ERGO Group

ERGO Group
ERGO Versicherungsgruppe
Subsidiary
Industry Financial services
Founded 1997
Headquarters Düsseldorf, Germany
Key people
Markus Rieß (Chairman of the Management Board)
Nikolaus von Bomhard (Chairman of the Supervisory Board)
Products Reinsurance, primary insurance
Revenue 17,867 million Euros (2015)
Number of employees
28,487 (2015)
Parent Munich Re
Website www.ergo.com

ERGO (ERGO Group) is a group of insurance companies owned by Munich Re. ERGO is one of the largest insurance groups in Europe. It operates in over 30 countries, especially in Europe and Asia. In Europe, ERGO claims to be number 1 in the health and legal expenses insurance segments, and in its home market of Germany it is among the market leaders. It has over 40,000 full-time employees.

With premium income amounting to €18bn, ERGO offers different types of insurance and other services. ERGO and its companies have claimed to have 40 million customers, including 20 million in Germany.

Munich Re holds a 99.69% stake in ERGO.

Main activities

ERGO Group is one of the largest German insurance companies. Its activities include life insurance, health insurance, non-life and casualty insurance, legal expenses insurance, travel insurance, and financial services.

The main activities of the group focus on private clients, company pension schemes, and medium-sized business. In Europe, ERGO is the first in health and legal expenses insurance; in its home market Germany ERGO claims to belong to the market leaders in all lines of business. The company consists of:

Outside of Germany, ERGO Group operates in over 30 countries. The foreign participations are mostly bundled in ERGO International AG. ERGO is mostly active in Southern, Middle and Eastern Europe and Asia.

ERGO Group changed the structure of its group in late 2010 to offer non-life and life insurances in Germany under the ERGO brand. The direct insurer KarstadtQuelle Versicherungen was renamed ERGO Direkt Versicherungen, health insurance was consolidated under the trademark DKV, and legal expenses insurance was put under the trademark D.A.S. The trademark ERV will remain in business for travel insurance. The trademarks Victoria and Hamburg-Mannheimer were removed from the market.

History

ERGO Group AG came into being at the end of 1997 by the fusion of Victoria Holding AG and Hamburg-Mannheimer AG; the latter evolved from Hamburg-Mannheimer Versicherungs-AG, the life insurance company of Hamburg-Mannheimer-Gruppe.

On December 1, 1997, the shareholders of Victoria Holding AG that was formerly listed on the stock exchange, approved the transfer of the whole property of their companies to ERGO Group AG. Every nominal share of Victoria could be exchanged for ten bearer shares of ERGO. Victoria Holding AG disappeared from the stock exchange after the closure of the transaction on February 2, 1998; its place in MDAX was taken by Ergo Group AG.

On April 1, 2001 the majority shareholder Münchener Rück (today Munich Re) announced an exchange offer to the shareholders of ERGO, in the framework of which two shares of ERGO could be exchanged for one share of Münchener Rück plus cash payment of 18 Euros. After the offer had expired in July 2001, the shares of ERGO left the MDAX due to the reduced free float.

ERGO Versicherungsgruppe AG was renamed "ERGO Group AG" in April 2016.

Share capital

On the balance sheet day December 31, 2006 the share capital of ERGO Group AG totalled €192,279,504.20, divided in 75,492,117 bearer shares 2.60 € each. The shares of ERGO Group AG are listed on the stock exchange under WKN 841852 and ISIN DE0008418526. 94.7% (since November 25, 2009 99.69% with the purpose to raise the participation to 100% by means of the so-called squeeze out) of the shares belong to Munich Re.

Sex Scandal

In 2007 the company's subsidiary Hamburg-Mannheimer held a party in Budapest to reward around 100 of its sales agents involving an orgy with 20 prostitutes at the Gellért Baths. When it became public knowledge in 2011 the company stated that it was a one-off indiscretion. An internal audit discovered that the company had previously held incentive events at a swinger hotel in Jamaica and at strip clubs in Prague and Hamburg. The contents of the report were made public by the German business newspaper Handelsblatt in 2012.[1][2][3][4]

References

External links

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