VIG Re Opens Singapore Hub With Wilfrid Goh as Inaugural APAC Chief

VIG Re Opens Singapore Hub With Wilfrid Goh as Inaugural APAC Chief

VIG Re names Wilfrid Goh Chief Representative APAC as it opens a Singapore office under VIGRe28, backed by EUR 995.6m GWP and a 17-year S&P A+ rating.

VIG Re, the Prague-based reinsurance arm of Vienna Insurance Group, is planting its first physical flag in Asia with the opening of a Singapore representative office and the appointment of Wilfrid Goh as its inaugural Chief Representative APAC, effective 1 July 2026, subject to approval by the Monetary Authority of Singapore. The move translates the company’s VIGRe28 three-year strategy of selective market expansion and digitally enabled underwriting growth across Europe and Asia into concrete headcount and a regulated address in the region’s pre-eminent reinsurance hub. For a Central and Eastern European reinsurer that has historically operated Asia from its Prague headquarters, the Singapore office signals a deliberate shift toward proximity-led client service in a market it can no longer afford to manage from a distance.

Why Singapore, and Why Now

The choice of Singapore as VIG Re’s first Asian beachhead is not incidental. VIG Re is already listed as an Ordinary Member of the Singapore Reinsurers’ Association, giving the company an existing institutional footprint to convert into a licensed operating presence. The city-state concentrates the treaty underwriting desks of every major global reinsurer, and Monetary Authority of Singapore licensing carries credibility throughout Southeast Asia and India — both markets where VIG Re has historically been active but under-staffed locally.

Timing matters too. After absorbing the elevated loss activity of 2025, when VIG Re’s net combined ratio stood at 85.7% — a figure that demonstrates strong technical discipline but also reflects a year of pricing leverage across catastrophe-exposed territories — management is deploying the resulting capital confidence into geographic expansion rather than share buybacks or dividend uplift alone. With gross written premium of EUR 995.6 million in 2025, up 1.3% year-on-year, the company has the scale to justify a dedicated regional office without over-extending its balance sheet. The Singapore move arrives at an inflection point for Asia’s reinsurance sector: governments across ASEAN are deepening their investments in parametric covers, climate resilience programmes, and infrastructure risk transfer — precisely the categories where a public-sector specialist like Goh can open doors that a visiting underwriter from Prague could not.

This strategy echoes moves by other mid-tier European reinsurers to anchor themselves in Southeast Asia. MNRB’s Labuan Re has been pursuing a parallel Asia reinsurance push through a dedicated Malaysian offshore vehicle, signalling that the region’s growth premium is attracting a broader set of players beyond the traditional London and Zurich names.

What Goh’s Public-Sector Pedigree Signals

Before joining VIG Re he ran public-sector risk solutions for Asia outside China at the same reinsurer, a remit centred on partnerships with governments and other state-backed buyers — the trajectory set out in the appointment announcement. That public-sector orientation is precisely what VIG Re wants to import into a market where sovereign and infrastructure cedants are scaling fast.

His technical credentials are equally well-suited to the markets VIG Re is targeting. His underwriting base sits in property and engineering treaties, broadened by marine, casualty and structured covers placed across the Southeast Asian and Indian markets — the segments named in the appointment release. Property cat and engineering lines are the primary risk-transfer mechanisms for the infrastructure build-out underway across ASEAN economies. A specialist in these lines, with an existing network of government counterparties from his Swiss Re years, gives VIG Re a credible entry point beyond the plain-vanilla proportional treaty business that most new entrants start with.

Goh arrives with more than two decades underwriting reinsurance across Asian markets, a career weighted toward treaty business and the long-run cedant relationships that decide where capacity flows in this region — as set out in the Prague-based reinsurer’s appointment announcement. He reports to Marc Haushofer, who runs the group’s Asia-Pacific book, a line that keeps the Singapore office wired into Prague’s underwriting authority while giving Goh room to cultivate local partnerships.

The hire is consistent with a wider pattern of CEE-rooted reinsurers recruiting laterally from Swiss Re and Munich Re alumni networks to accelerate their Asian market entry. Gallagher Re’s APAC cyber reinsurance build-out, anchored by a similarly high-profile lateral hire, illustrates how specialist credentials from a major reinsurer can shorten the credibility curve for a brand that Asia-based cedants are still learning to place.

The CEE Reinsurer’s Numbers Behind the Bet

VIG Re’s financials for 2025 — EUR 995.6 million in gross written premium, up 1.3% year-on-year — suggest a company operating in controlled-growth mode rather than top-line acceleration. But the profit story is more compelling. Pre-tax profit came in at EUR 49.0 million for 2025 — a 17.8% year-on-year rise — while return on equity reached 10.2%, per the 2025 results statement. That ROE improvement, delivered in a year of elevated global catastrophe activity, validates the disciplined combined ratio management that has been a hallmark of the company’s CEE-centric underwriting philosophy.

The portfolio diversification story is also evolving. In 2025, 63% of VIG Re’s Assumed Risk premium originated from third-party business, with 37% attributable to VIG Group companies; the company serviced around 660 insurance companies in almost 70 countries. That external-business ratio — nearly two-thirds third-party — distinguishes VIG Re from captive reinsurers and gives it genuine market credentials when approaching Asian cedants who rightly question whether a group reinsurer will prioritise their interests over its parent’s.

The S&P rating anchors the commercial proposition. VIG Re served more than 650 clients in nearly 70 countries in 2025, maintaining an S&P A+ financial strength rating with positive outlook. Established in 2008, the company has held that A+ rating since 2009 — a 17-year track record of rating stability that many newer entrants cannot match. In a market where Asian cedants increasingly require counterparty ratings above A as a condition of placement, that longevity is a tangible commercial advantage.

The strategic framing from Prague is equally clear. CEO Tobias Sonndorfer has described VIGRe28 as building on a solid foundation, strengthening the core, expanding with intent, and accelerating impact through data, technology, and people. Singapore is where the “expanding with intent” clause gets operationalised. According to the VIG Re 2025 financial results press release, the company’s strategic ambitions explicitly name Asia as a target for deepened client partnerships alongside its core European base.

Singapore as a Gateway: Regulatory Logic and Regional Reach

VIG Re describes the Singapore office as a key milestone in the company’s local presence in Asia, with Goh acting as liaison between the representative office and the headquarters in Prague. That liaison function is operationally significant: it means Singapore will serve as the client-facing front end while underwriting authority and capacity remain in Prague. This hub-and-spoke model — increasingly common among European reinsurers entering Asia — allows the company to benefit from MAS regulatory imprimatur without the capital commitment of a full branch or subsidiary.

For Asia-Pacific cedants, VIG Re’s move adds a new name to an already competitive Singapore marketplace. The Singapore Reinsurers’ Association member roster lists the full ecosystem of players already operating from the city-state, a roster that now formally includes VIG Re as it converts its market membership into a physical presence. The competitive environment is well-documented: Saudi Re’s recent GIFT City foray showed how reinsurers willing to commit local capital can secure preferential market access, a lesson Saudi Re demonstrated with its GIFT City hub anchored by senior leadership in a strategy that mirrors VIG Re’s Singapore play.

The official VIG Re press release announcing Wilfrid Goh’s appointment frames the Singapore hub explicitly within the VIGRe28 growth agenda, tying the hire to the company’s stated intention to deepen its footprint in Asia with locally embedded expertise rather than episodic market visits.

Mini-FAQ

What is VIG Re’s financial strength rating and how does it affect its APAC market entry?
VIG Re carries an S&P A+ financial strength rating with positive outlook, a status it has maintained since 2009, the year after the company was established in 2008. In Asian reinsurance markets where cedants increasingly apply minimum rating thresholds of A or better as a condition of placement, this 17-year rating consistency gives VIG Re a measurable competitive advantage over newer entrants or unrated regional players.
Why was Wilfrid Goh chosen to lead VIG Re’s Singapore office?
Goh brings over 20 years of reinsurance experience across Asia and most recently led Swiss Re’s Public Sector Solutions for Asia (excluding China), a role that built government and sovereign risk partnerships across the region. His technical base in property and engineering treaty underwriting across Southeast Asia and India aligns directly with the infrastructure-heavy risk transfer demand VIG Re is targeting through its VIGRe28 strategy.
What does the Singapore office mean for VIG Re’s existing Asian clients?
The Singapore representative office serves as a local liaison point between Asian cedants and VIG Re’s Prague underwriting hub, a structure described by the company itself as a key milestone in its local presence in Asia. For existing clients across Southeast Asia and India, it means access to a locally embedded senior representative with underwriting authority proximity, rather than managing the relationship across time zones. New cedants can now evaluate VIG Re through a MAS-regulated local entity rather than a remote counterparty.

Sources

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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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