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AIA Insurance building pathways for a digitally enabled bancassurance platform with Commercial Bank of Ceylon

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AIA Sri Lanka, a part of AIA Group, World’s Largest Life Insurer (by market capitalisation) entered into a digitally robust bancassurance partnership with Commercial Bank of Ceylon, Sri Lanka’s largest private bank. This partnership combines AIA’s compelling propositions, its digital expertise and proven bancassurance expertise with Commercial Bank’s network of more than 268 branches across Sri Lanka and its valued customer base.

The relationship is intended to go beyond an ordinary bancassurance relationship and facilitate a digitally enabled bancassurance platform. It will offer Commercial Bank’s customers and employees a range of innovative products and an ecosystem of vital financial advice on their protection, long-term savings and retirement planning needs with the best of AIA’s experience and expertise in Asia.

As a pioneer in bancassurance, AIA will apply its in-branch sales expertise, leading point-of-sale technology and broad product range across Commercial Bank’s customer base. Commercial Bank of Ceylon is Sri Lanka’s largest private bank with a customer base that has significant potential to deepen life and health insurance penetration. This will further strengthen AIA’s competitive advantage in the industry.

Both AIA and Commercial Bank are longstanding partners of the International Finance Corporation (IFC). Under the IFC-DFAT Women in Work program, Commercial Bank previously entered into an MOU offering exclusive insurance solutions for the Bank’s Anagi account holders to ensure financial security for women in Sri Lanka.

“We are truly excited to partner as a preferred insurer with Commercial Bank which is the largest private bank in Sri Lanka. Our bancassurance partnership with Commercial Bank brings together two trusted financial institutions with a long history of operating in Sri Lanka to build on the significant progress already achieved and increase the penetration of life and health insurance across Sri Lanka. It is also another timely forward step in our endeavour to provide the bank’s customers with opportunities that add greater protection and value to their lives through our range of need-based insurance solutions,” said Chathuri Munaweera, Chief Executive Officer/ Executive Director of AIA Insurance.

Sanath Manatunge, Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Commercial Bank said, “As Sri Lanka’s largest private bank, our customers come to rely on us to deliver world class products and services that offer value to them. By partnering with Sri Lanka’s best life insurer, we will be able to offer our customers access to high quality, tailored life insurance products and services that offer protection suited to their needs. We are pleased to tie up with AIA Insurance, a trusted company with a strong reputation and are confident that these services will strengthen the relationship with our customers.”

The new partnership arrangements will be implemented initially in Colombo and its suburbs and spread out to all Commercial Bank branches in gradual stages.



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Tea market grappling with headwinds as 2025 comes to an end

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The High and Medium Grown offerings, particularly from the Ex- Estate sector, set a cautious tone. With overall quality described as barely maintained, prices faced downward pressure

As the curtain prepares to fall on Sri Lanka’s tea trading year, the penultimate auction of 2025 has painted a picture of a market grappling with headwinds. The sale, catalogued in the aftermath of the disruptive Cyclone Ditwah, presented 6.0 million kilograms to the trade, but was met with a predominantly bearish sentiment, casting a reflective shadow over the year’s closing.

The High and Medium Grown offerings, particularly from the Ex-Estate sector, set a cautious tone. With overall quality described as barely maintained, prices faced downward pressure. The better liquoring Western BOP/BOPF varieties, often a market bellwether, declined by up to Rs. 50 per kg. This easing trend rippled through the Below Best and Plainer categories, which were often cheaper by Rs. 20-40 per kg. Regional nuances were evident: Nuwara Eliya teas remained sluggish, Uda Pussellawa listings weakened, and Uva varieties were mostly steady only where quality was exceptionally upheld, with others declining. The CTC segment mirrored this fragility, with PF1s generally easier by Rs. 20 per kg, while the very bottom end of the market faced severe challenges, becoming at times unsellable.

This internal market dynamic was compounded by a notable sluggishness in global demand. The report notes a concerning inactivity from traditional buyers in the UK and the European continent. While shippers to Japan, China, the CIS, and the Middle East continued to operate, they did so at lower levels of engagement. Activity from South Africa was described as virtually absent, underscoring a broader pattern of restrained international participation.

In stark contrast to this overarching bearishness, the Low Growns sector emerged as a relative bastion of stability. With approximately 2.45 million kilograms on offer, this category witnessed fair demand across the board. In the Leafy and Semi-Leafy catalogues, Select Best and Best BOP1s held firm, with others even appreciating. Well-made OP1s also generally maintained their ground, though poorer teas at the bottom saw substantial declines. The Tippy and Premium catalogues told a similar story of selectivity, where well-made FBOPs, Very Tippy teas, and the best varieties either held firm or appreciated, while poorer descriptions faced irregular and easier conditions.

The tale of this penultimate sale, therefore, is one of a stark dichotomy. The market narrative bifurcates into a struggling, quality-sensitive mainstream estate sector weighed down by climatic after-effects and muted Western demand, and a more resilient Low Growns market where quality continues to find its price. This divergence highlights the increasingly selective nature of the global tea trade.

As the industry looks toward the final sale and the year’s reckoning, the events of this penultimate auction offer sobering reflection. The impact of Cyclone Ditwah, both real and psychological, coupled with the cautious stance of key international buyers, has applied palpable pressure. Yet, the enduring firmness for the best Low Grown teas provides a counter-note of confidence, suggesting that in an uncertain global environment, uncompromising quality and specific origin characteristics remain Sri Lanka’s most reliable assets. The challenge heading into the new year will be navigating this two-tiered reality.

By Sanath Nanayakkare ✍️

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First Capital to restore 15 acres of forest through partnership with WNPS

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From left: Rapti Dirckze, General Secretary, WNPS; Sriyan de Silva Wijeyeratne, Chairman of WNPS-PLANT; Spencer Manualpillai, Past President, WNPS; Dilshan Wirasekara, Managing Director/CEO, First Capital Holdings PLC; Diluni Danushika, Head - Sustainability and Corporate Reporting, First Capital Holdings PLC and Sashi Schaffter, Vice President - Corporate Finance, First Capital Holdings PLC

First Capital Holdings PLC, a subsidiary of JXG (Janashakthi Group) and Sri Lanka’s pioneering full-service investment institution, announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society (WNPS) through its PLANT initiative (Preserving Land and Nature (Guarantee) Limited) to support a large-scale forest restoration initiative in the central highlands of Sri Lanka.

First Capital’s sustainability journey is anchored in the belief that long-term success stems from empowering people through financial literacy and responsible social and environmental practices. At the heart of our agenda is a commitment to advancing financial stability, enabling individuals and communities to make informed financial decisions, build economic strength and contribute meaningfully to national development.

This core focus is complemented by initiatives in community engagement, climate action, and environmental protection, ensuring a balanced approach to sustainable growth. Aligned with SLFRS S2 and global best practices, we champion programmes that promote inclusive progress, sustainable development and long-term wellbeing across Sri Lanka. By embedding financial literacy and sustainability into our core strategies, we aspire to create a financially empowered and environmentally conscious nation.

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Access Engineering gets contract for 615-unit housing project in Kirulapone

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Minister Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa

The Cabinet of Ministers has approved the proposal presented by Transport, Highways and Urban Development Minister Anura Karunathilake on the recommendation of the Cabinet appointed standing procurement committee to award Access Engineering PLC the contract to build 615 housing units at Colombage Mawatha, Kirulapone, which had been stalled.

On 30 December 2024, the Cabinet of Ministers approved following the relevant procurement process to select a contractor for the design and construction of the remaining works of the project.

“Accordingly, the Urban Development Authority (UDA) has invited bids and four bids have been received,” Cabinet Spokesman and Minister Dr. Nalinda Jayatissa said at the weekly post-Cabinet meeting media briefing yesterday.

He said the Cabinet of Ministers approved awarding  the relevant contract to Access Engineering PLC based on the recommendations submitted by the High Level Standing Procurement Committee regarding these bids.

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