HAMILTON, Bermuda--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Aspen Insurance Holdings Limited (“Aspen”) (NYSE:AHL) announced today
that its Board of Directors, after careful evaluation with the
assistance of its financial and legal advisors, unanimously determined
to reject an unsolicited proposal from Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.
(“Endurance”) (NYSE:ENH) to acquire Aspen for $47.50 per share, 60% in
Endurance common stock and 40% in cash.
Glyn Jones, Chairman of the Board of Directors, said: “After careful
review and deliberation, the Board of Directors unanimously determined
that Endurance’s proposal is not in the best interests of Aspen or its
shareholders. Endurance’s ill-conceived proposal undervalues our
company, represents a strategic mismatch, carries significant execution
risk, and would result in substantial dis-synergies. Furthermore, most
of the consideration to Aspen shareholders would be in a stock that
would reflect these problems.
“Aspen has a proven track record of performance and a clear strategy to
increase shareholder value. Endurance has a mixed operating track
record, new leadership, an unproven strategy, and no experience with
large acquisitions. Moreover, this transaction would be highly
disruptive to Aspen’s corporate culture, which has proven to be a
significant competitive advantage in the marketplace.”
In making its determination, the Aspen Board of Directors considered,
among other factors, the following:
- Aspen is executing a clear strategy to deliver superior value for
shareholders, while Endurance’s proposal undervalues the company and
carries significant risks.
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A combination would burden Aspen with Endurance’s unproven
underwriting teams with no clear strategy; an unprofitable insurance
business1; and a volatile and challenged crop business.
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Endurance has shown a public disdain for Lloyd’s, which is the growth
engine of Aspen’s well-established international insurance business.
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Endurance has a mixed operating track record, no experience with large
acquisitions, new leadership and an unproven strategy.
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The proposed transaction jeopardizes Aspen’s corporate culture, which
the Company believes is a significant component of its franchise value
because it differentiates Aspen with clients and allows Aspen to
recruit and retain outstanding professionals.
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The disruption of market and underwriting relationships likely would
result in material loss of business.
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The proposal involves a number of substantial execution risks,
including financing uncertainty, due diligence outcome, regulatory
approvals, the need for favorable votes by the shareholders of both
companies, and integration risk.
Goldman, Sachs & Co. is acting as financial advisor and Wachtell,
Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP are acting as
legal advisors to Aspen.
Below is a letter that Aspen previously sent to Endurance’s Board of
Directors rejecting the same proposal that Endurance made public today:
8 April 2014
Board of Directors
c/o John R. Charman, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer
Endurance Specialty Holdings Ltd.
Wellesley
House
90 Pitts Bay Road
Pembroke HM 08
Bermuda
Dear Members of the Board:
The Board of Directors of Aspen Insurance Holdings Limited has received
your letter of 3 April 2014.
Your most recent letter does not add to the information the Aspen Board
had when we thoroughly considered your 18 February 2014 letter and
unanimously concluded that the possible acquisition of Aspen by
Endurance was not in the best interests of Aspen or its stockholders and
that we did not wish to pursue the matter further. The Aspen Board
continues to have no interest in pursuing the matter further.
As was the case with your prior letters, we find your most recent letter
to be based on uninformed and unsubstantiated assertions and assumptions
about alleged benefits of the combination that do not stand up to
analysis. The Aspen Board has concluded that Aspen will be able to
create superior value for our stockholders based on our standalone plan.
Aspen has a long history of value creation for its stockholders and has
a clearly articulated growth strategy for delivering value to its
stockholders going forward. We have built a diversified business with a
strong balance sheet, proven management team and disciplined risk
management, and are confident that continued execution of our strategy
provides value far in excess of what you have suggested in the letter.
The levers that we have available to achieve our ROE goals are clear and
well-understood by the market and you have clearly misrepresented our
10% ROE guidance for 2014 as our long-term goal. We are confident we
will be able to deliver superior growth by following our plan.
As part of our review, we have evaluated Endurance’s business mix,
market presence, quality of earnings, earnings outlook and management
culture, all of which we found to be either unattractive or incompatible
with Aspen’s strategy. With respect to business mix, Endurance is
over-concentrated in crop insurance, a business which is troubled, low
margin, recently volatile and exposed to major risks. The other
insurance businesses are nascent and have not demonstrated progress.
Endurance’s continued well-publicized antipathy for Lloyd’s is
inconsistent with Aspen’s business model, as our Lloyd’s syndicate is
one of the most dynamic parts of our insurance franchise and a top
quartile performer amongst Lloyd’s syndicates. Aspen has a strong and
well-regarded reinsurance business with a clearly defined strategy for
addressing the changes in market dynamics while, in contrast, Endurance
is hesitant and uncertain about the industry. Furthermore, as analysts
have pointed out, Endurance’s earnings in recent years have been
disproportionately driven by reserve releases (a trend that accelerated
at year-end 2013) and the path for future earnings is unclear.
Any combination with Endurance’s centralized, top-down management model,
as compared to our collaborative, teamwork-oriented culture, would
result in extreme personnel disruption and loss of attractive business.
It is worth noting that our company is in significant litigation due to
your orchestrated poaching of Aspen employees and clear breaches of
fiduciary and other duties arising from this. The dis-synergies from the
transaction you propose, including loss of business and personnel,
combined with Endurance’s unappealing business mix, earnings track
record and incompatible culture, make the combination unattractive,
particularly in contrast to what Aspen expects to achieve by following
our standalone plan.
In addition, your letter poses significant risks and uncertainties,
including (1) Endurance’s due diligence of Aspen, (2) due diligence of
Aspen by your financing sources, (3) your ability to raise the necessary
funds, even the most general terms and amounts of which are omitted from
your letter (we note in this regard that one of the financing sources
from your prior letter is no longer included, and CVC’s commitment is no
longer described as “equity”), (4) your ability to secure all required
regulatory approvals and (5) importantly, approval of your own
stockholders.
The foundation of Aspen’s business is our client relationship franchise,
and our people are our most valuable assets. The uncertainty and
distraction that would result from pursuing what your letter proposes
would be destructive of value for our company and our stockholders. Your
“proposal” is merely the request for a one-way option to start an
investigation of our company and later decide if you wish to pursue a
transaction. The Aspen Board is vehemently opposed to the hostile
attempt of Endurance to address its business problems at the expense of
Aspen and its stockholders and to your potential effort to destabilise a
key competitor.
For the reasons outlined above, we are not interested in pursuing what
your letter proposes and do not believe that any purpose would be served
by meeting with you or your advisors.
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Yours sincerely,
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/s/
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/s/
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| Glyn Jones | | | | | | |
Chris O’Kane
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Chairman of the Board of Directors
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Chief Executive Officer
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cc: CVC Capital Partners Advisory
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_________________________
1 Endurance’s insurance
segment underwriting income ex reserve releases has been negative from
2011-2013.
- ENDS -
About Aspen Insurance Holdings Limited
Aspen provides reinsurance and insurance coverage to clients in various
domestic and global markets through wholly-owned subsidiaries and
offices in Bermuda, France, Germany, Ireland, Singapore, Switzerland,
the United Kingdom and the United States. For the year ended December
31, 2013, Aspen reported $10.2 billion in total assets, $4.7 billion in
gross reserves, $3.3 billion in shareholders’ equity and $2.6 billion in
gross written premiums. Its operating subsidiaries have been assigned a
rating of “A” (“Strong”) by Standard & Poor’s, an “A” (“Excellent”) by
A.M. Best and an “A2” (“Good”) by Moody’s.
Application of the Safe Harbor of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995
This press release may contain written “forward-looking statements”
within the meaning of the U.S. federal securities laws. These statements
are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements
include all statements that do not relate solely to historical or
current facts, and can be identified by the use of words such as
“expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “believe,” “project,” “anticipate,” “seek,”
“will,” “likely,” “estimate,” “may,” “continue,” “deliver,” and similar
expressions of a future or forward-looking nature.
All forward-looking statements rely on a number of assumptions,
estimates and data concerning future results and events and are subject
to a number of uncertainties and other factors, many of which are
outside Aspen’s control that could cause actual results to differ
materially from such statements.
Forward-looking statements do not reflect the potential impact of any
future collaboration, acquisition, merger, disposition, joint venture or
investments that Aspen may enter into or make, and the risks,
uncertainties and other factors relating to such statements might also
relate to the counterparty in any such transaction if entered into or
made by Aspen.
Aspen believes these factors include, but are not limited to: our
ability to successfully implement steps to further optimize the business
portfolio, ensure capital efficiency and enhance investment returns; the
possibility of greater frequency or severity of claims and loss
activity, including as a result of natural or man-made (including
economic and political risks) catastrophic or material loss events, than
our underwriting, reserving, reinsurance purchasing or investment
practices have anticipated; the assumptions and uncertainties underlying
reserve levels that may be impacted by future payments for settlements
of claims and expenses or by other factors causing adverse or favorable
development; the reliability of, and changes in assumptions to, natural
and man-made catastrophe pricing, accumulation and estimated loss
models; decreased demand for our insurance or reinsurance products and
cyclical changes in the highly competitive insurance and reinsurance
industry; changes in insurance and reinsurance market conditions;
increased competition from existing insurers and reinsurers and from
alternative capital providers and insurance-linked funds and
collateralized special purpose insurers on the basis of pricing,
capacity, coverage terms, new capital, binding authorities to brokers or
other factors and the related demand and supply dynamics as contracts
come up for renewal; changes in the availability, cost or quality of
reinsurance or retrocessional coverage; changes in general economic
conditions, including inflation, deflation, foreign currency exchange
rates, interest rates and other factors that could affect our financial
results; the risk of a material decline in the value or liquidity of all
or parts of our investment portfolio; evolving issues with respect to
interpretation of coverage after major loss events; our ability to
adequately model and price the effect of climate cycles and climate
change; any intervening legislative or governmental action and changing
judicial interpretation and judgments on insurers’ liability to various
risks; the effectiveness of our loss limitation methods, including our
reinsurance purchasing; changes in the total industry losses, or our
share of total industry losses, resulting from past events and, with
respect to such events, our reliance on loss reports received from
cedants and loss adjustors, our reliance on industry loss estimates and
those generated by modeling techniques, changes in rulings on flood
damage or other exclusions as a result of prevailing lawsuits and case
law; the impact of one or more large losses from events other than
natural catastrophes or by an unexpected accumulation of attritional
losses; the impact of acts of terrorism, acts of war and related
legislation; any changes in our reinsurers’ credit quality and the
amount and timing of reinsurance recoverables; the continuing and
uncertain impact of the current depressed lower growth economic
environment in many of the countries in which we operate; the level of
inflation in repair costs due to limited availability of labor and
materials after catastrophes; a decline in our operating subsidiaries’
ratings with S&P, A.M. Best or Moody’s; the failure of our reinsurers,
policyholders, brokers or other intermediaries to honor their payment
obligations; our ability to execute our business plan to enter new
markets, engage in acquisitions or introduce new products and develop
new distribution channels, including their integration into our existing
operations; our reliance on the assessment and pricing of individual
risks by third parties; our dependence on a few brokers for a large
portion of our revenues; the persistence of heightened financial risks,
including excess sovereign debt, the banking system and the Eurozone
debt crisis; changes in our ability to exercise capital management
initiatives (including our share repurchase program) or to arrange
banking facilities as a result of prevailing market changes or changes
in our financial position; changes in government regulations or tax laws
in jurisdictions where we conduct business; changes in accounting
principles or policies or in the application of such accounting
principles or policies; Aspen or Aspen Bermuda Limited becoming subject
to income taxes in the United States or the United Kingdom; loss of one
or more of our senior underwriters or key personnel; our reliance on
information and technology and third party service providers for our
operations and systems; and increased counterparty risk due to the
credit impairment of financial institutions.
For a detailed description of uncertainties and other factors that could
impact the forward-looking statements in this press release, including
the positioning to deliver profitable growth and value for investors,
please see the “Risk Factors” section in Aspen’s Annual Report on Form
10-K for the year ended December 31, 2013, filed with the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission on February 20, 2014. Aspen
undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any
forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information,
future events or otherwise.

For further information:
Please
visit www.aspen.co
or contact:
Investors
Kerry Calaiaro, Senior Vice
President, Investor Relations, Aspen
Kerry.Calaiaro@aspen.co
+1
(646) 502 1076
or
Kathleen de Guzman, Vice President, Investor
Relations, Aspen
kathleen.deguzman@aspen.co
+1
(646) 289 4912
or
Media
Steve Colton, Head of
Communications, Aspen
Steve.Colton@aspen.co
+44
20 7184 8337
or
North America – Sard Verbinnen & Co
Paul
Scarpetta or Jamie Tully
+1 (212) 687 8080
or
International
– Citigate Dewe Rogerson
Patrick Donovan or Caroline Merrell
patrick.donovan@citigatedr.co.uk
caroline.merrell@citigatedr.co.uk
+44
20 7638 9571
Source: Aspen Insurance Holdings Limited