(Bloomberg) — AXA SA, Europe's second-largest insurer, posted a 10 percent increase in 2013 profit on higher earnings at its life and savings and property and casualty divisions.
Net income rose to 4.48 billion euros ($6.15 billion) from 4.06 billion euros a year earlier, the Paris-based insurer said today. Earnings missed the 4.74 billion-euro average estimate of 16 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg as the company booked costs related to foreign-exchange hedges.
U.S. life insurance sales climbed as stock markets rose and the economy grew faster than France and the euro area. AXA, led by Chief Executive Officer Henri de Castries, has disposed of 8.5 billion euros of assets in developed markets since 2010 to invest in faster-growing nations from China to Colombia as a sluggish economy weighs on European insurers' revenue.
"There is a negative impact of forex and interest rate hedging," said Raphael Caruso, a Paris-based analyst at Raymond James, who recommends buying the stock. "But globally their profitability had a clear improvement. The touchstone is the recovery in the U.S. unit-linked portfolios."