Canada Life Financial Corp. announced that it has reached an agreement to acquire the Irish based German life operations of Prudential UK plc for $205 million.

Approximately half of the purchase price will be financed in the form of assumed reassurance. The acquisition is expected to be neutral to earnings in the first year due to integration costs and accretive to earnings by approximately 4¢ per share or a total of $7 million in 2004. Revenue premium on the block of business (which is sold under the brand name SALI) was approximately $152 million in 2001.

The transaction, which is expected to close on Jan. 1, 2003, will initiate the transfer of SALI’s German policyholders to Canada Life Europe Ltd., an Irish subsidiary of Canada Life. This transfer requires the approval of the High Court of Ireland, which is expected to occur during the first half of 2003. In the interim, the business will be reassured into Canada Life Europe Ltd. and the Germany and Ireland based SALI business staff will transfer to Canada Life.

SALI currently employs 232 people through its German operations with 167 staff based in its Frankfurt office and 65 located at Prudential offices in Dublin. Canada Life’s German operation is comprised of 41 administration employees in Dublin and 47 people in Cologne.

“The integration of Prudential’s German business into Canada Life’s operations will create a new force in the German market with 120,000 policies and almost 7,000 broker contacts,” said Tom Barry, senior vice president, Canada Life’s Irish Division, in a news release. “This will make Canada Life Europe one of the top five companies in the broker unit linked market and the market leader in Critical Illness insurance. More importantly, it positions the company to benefit from strong growth in the private pensions market in the world’s third largest economy.”

“This transaction is yet another example of Canada Life’s commitment to its stated objectives of exploiting its acquisition and integration capabilities to add value, and of leveraging processes and infrastructure to build strong businesses. Moreover, it is a tax efficient transaction that will reduce our unit costs in both Ireland and Germany,” said Bill Acton, president and COO, Canada Life.