Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc has remained in the black, but tougher operating conditions took a visible bite out of earnings in 2025.
According to its latest unaudited numbers filed on the Nigerian Exchange, the insurer delivered a profit before tax of ₦1.02 billion for the year ended December 2025.
While still positive, that’s a sharp step down from the ₦2.64 billion recorded a year earlier.
Premiums Climbed — But So Did the Bills
On the surface, business expanded.
Insurance revenue increased to ₦44.6 billion from ₦40.4 billion, supported by premium growth of nearly 10%, which pushed gross premiums to ₦46.2 billion.
But growth came at a price.
Higher claims-related spending, reinsurance obligations, and internal operating pressures squeezed margins and diluted the benefits of stronger topline performance.
Where the Pressure Came From
Key drags on profitability included:
- Insurance service expenses: ₦21.9 billion
- Reinsurance costs: ₦18.5 billion
Together, they reduced the insurance service result to ₦4.1 billion, down significantly from ₦6.6 billion in 2024.
Investments Couldn’t Save the Day
Investment income held relatively steady at ₦1.5 billion, boosted by interest earnings and fair value gains.
However, that cushion wasn’t large enough to neutralize ₦4.8 billion in other operating expenses, including employee-related costs.
With no impairment charges booked, operating profit still slipped to ₦1.02 billion, mirroring the final pre-tax outcome.
Balance Sheet Snapshot
There was mild expansion in assets.
- Total assets: up to ₦29.1 billion (from ₦28.3 billion)
- Cash & equivalents: ₦11.9 billion
- Total equity: edged higher to ₦16.07 billion
But retained earnings narrowed considerably, falling from ₦1.7 billion to about ₦621 million.
How the Market Is Reacting
Since the results dropped in early February, investor excitement has been limited.
The stock is currently trading around ₦3.38, down roughly 3.7% month-to-date, with no major momentum surge yet.
The Takeaway
Sovereign Trust proved it can still generate profit in a challenging environment.
Yet the big question for analysts and shareholders is clear:
Can future premium growth outrun rising costs?
That answer may define the company’s next chapter.