26 September 2023

Allianz Global Wealth Report 2023: South Africa’s financial assets continue to grow

Submitted by: raramuridesign support
  • Annus horribilis: Global financial assets of private households declined by
    -2.7%, the strongest drop since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC)
  • Wiped out: Adjusted for inflation, global financial assets were only 6.6% above the 2019 level – in Western Europe real wealth decreased by -2.6%
  • No tailwinds: Average growth of financial assets is likely to hover between 4% and 5% over the next three years
  • Belt tightening: Growth in households’ liabilities and the debt-to-GDP ratio fell sharply
  • South Africa: Financial assets buck the global trend and continue to grow by 1.7%

Munich, September 26, 2023

Today, Allianz, which provides commercial insurance in South Africa, unveiled the 14th edition of its “Global Wealth Report”, which puts the asset and debt situation of households in almost 60 countries under the microscope.

Annus horribilis

2022 was an annus horribilis for savers. Asset prices fell across the board in the "everything slump" scenario. The result was a dismal -2.7% decline in private households’ global financial assets[1], the strongest drop since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in 2008. Growth rates of the three major asset classes, however, differed markedly. While securities (-7.3%) and insurance/pensions (-4.6%) saw strong setbacks, bank deposits showed robust growth at +6.0%. Overall, financial assets worth EUR 6.6 trillion were lost, total financial assets amounted to EUR 233 trillion at the end of 2022. The decline was most pronounced in North America (-6.2%), followed by Western Europe (-4.8%). Asia, on the other hand – with the exception of Japan – still recorded relatively strong growth rates. China's financial assets grew robustly, too, clocking growth of 6.9%. But compared to the previous year (+13.3%) and the long-term average of the last 20 years (+15.9%), this was a rather disappointing development – repeated lockdowns clearly took their toll.

South Africa: modest growth

The gross financial assets of South African households increased by a modest 1.7% in 2022, way below the increase in the previous year (15.1%). The slowdown was across the board: the asset class insurance/pension – with a portfolio share of 55% the dominant asset class in South Africa – grew by meagre 2.1% (2021: 14.2%), bank deposits slowed to 6.6% (8.6%) and securities even lost in value (-0.9% in 2022 against +20.1% in 2021).

Compared to the pre-pandemic year of 2019, financial assets are 22.3% higher – but only in nominal terms. Adjusted for inflation, the increase is reduced to a much more modest 5.9% in three years. Growth in liabilities accelerated to 7.3% in 2022, after 5.8% in 2021. As a result, the debt-to-GDP ratio remained flat at 41%, some 9pp below its peak in 2007. Net financial assets, finally, remained basically flat (+0.3%). With net financial assets per capita of EUR 9,000, South Africa climbed one rung to 41st position in the ranking of the richest countries.

Wiped out

Despite bitter losses, global household financial assets were still nearly 19% above pre-Covid-19 levels at the end of last year – in nominal terms. Adjusted for inflation, almost two-thirds of (nominal) growth fell victim to price increases, reducing real growth to a meagre 6.6% in three years. While most regions could at least preserve some real growth in wealth, the situation in Western Europe is different: Any nominal gains were wiped out, real wealth decreased by -2.6% over 2019.

“For years, savers complained about zero interest rates.”, said Ludovic Subran, chief economist of Allianz. “But the real enemy of savers is inflation. And not only since the inflation surge after Covid-19. In South Africa, for example, assets per capita increased sixfold before inflation over the last 20 years. But after inflation, the increase is a less impressive 80%. This underlines the need for smart saving and increased financial literacy. But inflation is a hard beast to beat. Without some nudges and professional advice for long-term savings most savers might struggle.”

No tailwinds

After the decline in 2022, global financial assets should return to growth in 2023. This is supported above all by the (so far) positive development on the stock markets. All in all, we expect global financial assets to increase by around 6%, also taking into account a further "normalization" of savings behavior. Given a global inflation rate of around 6% in 2023, savers should be spared another year of real losses on their financial assets.

“The mid-term outlook, however, is rather mixed.”, said Patricia Pelayo Romero, co-author of the report. “There will be no monetary or economic tailwinds to blow. Average growth of financial assets is likely to hover between 4% and 5% over the next three years, under the assumption of average stock markets returns. But like the weather, which gets more extreme amid climate change, more market swings are to be expected in the new geopolitical and economic landscape. ‘Normal’ years might rather become the exception.”

Belt tigthening

The interest rate turnaround was also clearly felt on the liabilities side of the private household balance sheet. After global private debt had risen by 7.8% in 2021, growth weakened significantly last year to 5.7%. The sharpest fall was seen in China: last year's debt growth of +5.4% was the lowest growth on record. Overall, global household liabilities totaled EUR 55.8trn at the end of 2022. As the gap between debt and economic growth widened to 3.9pp, the global debt-to-GDP ratio (liabilities as a percentage of GDP) has fallen significantly by more than 2pp to 66.1% in 2022. This means that the global debt ratio for private households is back at about the same level as it was at the beginning of the millennium – a remarkable level of stability that hardly fits the widespread narrative of a world drowning in debt. However, there have been major shifts in the world debt map. First and foremost, stability characterizes the development in advanced economies. On the other hand, most emerging markets have seen their debt ratios rise sharply over the last two decades. China is at the top of the list, with a ratio that has more than tripled to a good 61%.

Net financial assets per capita in 2022

    In Euro Y/Y in % Rank 2002
1 United States 251,860 -8.9 2
2 Switzerland 238,780 -4.4 1
3 Denmark 163,830 -9.9 18
4 Singapore 151,200 +3.9 11
5 Taiwan 141,600 +3.1 10
6 New Zealand 117,760 -7.6 6
7 Canada 117,450 -5.7 9
8 Sweden 116,060 -13.2 15
9 Netherlands 103,120 -18.1 7
10 Belgium 97,790 -7.7 3
11 Japan 96,500 -0.3 4
12 Australia 92,630 -6.1 17
13 Israel 92,370 -3.6 13
14 UK 88,380 -9.2 8
15 Ireland 71,360 -3.9 16
16 Italy 69,350 -6.9 5
17 France 67,500 -7.1 12
18 Austria 65,330 -4.6 14
19 Germany 63,540 -8.3 19
20 Malta 49,500 +0.6 20
         
41 South Africa 9,000 +0.3 39

The interactive “Allianz Global Wealth Map” can be found here on our homepage:

https://www.allianz.com/en/economic_research/research-data/interactive-wealth-map.html

You can find the study here on our homepage: https://www.allianz.com/en/economic_research.html

For further information please contact:
Lorenz Weimann
Tel. +49 89 3800 16891
e-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

About Allianz

The Allianz Group is one of the world's leading insurers and asset managers with more than 122 million* private and corporate customers in more than 70 countries. Allianz customers benefit from a broad range of personal and corporate insurance services, ranging from property, life and health insurance to assistance services to credit insurance and global business insurance. Allianz is one of the world’s largest investors, managing around 683 billion euros** on behalf of its insurance customers. Furthermore, our asset managers PIMCO and Allianz Global Investors manage about 1.6 trillion euros of third-party assets. Thanks to our systematic integration of ecological and social criteria in our business processes and investment decisions, we are among the leaders in the insurance industry in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index. In 2022, over 159,000 employees achieved total revenues of 152.7 billion euros and an operating profit of 14.2 billion euros for the group.

* Including non-consolidated entities with Allianz customers.

** As of Dec 31, 2022

These assessments are, as always, subject to the disclaimer provided below.

Cautionary note regarding forward-looking statements

This document includes forward-looking statements, such as prospects or expectations, that are based on management's current views and assumptions and subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties. Actual results, performance figures, or events may differ significantly from those expressed or implied in such forward-looking statements.

Deviations may arise due to changes in factors including, but not limited to, the following: (i) the general economic and competitive situation in the Allianz’s core business and core markets, (ii) the performance of financial markets (in particular market volatility, liquidity, and credit events), (iii) adverse publicity, regulatory actions or litigation with respect to the Allianz Group, other well-known companies and the financial services industry generally, (iv) the frequency and severity of insured loss events, including those resulting from natural catastrophes, and the development of loss expenses, (v) mortality and morbidity levels and trends, (vi) persistency levels, (vii) the extent of credit defaults, (viii) interest rate levels, (ix) currency exchange rates, most notably the EUR/USD exchange rate, (x) changes in laws and regulations, including tax regulations, (xi) the impact of acquisitions including and related integration issues and reorganization measures, and (xii) the general competitive conditions that, in each individual case, apply at a local, regional, national, and/or global level. Many of these changes can be exacerbated by terrorist activities.

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 [1] Financial assets include cash and bank deposits, receivables from insurance companies and pension institutions, securities (shares, bonds and investment funds) and other receivables.