Saudi Re has appointed Ruchi Jain as Principal Officer of its Insurance International Office (IIO) at GIFT City, India, with her role effective from May 2026. Jain previously served as Vice President and Senior Client Underwriter at Swiss Re for over a decade, bringing both market-facing underwriting depth and the institutional credibility that GIFT City’s competitive IIO marketplace now demands. Saudi Re obtained its IFSCA and Saudi regulatory approvals in January 2026, meaning the appointment completes a five-month operational sequence from licence to staffed platform — an execution pace that reflects how seriously Riyadh’s flagship reinsurer is treating the India corridor.
Saudi Re’s India Rationale: A Top-Ten Global Market Now Open to Foreign Capital
India’s total insurance premiums exceed USD 130 billion, placing the country among the world’s top ten insurance markets. The regulatory framework has been evolving rapidly to accommodate foreign reinsurance capital: the 2023 amendment to the IRDAI (Re-insurance) Regulations elevated IIOs to the same order-of-preference category as Foreign Reinsurance Branches — just below GIC Re — sharply improving their access to cessions from Indian cedants. India’s FDI cap removal, passed in December 2025 and effective from February 2026, further cemented the regulatory pivot. For Saudi Re, the timing is aligned with a broader geographic diversification already underway: Asia accounts for 22% of Saudi Re’s business portfolio, and the GIFT City branch is its second Asian branch, following the Malaysia branch established in 2014. CEO Ahmed Al-Jabr stated at the launch: “We are delighted to strengthen our presence in the Asian markets with the opening of a branch in India, where the Company has been operating for over ten years.”
The Numbers That Make the India Play Strategic, Not Symbolic
Saudi Re’s financial profile supports an ambitious GIFT City strategy. The company’s paid-up capital stands at SAR 1.7 billion (USD 453 million) — described as the largest paid-up capital in MENA — and it operates in more than 40 markets across the Middle East, Asia, and Africa. Growth has been rapid: the company reported SAR 140 million in full-year 2025 net profit with a 48% increase in revenue, while Q1 2026 gross written premiums of SAR 2.38 billion marked a 37% year-on-year increase. The pace of expansion — including Jain’s appointment from a tier-1 Swiss Re underwriting desk — signals that the India IIO is not a flag-planting exercise: it is a capacity deployment vehicle for a reinsurer whose Gulf-region growth momentum has put it in direct competition with Munich Re, Swiss Re, and Hannover Re for South Asian cedant relationships.
GIFT City’s Reinsurance Surge: Eleven Times the Volume in Five Years
The underlying market data validates the competitive intensity. GIFT City insurance and reinsurance volumes reached USD 1.2 billion in FY2024-25, up from USD 102 million in FY2019-20 — more than an 11-fold increase in five fiscal years. The pace is accelerating: the number of Insurance Offices at GIFT City stood at 36 as of March 2026, up from 24 in December 2025, adding 12 entities in a single quarter. At the premium level, IFSCA quarterly data shows that reinsurance gross written premiums at GIFT City reached USD 607.96 million in FY2025-26, up from USD 147.13 million the prior year — a 4x annual jump that outpaces even the most optimistic market projections from 2022. Saudi Re is arriving into a marketplace already in explosive growth mode. The reinsurer’s entry joins a simultaneous MENA cluster: Kuwait Re, ADNIC, Qatar Re, and Doha Re have all established or activated GIFT City IIO presence in the same six-month window, transforming what was a regulatory opportunity into a fully institutionalised GCC-India reinsurance corridor. For context on how Asia-Pacific hub competition is playing out, see our coverage of MNRB Berhad’s Labuan Re strategy, which anchors a parallel Southeast Asian hub-building approach.
The Sovereign Dimension: Why Saudi Re’s GIFT City Play Is Also Economic Diplomacy
Saudi Re’s majority shareholder is the Public Investment Fund (PIF), which is simultaneously a co-investor in Indian infrastructure through Vision 2030 bilateral corridors. The GIFT City IIO is therefore as much a sovereign economic diplomacy asset as it is a technical underwriting platform — a dual purpose that justifies capital and talent deployment at a scale that commercial return alone might not warrant in the near term. Ruchi Jain’s mandate, per Saudi Re’s official statement, includes not only client underwriting but “expand[ing] Saudi Re’s footprint across the Asian markets” — language that signals the GIFT City branch as a regional hub, not a bilateral operation. As GIFT City’s IIO cluster deepens beyond the current 36 offices, it is progressively replacing Lloyd’s and Singapore as the institutional addressee for Indian cedant relationships seeking international reinsurance capacity. The Saudi Re appointment is one data point in a structural reorientation of the global reinsurance supply chain toward South Asia.