These incidents highlight ongoing challenges in maintaining robust anti-money laundering controls amid evolving regulatory scrutiny in South Africa.Corporate Governance and Strategy
Leadership and Board Composition
Jurie Strydom serves as Chief Executive Officer of Old Mutual Limited, having assumed the role on 1 June 2025 following the retirement of Iain Williamson, who held the position from May 2019 until 31 August 2025.[101][102] Strydom, aged 50, brings extensive experience in financial services, having previously served as an independent non-executive director on the board since December 2023.[103] The executive committee, responsible for day-to-day operations, is led by Strydom and includes Casper Troskie as Chief Financial Officer, aged 62, overseeing financial strategy and reporting.[104] Other key executives comprise Zureida Ebrahim as Chief Operating Officer, Prabashini Moodley as CEO of Life and Savings, and Zulfa Abdurahman as Acting Managing Director of Old Mutual Investments.[105][104] The board of directors is chaired by Trevor Manuel, aged 69, an independent non-executive director providing strategic oversight.[106] It features a majority of independent non-executive directors, including members such as Itumeleng Kgaboesele, Brian Armstrong, and James Mwangi, to maintain objectivity in governance and risk management.[107][108] Board committees, such as audit and remuneration, are chaired by independent directors and consist of at least three members each, aligning with principles of accountability and ethical leadership as outlined in the company's 2024 governance report.[109]| Key Board Members | Role | Independence Status |
|---|---|---|
| Trevor Manuel | Chairperson | Independent Non-Executive |
| Jurie Strydom | CEO & Director | Executive |
| Casper Troskie | CFO & Executive Director | Executive |
| Itumeleng Kgaboesele | Director | Independent Non-Executive |