LONDON, March 18, 2026, 16:51 GMT
Prudential plc closed down roughly 2.7% in London on Wednesday at about 1,065 pence. The Asia-focused insurance group reported higher projected earnings for 2025, boosted its dividend, and rolled out another $1.2 billion buyback plan. Even so, the company disclosed a drop in its free surplus ratio. 1
Prudential wants investor support for a beefed-up payout plan, even as it eyes 2027 cash targets. The insurer’s free surplus ratio—a straightforward gauge of capital above what’s needed—has slipped to 221%, down from 234% this time last year. 2
The ratio missed the 230% mark analysts were looking for. UBS’s Nasib Ahmed flagged “a small negative reaction,” pointing out shares had already seen plenty of buying before results dropped, and management left estimates unchanged Wednesday. 3
Prudential reported a 12% jump in new business profit on a traditional embedded value (TEV) basis, reaching $2.782 billion. Adjusted operating profit before tax came in 5% higher at $3.306 billion. The insurer also lifted its full-year dividend by 15% to 26.60 cents per share. 2
The company noted it has finished $2 billion in buybacks and wrapped up the IPO of ICICI Prudential Asset Management Company in 2025. It kicked off another $1.2 billion buyback for 2026, and is aiming for a $1.3 billion capital return in 2027. Reuters said that pushes total expected shareholder returns past $7 billion for 2024-2027. 2
Regional growth stayed resilient. In Hong Kong, new business profit climbed 12%, thanks to higher sales and fatter margins from both local clients and those coming in from mainland China. Over on the mainland, Prudential’s CITIC Prudential Life joint venture notched up 27% growth. This cross-border dynamic is a sector-wide theme—AIA, for example, has singled out Hong Kong demand and spending by mainland Chinese visitors as a central pillar for earnings. 4
Chief Executive Anil Wadhwani described 2025 as “a strong year of consistent delivery,” adding that the group remains “confident in our double-digit growth trajectory” heading into 2026. Prudential noted that S&P Global Ratings bumped up the financial strength ratings of its core entities to AA from AA-. 2
Still, Henry Heathfield, CFA, over at Morningstar, flagged the $3.059 billion in gross operating free surplus as leaving “the market wondering” how Prudential plans to hit that $4.4 billion-plus target by 2027. Over at Deutsche Bank, analyst Kailesh Mistry—quoted via Proactive—noted new business profit came in 3% above his forecast, thanks mostly to solid numbers out of mainland China. 5
There’s a risk here: if cash generation lags, the juicier payout narrative might not add up. Should Hong Kong capital needs climb further, or if Prudential can’t hit the free-surplus run-rate required for 2027, the stock could remain stuck, even as dividends and buybacks move higher. 5