Turning Point for Confidence in South Africa’s Economy and Its Insurance Sector27 January 2026

I joined Mutual & Federal (now Old Mutual Insure) as a young 22-year-old junior underwriter shortly after the September 11 terror attacks, an event that fundamentally reshaped global risk perception and capital flows. Confidence evaporated almost overnight, and it took years to rebuild. Today, South Africa’s financial sector, particularly its insurance industry, stands at a comparable inflection point. What makes this moment distinctive is that confidence is rebuilding at the same time as the industry is being reshaped by artificial intelligence. This convergence marks a genuine turning point.

Insurance is both a mirror and an enabler of economic momentum, and the signals coming through the market are materially changing. Previously constrained risks are returning as energy supply and logistics stabilise. Long-duration capital is re-entering infrastructure, renewables, water, ports and transport corridors, all of which require deep insurance capacity. Reinsurance sentiment toward South Africa, which had been steadily weakening, has shifted to cautious stabilisation.

This shift matters because the insurance sector does not function on sentiment alone; it functions on balance sheets. Strong prudential oversight over the past decade has preserved capital resilience across the industry. That stability now enables controlled expansion at precisely the moment confidence begins to return.

At the same time, this economic turning point is unfolding in parallel with the rapid acceleration of artificial intelligence across the insurance value chain. South African insurers are embedding AI into claims settlement, fraud detection, predictive underwriting, customer-experience optimisation and catastrophe modelling. The efficiency gains are undeniable. But in emerging markets, especially, AI must serve more than automation. It must enhance fairness, transparency and access. Explainable models, bias controls and strong data governance will increasingly define competitive trust. Global capital (investment) does not simply seek advanced technology—it seeks governed innovation. This is where South Africa has a strategic opportunity.From a macroeconomic perspective, the green shoots are becoming harder to dismiss. Inflation has moderated relative to many global peers. Fiscal discipline has strengthened under sustained pressure. Most importantly, energy availability—long the economy’s defining constraint- has stabilised through unprecedented private-sector generation and ongoing grid reform.

For the insurance industry, these are not abstract improvements. Energy reliability directly reduces business-interruption exposure. Improved freight movement reshapes marine and transport risk. Municipal stabilisation strengthens property risk profiles. Each of these recalibrates the national risk map.

Capital is responding cautiously but decisively. Offshore inflows into bonds and selective infrastructure equity are no longer sporadic. Development finance institutions and globally aligned capital have increasingly pointed to South Africa’s reform momentum as central to medium-term growth stabilisation. This is no longer a purely domestic vote of confidence.

Yet South Africa’s real turning points have never been driven by data alone. They begin in psychology. Corporate language is shifting from survival to strategy. Entrepreneurial activity—particularly in energy, logistics, agri-processing and fintech—is quietly accelerating. Consumers are cautiously re-engaging with long-delayed upgrades to homes, vehicles and businesses.

At the centre of this renewal lies trust, the foundation of insurance itself. Without trust in claims settlements, regulatory frameworks and institutional integrity, insurance loses its catalytic role in economic development. With trust, it becomes a powerful enabler of growth.

South Africa has been here before. Ahead of the 2010 World Cup, scepticism was widespread. Infrastructure delivery, security and transport capacity were openly questioned. What followed was one of the most ambitious infrastructure mobilisations in national history—delivered largely on time and at scale. For the insurance sector, it proved that South Africa could underwrite and manage mega-project risk to global standards.

A similar renewal arc later played out in sport. In 2017, the Springboks were struggling with poor results and internal instability. Two Rugby World Cup titles later, the recovery stands as a powerful reminder that turning points are not built on optimism alone. They rest on leadership, governance, accountability and long-term system building. Economies and financial systems turn the same way.

For much of the past decade, South African business strategy has been defensive. Turning points allow a different posture to emerge. For insurers, that means expanding confidently into infrastructure, energy and logistics; designing products for climate volatility, cyber risk and supply-chain disruption; and treating data and AI as strategic balance-sheet assets rather than operational tools alone.

Perhaps the most decisive indicator of all is the quiet return of belief. It is visible not in slogans, but in underwriting appetite, capital deployment and investment horizons. Belief does not replace policy or eliminate risk. But without it, no reform, fiscal adjustment or technological advance can function at scale.

South Africa’s financial sector now stands at a rare inflection point. where stabilising fundamentals meet rising confidence, and where responsible innovation meets renewed global engagement. For the insurance industry, this is not simply a phase to observe. It is a moment to lead.

Turning points rarely announce themselves. They are recognised only in hindsight—by those who were prepared to commit while confidence was still fragile. South Africa is turning. And yes, the South African insurance sector is ready to underwrite and insure what comes next.

Old Mutual Insure Limited, Registration Number 1970/006619/06.  A licensed FSP and Non-Life Insurer.