Allianz Group 2025 SFCR: A Decade of Portfolio Shift as Government Bonds Halved and CIU Hits €255bn

Allianz Group 2025 SFCR: A Decade of Portfolio Shift as Government Bonds Halved and CIU Hits €255bn

Allianz 2025 SFCR: government bonds halved to EUR 97bn over a decade. The EUR 255bn CIU headline is largely a Solvency II reclassification artefact — the real story is EUR 94bn of bond compression.

Allianz Group’s 2025 Solvency and Financial Condition Report (SFCR), published in May 2026, offers the most detailed decadal view yet of how Europe’s largest insurer has restructured its €792 billion Solvency II investment portfolio. The headline finding — that government bonds fell from EUR 191bn (28% of total assets) in 2016 to EUR 97bn (12%) in 2025 while collective investment undertaking (CIU) exposure appears to have reached EUR 255bn — generates more heat than light unless readers understand the regulatory accounting conventions that produced it. What follows is a structured reading of the SFCR data, separating genuine portfolio reallocation from reclassification effects, and drawing out the implications that matter for analysts and supervisors.

The Government Bond Compression Is Real and Structural: Ten Years of Sustained Reduction

The compression of Allianz’s direct fixed-income book is the authentic story of this SFCR. The reduction in government bond stock over the decade totalled EUR 94bn, placing 2025 among the decade’s lowest government bond allocations alongside the 2022 valuation trough. Corporate bonds contracted in parallel, from EUR 234bn (34%) to EUR 116bn (15%). The combined effect is striking: combined sovereign and corporate bonds accounted for 62% of Allianz’s Solvency II balance sheet in 2016; by 2025 that figure had fallen to 27%. This compression reflects a deliberate ALM strategy executed over eight annual reporting cycles — driven by the protracted low-rate environment of the late 2010s, which made sovereign bond yields insufficient to match long-dated liability discount rates, and sustained through the rate normalisation period between 2022 and 2024, as the group diversified away from reinvestment risk concentration.

The CIU Headline Explained: Two Reclassification Events, Not One Portfolio Pivot

The Collective Investment Undertakings line in Allianz’s SFCR is the source of most analytical confusion. Two discontinuity events created the appearance of massive alternative-asset accumulation where none occurred on an economic basis. In 2018, Allianz’s CIU exposure rose sharply from EUR 19bn (3% of assets) to EUR 217bn (31%) following the reclassification of PIMCO and AllianzGI fund subsidiaries under Solvency II Delegated Regulation Article 1(40). The affected entities are principally fund structures managed by PIMCO and AllianzGI — the group’s two major external asset management arms — which were reclassified from “participations” to “CIUs” when the regulatory taxonomy was updated. A second reclassification in 2023 produced a similar step change: unlisted equities fell from EUR 35bn (5%) to EUR 5bn (1%) in a single year while CIUs rose by EUR 41bn, from EUR 205bn to EUR 246bn, again reflecting a reporting structure change rather than a new investment decision. From 2018 onwards, SFCR disclosures consistently record CIUs at EUR 205-278bn, representing approximately 30-33% of total assets — a range that reflects both the reclassification base and year-on-year market value movements in the underlying funds.

Where Allianz Actually Deployed Its Capital: Unit-Linked Growth and Balance Sheet Expansion

The genuine reallocation story outside of fixed income is in the unit-linked book and overall balance sheet scale. The index-linked and unit-linked book grew steadily from EUR 79bn (11%) in 2016 to EUR 139bn (18%) in 2025. This growth transfers market risk to policyholders — a structurally capital-efficient outcome for the insurer — and partly offsets the capital charge implications of holding lower-rated alternatives on the insurer’s own account. Total Solvency II assets grew from EUR 689bn to EUR 792bn over the period, a 15% increase, reflecting organic premium growth, acquisition activity, and market appreciation in the investment portfolio. At the operating level, Allianz reported record full-year 2025 operating profit of EUR 17.4bn, up 8.4% year-on-year, with its Solvency II ratio rising 10 percentage points to 218% at year-end 2025. The capital strength matters: it confirms that the portfolio rotation has been executed without compromising regulatory solvency headroom, and that the improvement in Solvency II ratios across Europe’s largest insurers applies with particular force to Allianz as its balance sheet expands.

EIOPA’s Private Credit Warning and the Systemic Backdrop

Allianz’s SFCR should be read alongside the EIOPA December 2025 Financial Stability Report, which flagged concentration risks in private credit and alternative asset classes across the European insurance sector. EIOPA reported that EEA insurers’ private credit exposure totalled EUR 514bn (5.1% of total assets) at end-2024, with growing concerns about liquidity and secondary-market depth. The CIU wrapper architecture used by Allianz — where PIMCO and AllianzGI fund structures sit in the CIU regulatory bucket — partially obscures the underlying credit and liquidity profile of these investments from standard supervisory dashboards. Regulators reviewing Allianz’s SFCR will need to conduct a look-through analysis of the CIU bucket to assess actual private credit and infrastructure sub-allocations. This is a systemic disclosure adequacy question: the decade’s genuine story is the bond compression; the CIU line in both discontinuity years measures a reporting structure, not a portfolio pivot — and without that distinction clearly communicated in the SFCR itself, analysts and supervisors risk misreading the trajectory. Allianz’s ongoing pan-European expansion, including its advanced talks to acquire Portugal’s Caravela Seguros, adds further portfolio complexity to an already structurally transformed balance sheet.

Mini-FAQ

What are CIUs in a Solvency II context and why did Allianz’s CIU exposure jump so sharply in 2018?
Collective Investment Undertakings (CIUs) are a regulatory asset class under Solvency II’s Delegated Regulation Article 1(40), covering fund structures and collective investment vehicles. Allianz’s CIU line jumped from EUR 19bn to EUR 217bn in 2018 not because the group made a comparable volume of new fund purchases, but because PIMCO and AllianzGI fund subsidiaries were reclassified from “participations” to “CIUs” following a regulatory taxonomy update. The economic portfolio was unchanged; only the reporting category changed.
Is Allianz’s government bond allocation low compared to European insurer peers?
At 12% of Solvency II assets, Allianz’s government bond allocation is among the lowest of Europe’s major insurance groups — roughly half the sector average, which EIOPA estimates at the sector average for large European groups. The compression reflects Allianz’s scale and diversification: as the group’s AUM businesses (PIMCO, AllianzGI) grew and its unit-linked book expanded, the need to hold sovereign bonds as a direct liability-matching instrument diminished relative to the overall balance sheet.
What should analysts do before treating Allianz’s CIU line as an alternative-asset allocation measure?
Analysts should net out the 2018 and 2023 reclassification events before drawing conclusions about alternative-asset accumulation velocity. The genuinely informative data is the look-through to underlying sub-categories (infrastructure debt, private equity, private credit) within the CIU bucket — which Allianz does not fully disclose in the public SFCR. Supplementary data sources include Allianz’s annual report investment appendix and PIMCO/AllianzGI fund-level filings.
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Nicolas Martin

InsuraBeat correspondent

Senior reporter at InsuraBeat covering commercial and property & casualty markets, M&A, and underwriting performance across Europe and North America. Twelve years in the industry: started as an analyst on the broker side at a global reinsurance intermediary placing casualty and specialty risks for European corporates, then five years on the underwriting side at a Tier-1 European insurer, last managing D&O and cyber portfolios. Holds a Master in Reinsurance Economics and Capital Markets from the Kwang-Hwa Institute of Financial Sciences (Taipei) and is a CFA charterholder. Writes from Paris, on US morning markets.

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