EXOR Restarts Talks With Insurer Covéa Over Scrapped $9B Sale of PartnerRe: Report

EXOR, the holding company of Italy’s Agnelli family, has restarted talks with French insurer Covéa over a possible sale of reinsurer PartnerRe, Il Sole 24 Ore reported on Saturday, after the deal was scrapped last year due to the pandemic.

Talks have resumed in the recent weeks, the daily newspaper said, citing several unidentified sources.

EXOR and Covéa were discussing a valuation for Bermuda-based PartnerRe which was “close” to the one agreed as part of their original deal, one of the sources said.

Covéa last year walked away from its planned purchase of 100% EXOR-owned PartnerRe for $9 billion in cash, saying it could no longer buy it under the terms of their agreement, which was signed before the coronavirus pandemic.

EXOR declined to comment on the report, while privately held Covéa was not immediately available for comment.

Under the original terms of the agreement with Covéa, Exor would have received an aggregate cash return of $3 billion from its purchase and disposal of PartnerRe, including dividends paid by the reinsurer since 2016, EXOR had said.

After the deal collapsed, Covéa agreed to invest 1.5 billion euros ($1.75 billion) in entities managed by PartnerRe and in undisclosed investments related to Exor, in a bid to normalize relations between the two companies.

It is not known how long revived talks could last and whether a transaction would be eventually agreed, Il Sole 24 Ore said.

($1 = 0.8593 euros) (Reporting by Giulio Piovaccari; additional reporting by Jean-Stephane Brosse in Paris; editing by Mike Harrison)

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