Annual Report • Apr 5, 2023
Annual Report
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The official document containing the 2022 Consolidated Financial Statements, accompanied by the Management Report, prepared according to the technical requirements of Regulation (EU) 815/2019 (European Single Electronic Reporting Format - ESEF), is available, in accordance with the law, on the company's website (www.unipolsai.com).
This document in PDF format provides the text of the 2022 Consolidated Financial Statements, accompanied by the related Management Report, for ease of reading.
Translation from the Italian original solely for the convenience of international readers
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| Contents | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Company bodies | 7 |
|---|---|
| Introduction | 8 |
| Macroeconomic background and market performance | 8 |
| Main regulatory developments | 12 |
Consolidation Scope at 31 December 2022 17
| 1.Management Report | 19 |
|---|---|
| Group highlights | 20 |
| Management Report | 22 |
| Significant events during the year | 22 |
| Operating performance | 30 |
| Salient aspects of business operations | 32 |
| Insurance Sector | 36 |
| Real Estate Sector | 48 |
| Other Businesses Sector | 49 |
| Asset and financial management | 50 |
| Shareholders' equity | 53 |
| Technical provisions and financial liabilities | 55 |
| Other information | 56 |
| Sustainability | 56 |
| Human Resources | 57 |
| Group sales network | 58 |
| IT services | 58 |
| Transactions with related parties | 59 |
| Report on corporate governance and ownership structures |
pursuant to Art. 123-bis of Italian Legislative Decree 58 of 24 February 1998 59 Statement pursuant to Art. 2.6.2, paragraph 8 of the Regulation
governing markets organised and managed by Borsa Italiana SpA 60
| Significant events after the reporting period | 61 |
|---|---|
| Business outlook | 63 |
2.Consolidated Financial Statements at 31 December 2022 Tables of Consolidated Financial Statements 65 Statement of Financial Position 66 Income Statement 68
Comprehensive Income Statement 69
| Statement of Cash Flows (indirect method) | 71 |
|---|---|
| 3.Notes to the Financial Statements | 73 |
| 1. Basis of presentation | 74 |
| 2. Main accounting standards | 83 |
| 3. Notes to the Statement of Financial Position | 117 |
| 4. Notes to the Income Statement | 129 |
| 5. Other information | 135 |
| 5.1 Hedge Accounting | 135 |
| 5.2 Information relating to the actual or potential effects of netting agreements |
136 |
| 5.3 Earnings (loss) per share | 137 |
| 5.4 Dividends | 137 |
| 5.5 Non-current assets or assets of a disposal group held for sale 137 | |
| 5.6 Transactions with related parties | 139 |
| 5.7 Fair value measurements – IFRS 13 | 145 |
| 5.8 Information on personnel | 148 |
| 5.9 Information on public funds received | 150 |
| 5.10 Non-recurring significant transactions and events | 150 |
| 5.11 Atypical and/or unusual positions or transactions | 150 |
| 5.12 Additional information on the temporary exemption from IFRS 9 |
151 |
| 5.13 Criteria to determine the recoverable amount of goodwill with an indefinite useful life (impairment test) |
153 |
| 5.14 Notes on Non-Life business | 156 |
| 5.15 Notes on Life business | 159 |
| 5.16 Risk Report | 160 |
Statement of Changes in Shareholders' Equity 70
| 4.Tables appended to the Notes to the Financial | |
|---|---|
| Statements | 183 |
| Consolidation scope | 184 |
| Consolidation scope: interests in entities with material non controlling interests |
188 |
| Details of unconsolidated investments | 188 |
| Statement of financial position by business segment | 190 |
| Income statement by business segment | 192 |
| Details of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets | 194 |
| Details of financial assets | 194 |
| Details of assets and liabilities relating to insurance contracts where the investment risk is borne by policyholders and arising from pension fund management |
196 |
| Details of technical provisions – reinsurers' share | 197 |
| Details of technical provisions | 197 |
| Details of financial liabilities | 198 |

| Details of technical insurance items | 199 |
|---|---|
| Investment income and charges | 200 |
| Details of insurance business expenses | 201 |
| Details of other consolidated comprehensive income | 202 |
| Assets and liabilities at fair value on a recurring and non-recurring basis: breakdown by fair value level |
204 |
| Details of changes in level 3 assets and liabilities at fair value on a recurring basis |
205 |
| Assets and liabilities not measured at fair value: breakdown by fair value level |
206 |
| 5.Statement on the Consolidated Financial Statements Art.81-ter, Consob Regulation no.11971/1999 |
209 |
| 6.Summary of fees for the year for services provided by the Independent Auditors |
213 |


| BOARD OF DIRECTORS | CHAIRMAN | Carlo Cimbri | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VICE CHAIRMAN | Fabio Cerchiai | |||
| CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER | Matteo Laterza | |||
| DIRECTORS | Bernabò Bocca | Jean Francois Mossino | ||
| Stefano Caselli | Milo Pacchioni | |||
| Mara Anna Rita Caverni | Paolo Pietro Silvio Peveraro | |||
| Giusella Dolores Finocchiaro | Daniela Preite | |||
| Rossella Locatelli | Elisabetta Righini | |||
| Maria Paola Merloni | Antonio Rizzi | |||
| SECRETARY OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS |
Alessandro Nerdi | |||
| BOARD OF STATUTORY AUDITORS |
CHAIRMAN | Cesare Conti | ||
| STATUTORY AUDITORS | Silvia Bocci | |||
| Angelo Mario Giudici | ||||
| ALTERNATE AUDITORS | Sara Fornasiero | |||
| Luciana Ravicini | ||||
| Roberto Tieghi | ||||
| MANAGER IN CHARGE OF FINANCIAL REPORTING |
Luca Zaccherini | |||
| INDEPENDENT AUDITORS | EYSpA |

2022
In 2022, global GDP was estimated to have grown by 3.1% compared to +6.1% in 2021. The slowdown in economic growth was affected in particular by the intensification of inflationary pressures that had initially emerged with the reopening of production activities after the most acute phase of the pandemic and later exacerbated by the conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Another factor that led to the slowdown was the decline in global trade, mainly due to supply chain disruptions and China's "zero-Covid" policy.
In the United States, GDP increased by 2.1% in 2022, compared to +5.9% in 2021. However, in the first and second quarters, the reduction in trade with China led the US into recession. In fact, in the first quarter, GDP fell by 0.4% compared to the previous quarter, while in the second quarter it decreased by 0.1% compared to the first quarter. During the third quarter, on the other hand, there was a return to growth (+0.8% compared to the second quarter), which continued in the fourth quarter as well (+0.7% compared to the third quarter), mainly due to the recovery in trade and the growth in private consumption. The good economic performance was also reflected in the labour market, with an average unemployment rate of 3.7% in 2022 (5.4% in 2021). Growth occurred despite the negative effects of the sharp increase in the inflation rate, which in 2022 averaged 8.0%, prompting the Fed to adopt a highly restrictive monetary policy, raising interest rates and starting a process of downsizing its bond portfolio.
In China, GDP grew by 3.0% in 2022, a figure significantly lower, by 6.1%, than in 2021, mainly due to the low level of domestic demand deriving in turn from the "zero-Covid" policy, entailing restrictions on mobility and economic activity aimed at containing the Covid-19 pandemic. In this context, the average unemployment rate in 2022 was 5.6%, while the average annual inflation rate was 2%. In addition, in 2022 the Chinese economy grew less than the emerging countries bloc, which achieved estimated growth of 3.6%.
In Japan, average estimated GDP growth for 2022 was 1.3%. Japanese growth was negatively affected (especially in the first and third quarter) by trends in global trade and uncertain epidemic development. In this context, the unemployment rate remained stable at an average of 2.6% per year, while the inflation rate rose to 2.5%, a value higher than the 2021 deflation (-0.2%), but this did not change the Bank of Japan's expansionary monetary policy tone.
In the Euro Area, GDP rose by 3.4% in 2022 (+5.3% in 2021). After the growth in the first and second quarters (+0.6% and +0.8% on the respective previous quarters), the GDP growth rate in the third quarter (+0.3% on the second quarter) and in the fourth quarter (+0.1% on the third quarter) decreased mainly due to the effects of the energy crisis, in turn a consequence of the war between Russia and Ukraine. The energy crisis has, in fact, led to a sharp increase in the inflation rate, equal to an annual average of 8.4%, thus prompting the ECB to adopt a restrictive monetary policy characterised by rising policy rates and the interruption of its bond buying programmes (Quantitative easing). Despite the economic slowdown, the labour market continued to improve during the year, with an average unemployment rate of 6.7% in 2022 compared to 7.7% in 2021.
Italian GDP grew by 3.9% in 2022. After a first quarter of weak growth (+0.1% compared to the previous quarter), the GDP trend improved in the second quarter (+1.1% compared to the first quarter) and the third quarter (+0.5% compared to the second quarter) thanks to the positive results of consumption and investments. During the fourth quarter, however, GDP fell by 0.1% due to the sharp increase in the inflation rate, as a result of the energy crisis and, in particular, Italy's strong exposure to natural gas imports. In fact, while the average annual inflation rate was 8.2% (a value comparable to that of the Euro Area), during the year it increased to an average of 12.3% in the fourth quarter. Despite a slowdown in the cycle and inflationary pressures, the unemployment rate averaged 8.1%, down sharply compared to 2021 when it was 9.5%.

In 2022, the main central banks adopted restrictive policies in order to contain inflationary pressures in the Eurozone. The Fed has raised the Fed funds rate by 425 basis points since the beginning of the year, also embarking upon a process of downsizing the portfolio of securities purchased during the various quantitative easing programmes. Likewise, the ECB again raised monetary policy rates, bringing the deposit rate back into positive territory (to 2% at the end of 2022, from -0.5% at the end of 2021) and the main refinancing operations rate (refi) to 2.5% at the end of 2022, after a long period of expansionary policies. The ECB also interrupted its bond buying programme and made its targeted refinancing operations (TLTRO-III) more restrictive.
The restrictive action of the ECB drove up all European interest rate curves, especially on long maturities. The 3-month Euribor rate closed 2022 with a sharp rise to 2.13%, up by around 270 basis points compared to the figures at the end of 2021, while the 10-year Swap rate increased during the same period by roughly 290 basis points, closing 2022 at 3.20%.
The expectation of a more restrictive ECB monetary policy also supported government interest rates in the main Euro Area countries. In Germany, the 10-year Bund closed 2022 at 2.54%, up by around 270 basis points on the values at the end of 2021, whilst in Italy the 10-year BTP closed 2022 at 4.65%, up 346 basis points. The 10-year spread between Italian and German rates was therefore 211 basis points at the end of 2022, up by 76 basis points compared to the end of 2021.
2022 ended negatively for the European stock markets. The Eurostoxx 50 index, referring to the Euro Area indexes, showed a reduction of 11.7% in 2022 compared to the values at the end of 2021. The FTSE Mib index, referring to Italian listed companies, recorded a decline of 13.3% in the same period. Lastly, the DAX index, referring to German listed companies, closed 2022 down by 12.3% compared to December 2021.
The Fed's restrictive approach has had a significant impact on US stock indexes. In fact, the S&P 500 index closed 2022 down by 19.4% compared to the values at the end of 2021. The expansion of interest rate spreads between the United States and the Euro Area favoured the appreciation of the US dollar against the euro, with the euro/dollar exchange rate closing 2022 at 1.07 dollars to the euro compared to 1.13 at the end of 2021.
International stock markets also saw a sharp decline in 2022: the Nikkei stock index, referring to listed companies in Japan, closed 2022 with a loss of 9.37% compared to December 2021, while the Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets index, referring to emerging markets, recorded an even more significant decline in 2022 of -22.4%.
The final figures reported for the third quarter of 2022 show premiums in the Italian and non-EU direct business insurance market of approximately €94.9bn, down 7.4% compared to the third quarter of 2021. These economic trends would translate into a decline for 2022 of around 8.0% compared to the previous year, with total premiums close to €129bn.
In the third quarter of 2022, Italian and non-EU direct premiums for the Non-Life business increased by 4.8% compared to the same quarter of 2021. Therefore, 2022 is expected to close with growth of approximately 4.4% compared to 2021, with premiums expected to exceed €35.5bn.
In the MV sector, consisting of the MV TPL, Marine Vessels TPL and Land Vehicle Hulls classes, premiums are forecast to be down by 0.4% compared to the same period of the previous year, penalised by the expected negative performance of MV TPL + Marine Vessels TPL (-1.6%), while an expansionary trend is expected in the Land Vehicle Hulls component (+3.7%). The decline in MV TPL premiums is partly explained by the decrease in the average MV TPL premium, which decreased by 2.8% to €310 compared to €319 in the previous year (ANIA figure for the third quarter of 2022), consistent with ISTAT values down by 0.2%. With regard to the Non-Life Non-MV classes, at the end of 2022 the segment should record an increase of approximately 8.2% (Health +11.6%, Property +7.6%, General TPL +9.5%).
During 2022, the MV sector agency channel is expected to record premiums up by approximately 0.2% compared to 2021 and an overall weight of approximately 83.6%, while a significant reduction is expected in the Direct channel (-3.4%) and Brokers (-4.4%), with a milder contraction in the banking channel (-1.5%).
In the Non-MV sector on the other hand, premiums are expected to increase across all channels. The most significant increase in premiums is expected from the banking channel (+21.3%), followed by the broker channel (+9.8%): for the agency channel, growth should be 5.7%.
Italian and Non-EU Direct Life premiums, according to ANIA estimates, should decrease in 2022 by around 11% compared to the end of 2021, due to the reduction in Class III (-27.4%) and Class I (-2.7%) premiums. On the other hand, premiums for Classes IV, V and VI should increase (+25.0%, +7.5% and +33.4%, respectively), reaching approximately €4.7bn in total (+24.6%).
The breakdown of Life business premiums by distribution channel in 2022 should remain strongly skewed towards the banking channel, with a share of 57% of total premiums (despite a reduction in premiums of approximately 8.5%, in line with the contraction seen in the entire sector). The other channels should reach a share close to 14%, with the Broker and Direct channels bucking the trend, with premiums up by 0.3%.
In 2022, net deposits of assets under management (mutual funds, individual asset management, collective and individual pension plans) amounted to around €19.8bn, of which €15.5bn referring to collective management (open and closed funds) and €4.3bn in net deposits for portfolio management.
In the third quarter of 2022, net deposits of pension assets amounted to approximately €1.7bn, down sharply compared to the €2.2bn of net deposits recorded in the same quarter of the previous year. The assets managed by pension funds and individual pension plans therefore amounted to €99.2bn at the end of the third quarter of 2022 and represented 4.5% of total assets under management, down by 2.5% compared to the second quarter of 2022, continuing with the negative trend observed during the year.
In 2022, existing positions with supplementary pension schemes, reported by Covip, increased by 564 thousand units compared to the end of 2021. The 5.8% increase recorded at the end of the year confirms the upward trend observed in recent periods. In December 2022, there were therefore 10.3m existing positions, of which 7.5m held by employees (73.1%).
In December 2022, Covip recorded growth of 10.1% for occupational funds, with 349k more positions, for a total of €3.8m at year end, for which contributions were up by 4.5%. This growth is sustained, in particular, by the contribution of contractual enrolments, both in the private sector, which provides for nearly automatic subscription by new hires, incentivised by a minimum employer contribution (which contributed about 200k positions), and in the public sector, with the introduction of automatic registration for new public employees (about 80k positions). Market pension schemes were also up compared to the end of 2021, with an increase in existing positions of open funds (+6.1%) and "new" Personal Pension Funds (PiPs) (+2.3%) and an increase in contributions of 7.8% and 2.0% on an annual basis. The latest data available for pre-existing pension funds, based on the data available as at September 2022, show an increase in the number of positions of 4.0%.
The resources allocated to supplementary pension benefits were down by 3.6% at the end of 2022, i.e. equal to approximately €205bn compared to €213bn recorded in December 2021, due to capital losses linked to the performance of the financial markets and despite the overall increase in contributions. As regards yields at the end of 2022, there was a net one-year return of -9.8% for occupational funds, -10.7% for open funds and -11.5% for "new" unit-linked PiPs, while a slightly positive return was recorded for the segregated fund component of "new" PiPs (1.1%). Segregated fund assets are accounted for at historical cost and not at market values and the returns largely depend on the coupons collected on the securities held. All one-year returns are significantly below the revaluation threshold of post-employment benefits which, driven by strong inflationary pressure, recorded a return of approximately 8.3% at the end of 2022.
According to the Italian Tax Authorities Real Estate Market Observatory, in 2022 the growth in home sales has slowed down to 5.8%, after the exceptional figure of 2021 (+34.2%), due to both tax incentives for renovations and stricter credit access conditions. In fact, due to the sudden hike in ECB policy rates and the resulting increase in the cost of credit for households, after more than 400k sales were made in the first half of 2022, an initial decline was observed in the second half of the year (-2.4% on the first half).
As reported by Nomisma, for the 13 major cities, prices of existing homes further increased by 2.8% in 2022, after growth of 1.0% recorded in 2021. Growth was widespread in all Italian cities, with particularly positive performance in Milan (5.8%), Bologna (4.3%), Rome (3.8%) and Florence (3.7%). Rents, up by 1.1% in 2022, did not show the same expansionary drive as prices, lowering cap rates and the overall attractiveness of the market. Furthermore, given high inflation, the home price growth rate is lower than the average growth in the consumption deflator (on average equal to 7.0%), again entailing a decline in home values in real terms.

In 2022, sales in the non-residential sector also recorded a slowdown in growth to +7.1% (+38.2% in 2021). Overall, in 2022, growth was highest for the production sector (+12.1%), followed by offices (+8.1%) and lastly by stores (+5.1%). The recovery had less positive repercussions on the prices of non-residential properties than those observed for homes. In fact, the office price cycle, which had started its expansionary phase in the second half of 2020 after declining for 24 half-year periods, was reversed in the second half of 2022, recording a drop compared to the first half of the year, while that of stores has continued to decline for the last 28 half-year periods. Therefore, in 2022, both office and store prices recorded zero growth compared to 2021. However, price dispersion was high amongst the major Italian cities in 2022: prices were still down in Catania (-1.7%), Genoa (-0.7%), Venice (-0.6%), Padua (-0.3%) and Turin (-0.2%) as regards offices and in Palermo (-1.2%), Genoa (-1.0%), Padua (-0.8%), Catania (-0.7%) and Florence (-0.6%) for stores. On the other hand, sustained growth rates were observed in Milan for both segments (+2.3% for offices and +3.1% for stores). In addition, on average in the 13 major cities, in 2022 office cap rates were up compared to 2021 thanks to a growth, albeit modest, in rents (+0.2%) while, for stores and homes, the drop in rents (-0.8%) led to a reduction in cap rates.

In 2022, the reference regulatory framework for the sectors in which the Group carries on business saw numerous innovations.
The main regulatory change for the insurance sector was IVASS Measure no. 121/2022, which modified the financial statement layouts contained in ISVAP Regulation no. 7/2007 to adjust domestic regulations to the provisions of Regulation (EU) 2021/2036 on IFRS 17, which applies to accounting periods from 1 January 2023 onwards. IFRS 17 is profoundly discontinuous with respect to IFRS 4 in terms of the methods for measuring and recognising profits from insurance contracts, especially in the Life business, introducing a market-consistent approach inspired by Solvency II and valuation methodologies based on embedded value, also in order to increase the transparency and comparability of accounting information.
On 14 December 2022, Regulation (EU) 2022/2554 on digital operational resilience for the financial sector (DORA) was approved, which introduces harmonised requirements for companies operating in the financial sector (including insurance companies) in terms of the overall management of ICT risk, ICT system resilience testing and management, classification and reporting of ICT incidents. In essence, DORA enhances the ICT risk management requirements already established by certain sector regulations and extends them to a broad range of entities, including larger insurance intermediaries, institutions for occupational retirement provision, alternative investment fund managers and ICT service providers. One of DORA's main innovations concerns the introduction of supervisory and sanctioning powers also with respect to critical third-party providers of ICT services, which will be obliged to comply with the provisions of DORA and have a stable presence in the European Union. DORA enters into force on 16 January 2023 and will apply from 17 January 2025.
At the level of primary Italian legislation, on 8 August 2022 Italian Legislative Decree no. 114/2022 was published in the Official Gazette. It contains the implementing provisions for Regulation (EU) 2019/1238 on a pan-European Personal Pension Product (PEPP), which represents a new type of personal pension product intended for residents in the European Economic Area, envisaging the option for a taxpayer changing their country of residence to pay contributions to a sub-account in the new country of residence or to continue paying contributions to the sub-account of the previous country of residence (portability of the PEPP). While the European Regulation sets forth the general rules relating to the authorisation phase, the investment policy and the portability of the PEPP at European level, Italian Legislative Decree no. 114/2022 identifies the competent national authorities, establishes the conditions relating to the phase of accumulation and disbursement of benefits and defines the tax treatment applicable to the national PEPP sub-accounts. In particular, note that, unlike other pension products, the PEPP Regulation envisages the option of disbursement of the accumulated capital in a lump sum, but Italian Legislative Decree no. 114/2022 does not allow post-employment benefits (TFR) to be paid into the PEPP.
With regard to secondary legislation, in 2022 insurance sector policymakers paid particular attention to issues related to the relaunch of Life products and the enhancement of value for money, i.e. the costs-benefits ratio (in terms of insurance benefit and financial return) that the policyholder can expect from the insurance contract. In particular, following a 2021 Supervisory Statement on value for money, on 31 October 2022 EIOPA published a document on the methodology for the assessment of value for money in the unit-linked policies market, in which the Authority recommends that companies, inter alia, carefully assess the risks linked to inflation as part of product development and adequately value the biometric risk component contained in unit-linked policies, also in order to differentiate them from other investment instruments.
At domestic level, on 11 March 2022 IVASS officially began work on an overall reform of Life product regulations, publishing a draft Regulation for consultation that aims to align the asset allocation rules for linked policies with the similar Bank of Italy regulations on UCITS, in order to overcome certain procedural limitations and rigidities to which insurance companies are subject in the engineering of linked products and in the choice of underlying assets pursuant to ISVAP Circular no. 474/2002. In addition, on the same date, IVASS published a Discussion Document with which it submits proposals to the market so that insurance companies can better value the demographic guarantee element (biometric risk) in Class III products, as well as options regarding the terms and conditions under which insurance companies could propose to policyholders any changes to the rule for determining the average rate of return for the

segregated funds to which the contracts are linked, envisaging application of the profit provision, which is allowed by regulations in force only for new contracts and not for existing contracts.
Also note that, on 30 August 2022, IVASS approved IVASS Regulation no. 52 relating to the implementation of provisions on the temporary suspension of capital losses for non-durable securities following Decree Law 73/22, which stated that insurance companies, in compliance with specific conditions set out in the Regulation that include the need to establish an undistributable equity reserve, should have the right for 2022 to value short-term securities at their recognition value in the financial statements for the previous year rather than according to the respective realisable value (if lower than the purchase cost). IVASS Regulation no. 52 was further amended, with resolution 127/2023 introducing, by virtue of the provisions of Decree Law no. 176 of 18 November 2022, the right to determine the amount of the undistributable reserve to be allocated by deducting the portion, attributable to policyholders, deriving from not writing down the securities. Note that, within the Group, Arca Vita S.p.A. availed itself of the option envisaged in the aforementioned Regulation with reference to the 2022 financial statements.
Lastly, on 11 July 2022 the Official Gazette published MISE Regulation no. 88/2022 on the requirements and eligibility criteria for the duties of corporate officer pursuant to Art. 76 of the Private Insurance Code. MISE Regulation no. 88/2022 replaces the previous Ministerial Decree no. 220/2011 and implements the provisions of Art. 76 of the Private Insurance Code, introducing new requirements (which the related body must assess according to strict parameters) relating to formal independence and limits to the accumulation of offices, in addition to those already envisaged with regard to integrity and professionalism. Furthermore, MISE Regulation no. 88/2022 introduces eligibility criteria (for the assessment of which the related body has a certain degree of discretion) in relation to fairness, expertise, independence of judgment, time availability and the ideal collective composition of the body. Overall, the reform measures substantially align with the corresponding banking regulations dictated by MEF Decree no. 169/2020 and aim to increase the quality of corporate officers, also by encouraging turnover and the addition of new specific skills.
In 2022, the following regulatory measures were issued:

On 16 December 2022, the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) was published in the Official Journal of the EU. The CSRD aims to harmonise the disclosure of sustainability information by companies, so that financial companies, investors and the general public receive transparent, comparable and reliable information. In doing so, the Commission aspires to create a series of rules that over time will place sustainability reporting on the same level as financial reporting. To this end, the CSRD introduces some changes compared to the previous Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD), including an extension of the scope of disclosure obligations to all large undertakings and listed companies (with the exception of micro-businesses listed on the stock exchange) and the introduction of the obligation to certify sustainability information. Furthermore, the CSRD specifies in greater detail the information that companies must report and requires them to disclose the information in compliance with mandatory EU principles on sustainability reporting (EU sustainability reporting standards), also establishing that all information must be published in the management reports drawn up by companies and disseminated in machinereadable digital format. The directive enters into force on 5 January 2023 and must be transposed into Member State laws by the end of 2024.
Also note that, on 25 July 2022, Regulation (EU) 2022/1288 was published, in force from 1 January 2023 on regulatory technical standards (RTS), which specify in particular the methodologies and presentation of information relating to sustainability indicators.
On 31 March 2022 the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) issued the Exposure Draft (ED) "Climaterelated Disclosures" on sustainability reporting, which remained in consultation until July 2022 and is currently being examined by the ISSB for the preparation of the final version of the standard.
Lastly, in February 2022, the European Commission adopted a proposal for a directive on corporate sustainability due diligence (CSDD), which aims to promote more responsible conduct by large corporates and regulated financial undertakings with respect to violations of human rights (such as child labour and the exploitation of workers) and environmental damage (such as pollution and biodiversity loss) that occur along the entire value chain. To this end, the Commission proposal introduces common due diligence obligations to ensure that companies identify, prevent and end or mitigate the actual or potential negative effects on human rights and the environment deriving from their

activities, the operations of subsidiaries and the operations along the value chain carried out by parties with which the company has consolidated business relationships. In the proposed directive, the violation of due diligence obligations entails civil liability of the company and the related obligation to provide compensation for damages that can be identified, avoided or mitigated with adequate due diligence measures.
The Consolidated financial statements of UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA are subject to an audit by independent auditors EY SpA, the company tasked with performing the legally-required audit of the consolidated financial statements for the 2021/2029 period.
With respect to the obligations laid out by Italian Legislative Decree no. 254 of 30 December 2016, on the communication of non-financial and diversity information by certain large undertakings and groups, please note that the UnipolSai Group is not subject to this obligation as one of the cases of exemption and equivalence laid out in Art. 6, paragraph 2 applies to it, given that it is a subsidiary company included within the Consolidated Non-Financial Statement prepared by the Unipol Group.

UnipolSai Assicurazioni 2022 Consolidated Financial Statements
# Consolidation Scope at 31 December 2022 (direct holding out of total share capital) For more details see the table appended to the Notes "Consolidation Scope" \




bianco

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
|---|---|---|
| Non-Life direct insurance premiums | 8,304 | 7,943 |
| % variation | 4.5 | 0.8 |
| Life direct insurance premiums | 5,341 | 5,386 |
| % variation | (0.8) | 24.4 |
| of which Life investment products | 1,831 | 1,272 |
| % variation | 44.0 | 123.4 |
| Direct insurance premiums | 13,645 | 13,329 |
| % variation | 2.4 | 9.2 |
| Net gains on financial instruments (*) | 1,531 | 1,496 |
| % variation | 2.3 | 9.1 |
| Consolidated profit (loss) | 651 | 723 |
| % variation | (9.9) | (15.2) |
| Balance on the statement of comprehensive income | (1,794) | 678 |
| % variation | n.s. | (32.3) |
| Investments and cash and cash equivalents | 60,504 | 69,339 |
| % variation | (12.7) | 0.8 |
| Technical provisions | 51,766 | 57,128 |
| % variation | (9.4) | (1.0) |
| Financial liabilities | 9,142 | 8,411 |
| % variation | 8.7 | 19.2 |
| Shareholders' Equity attributable to the owners of the Parent | 5,569 | 7,964 |
| % variation | (30.1) | 1.1 |
| UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA Solvency ratio - Partial Internal Model | 288% | 326% |
| No. Staff | 12,315 | 11,881 |
(*) excluding net gains and losses on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss for which investment risk is borne by customers (index- and unit-linked) and arising from pension fund management

| Indicatori alternativi di performance | classes | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loss ratio - direct business (including OTI ratio) | Non-Life | 62.2% | 64.0% |
| Expense ratio (calculated on written premiums) - direct business | Non-Life | 28.8% | 28.5% |
| Combined ratio - direct business (including OTI ratio) | Non-Life | 91.0% | 92.5% |
| Loss ratio - net of reinsurance | Non-Life | 65.2% | 67.1% |
| Expense ratio (calculated on premiums earned) - net of reinsurance | Non-Life | 28.7% | 27.9% |
| Combined ratio - net of reinsurance (*) | Non-Life | 93.8% | 95.0% |
| Premium retention ratio | Non-Life | 93.8% | 94.4% |
| Premium retention ratio | Life | 99.5% | 99.6% |
| Premium retention ratio | Total | 95.5% | 96.1% |
| Group pro-rata APE (amounts in €m) | Life | 562 | 548 |
| Expense ratio - direct business | Life | 6.4% | 5.1% |
| Expense ratio - net of reinsurance | Life | 6.3% | 5.0% |
(*) with expense ratio calculated on premiums earned
Combined ratio: indicator that measures the balance of Non-Life technical management, represented by the sum of the loss ratio and the expense ratio.
1 These indicators are not defined by accounting rules; rather, they are calculated based on economic-financial procedures used in the sector.
Loss ratio: primary indicator of the cost-effectiveness of operations of an insurance company in the Non-Life sector. This is the ratio of the cost of claims for the period to premiums for the period.
OTI (Other Technical Items) ratio: ratio of the sum of the balance of other technical charges/income and the change in other technical provisions to net premiums for the period. Expense ratio: percentage indicator of the ratio of total operating expenses to premiums written as far as direct business is concerned, and the premiums as far as retained business, net of reinsurance, is concerned.
APE – Annual Premium Equivalent: the new Life business expressed in APE is a measurement of the volume of business relating to new policies and corresponds to the sum of periodic premiums of new products and one tenth of single premiums. This indicator is used to assess the business along with the in force value and the Life new business value of the Group.
The premium retention ratio is the ratio of premiums retained (total direct and indirect premiums net of premiums ceded) to total direct and indirect premiums. Investment products are not included in calculating this ratio.


After two years characterised by major repercussions related to the spread from February 2020 of the Covid-19 pandemic, in 2022, also thanks to the success of the vaccination campaign, a substantial return to normal was possible in the dynamics of social life and production activities.
With reference to the Non-Life insurance business, and in particular MV TPL, a return of road traffic to the levels of 2019 was therefore seen, with a consequent gradual recovery in the frequency of claims even if at levels lower than the pre-Covid period.
In the Non-Life Non-MV classes, the commercial drive by our sales networks along with the economic recovery in 2022 made it possible to considerably increase business.
As concerns the Life business, over the last few years the pandemic had no particular consequences in terms of premium trends or managed volumes.
In the initial months of 2022, the international spotlight was dominated by the worsening of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, which transformed into a large-scale war following Russia's invasion of Ukrainian territory. Aside from the heavy price in terms of human life and refugees, the effects of the conflict and the ensuing economic and financial sanctions imposed on Russia by the international community have had a considerable impact on the global economy. Some of the main impacts of the conflict are greater difficulty in the procurement of raw materials, with additional significant increases in the relative prices, and the risk of an already stressed supply chain becoming even more compromised.
This had repercussions on the cost of claims trend which, from the second half of 2022, saw significant increases in the average cost of claims settled with particular regard to MV TPL business. These increases, together with resumption of the frequency following the exit from the Covid emergency, led to the need for tariff adjustments to restore the technical balance of the class.
The ongoing conflict has also fuelled financial market tensions, with sharp declines in the international stock markets in the first part of the year, which then saw a partial recovery towards the end of 2022.
There was also a marked increase in interest rates deriving from the context of high inflation produced by sanctions on the export of raw materials of which Russia is an important producer and the response of central banks that have raised the cost of money on several occasions.
All this had repercussions on the Group's financial investments which, on the one hand, marked a significant deterioration in the net balance between implicit capital gains and losses, but on the other hand, thanks to the reinvestment of the flows produced, recorded better forward-looking profitability.
However, the Group does not carry out relevant economic activities in the area concerned by the conflict, does not hold, except to an extremely marginal extent, financial investments in securities of Russian or Ukrainian issuers, and is not a contractual party to any significant financial transactions with parties or entities subject to the international sanctions.
On 12 May 2022, the Board of Directors of UnipolSai approved the "Opening New Ways" 2022-2024 Strategic Plan. The new Strategic Plan is being unveiled within a macroeconomic context influenced by the international geopolitical crisis triggered by the conflict in Ukraine: a scenario characterised by a slowing economy, rising inflation due to a further acceleration in energy and food commodity prices, high financial market volatility and the expectation of higher interest rates. Despite this situation, the insurance market is expected to grow over the 2022-2024 three-year period.
In the sustainability area, UnipolSai will contribute to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.
As in the past, the Group's strategies aim to create value for all its stakeholders based on the following distinctive assets:
By leveraging the distinctive assets, the Strategic Plan is broken down across five strategic areas:
Convinced that the opportunities and well-being of customers and the people who interact with UnipolSai every day are necessary conditions for market development capacity and for the sustainable success of the Group, in relation to each of the strategic areas the Plan identifies and integrates ESG objectives, i.e. lines of action that, starting from opportunities linked to social, environmental and governance aspects, aim to generate positive impacts for stakeholders and society as well and contribute to sustainable development.
In the wake of the Beyond Insurance Enrichment area outlined by the "Opening New Ways" 2022-2024 Strategic Plan, in 2022, the first year of the plan, the following companies were acquired or established for the development of the Mobility, Property and Welfare ecosystems.
On 13 January 2022, UnipolSai acquired 100% of I.Car Srl share capital at the estimated total price of €77m and 100% of Muriana Manuela Srl share capital for €3m. The acquisition of these two companies, operating in the vehicle antitheft system sector and insurance brokerage sector, respectively, is consistent with development of the Mobility Ecosystem undertaken by the Group in recent years.
On 20 January 2022, UnipolHome S.p.A., a wholly-owned subsidiary of UnipolSai, was established with the aim of integrating the Group's insurance offer into the Property ecosystem sector. In particular, the company aims on one hand to create and coordinate a network of craftsmen through a digital platform to manage the provision of direct compensation for damages relating to claims on insured properties, with potential expansion in the activity of property maintenance, and on the other hand to enter the condominium management market, also by acquiring already specialised companies, and possibly act as a business procurer with reference to energy market services.
On 1 July and 26 October 2022, UnipolSai, at the request of the subsidiary, made capital contributions of €2.7m and €2.6m, respectively, to provide UnipolHome with the financial resources required to implement the Craftsmen Network Platform and acquire a controlling interest in Unicasa Italia SpA, a company operating in the area of condominium administration.
On 6 July 2022 and 26 October 2022, through acquisitions of shares and the subscription of a reserved share capital increase, UnipolSai acquired an overall equity investment amounting to 75% of the share capital of the company Tantosvago at a total price of €15.9m. The investment sale agreement also calls for a system of option calls on all of the interests of the non-controlling shareholders, exercisable by UnipolSai within contractually defined time windows at a price to be defined on the basis of specific future profitability and debt parameters of the company, and a separate right of the non-controlling shareholders to sell their interests to UnipolSai, provided UnipolSai has not previously exercised the option call.
Tantosvago is active in the flexible benefits market (or the goods and services that a company can provide within the welfare plan for its employees), with the role of aggregator, holding the technology and the know-how to proceed with the acquisition and aggregation of individual products/services provided by various suppliers (such as insurance companies, healthcare facilities, gyms, travel agencies, training organisations) within a digital catalogue of services set up to be integrated within dedicated platforms.
Also on 6 July 2022, the company Welbee was established, a wholly-owned subsidiary of UnipolSai, with a view to performing platform provider activities in the flexible benefits market, in the welfare and healthcare sectors, within the framework of the Beyond Insurance Enrichment strategic area defined in the 2022-2024 Strategic Plan.
On 16 December 2022, UnipolSai signed the contract to acquire the entire share capital of Società e Salute SpA, a company operating in the private healthcare sector under the brand name "Centro Medico Santagostino", from the L-GAM investment fund. The transaction, that is part of the Beyond Insurance Enrichment strategic area of the "Opening New Ways" 2022-2024 Strategic Plan, constitutes a significant component of the welfare ecosystem, concerning the development and direct management of a network of health centres. Indeed, Santagostino Medical Centres, with its 34 offices, is one of the main operators in Lombardy, particularly in the Milan area; it relies on the collaboration of around 1,300 doctors, with a service offering aimed at guaranteeing a high quality patient experience at accessible conditions and with reduced waiting times, also thanks to technological innovation, which is one of the distinctive factors of the company. It is expected that, after obtaining the necessary authorisations, the transaction will be completed by the end of April 2023.
Also with the aim of developing the Welfare ecosystem, in 2022 equity investments were acquired in the following companies operating in the healthcare field:
10 February 2022 saw the conclusion of the mutually agreed termination of the agreement signed on 17 February 2020 between UnipolSai and Intesa Sanpaolo SpA in the broader context of Intesa Sanpaolo's launch of a public exchange offer on 100% of UBI Banca SpA shares and the related acquisition of business units referring to one or more insurance company investees of UBI Banca. This termination was the result of the assessment, agreed between the parties, of the transaction no longer being convenient and of mutual interest, taking into account the implementation costs and complexities.
On 1 March 2022, exercising the contractually envisaged right to early repayment, Unipol arranged full repayment of the €300m loan disbursed by UnipolSai on 1 March 2019, granted as part of the sale to Unipol of the shareholding in Unipol Banca SpA and in UnipolReC SpA.

After being the first company at national and European level to obtain accreditation for the European electronic toll service, in March 2022 UnipolMove began marketing the electronic motorway toll payment service to all Group customers.
In May 2022, as a result of the interest formally expressed by some operators in the sector for the acquisition of the portfolio of non-performing loans held by the investee UnipolReC (the "Portfolio"), a competitive selection process was launched for a buyer to be identified among the major market players.
As part of this process, at the end of the due diligence phase carried out with reference to the accounting situation at 31 March 2022, as a result of the binding offers received, the proposal of the company AMCO was selected, received on 2 August, and which provided for the sale en bloc without recourse of the Portfolio, for an amount of €307m, corresponding to 11.9% of the Gross Book Value at 31 March 2022, equal to €2.6bn. The sale was finalised on 14 December 2022 after obtaining Bank of Italy authorisation. Possible compensation in favour of the buyer was envisaged in the sale agreements if certain conditions were met, with respect to which the appropriate provisions were recognised in the financial statements of UnipolReC at 31 December 2022, which closed with a loss of €52m.
On 24 May 2022, the Moody's rating agency upgraded the Insurer Financial Strength Rating (IFSR) of UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA from "Baa3" to "Baa2", i.e. one notch above Italy's rating (Baa3/Stable outlook). As a result, the ratings of the debt issues all improved as follows:
The rating agency initially maintained the outlook of the above-mentioned ratings at "stable".
In its decision, the Moody's Committee recognised the improvement of the Group's credit profile and increased resilience in the face of potential stress scenarios, particularly with reference to Italian government bonds. The Agency also recognised the validity of the strategy, a very strong market position and distribution capacity and the improvement in the financial profile, particularly as regards profitability and capital strength, with a solvency ratio less sensitive to market fluctuations.
Subsequently, on 9 August 2022 Moody's confirmed the Insurance Financial Strength Rating of UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA at "Baa2", lowering its outlook from "Stable" to "Negative" after the similar action carried out on Italy's rating.
In its decision, the Moody's Committee considered the high exposure of UnipolSai's assets and liabilities to the country.
The debt issue ratings are also confirmed:
On 1 July 2022, UnipolSai received formal termination from UniCredit SpA of the shareholders' agreement signed on 30 October 2017 between the two parties in relation to the company Incontra Assicurazioni SpA (the "Agreement"). Following this termination, on 29 July 2022, UnipolSai exercised the put option due to it on the basis of the Agreement, concerning the equity investment held in Incontra Assicurazioni, equal to 51% of its share capital (the "Equity Investment"). Pursuant to the Agreement, UnipolSai and UniCredit have 14 months (subject to legal
authorisations) to finalise the transfer of the Equity Investment. The Agreement requires the definition of the sale price of the Equity Investment to be made by an expert identified by the parties or, in the absence of an agreement, by the President of the Court of Milan from among investment banks and international consulting firms. The expert must proceed with their determinations in application of the methodologies defined in the Agreement.

In November 2022, UnipolRental was the first in Italy among long-term rental operators to complete an innovative securitisation transaction. The transaction was carried out through the granting by a special purpose vehicle of a loan pursuant to Art. 7, par. 1, lett. (a) of Law 130, the repayment of which is guaranteed by special-purpose assets set aside pursuant to Art. 4-bis of Decree Law 162/2019 ("Milleproroghe" Decree), which includes the car rental contracts held by UnipolRental, as well as the vehicles underlying such contracts. The transaction, in which a leading investment bank acted as Arranger and disburser of the Senior Loan to the vehicle company, leverages a guarantee established on the core company assets (long-term rental contracts and the vehicle fleet) and has the primary goal of supporting the company's Strategic Plan. The net liquidity acquired at closing amounted to €481m, against debt of €520m and sums withheld by the lender as an accessory guarantee of €39m.
On 22 December 2022, UnipolSai signed agreements for renewal of the bancassurance partnership with BPER Banca SpA ("BPER") and Banca Popolare di Sondrio SpA ("BPSO") relating to the distribution of Life and Non-Life insurance products of Arca Vita SpA ("Arca Vita"), Arca Assicurazioni SpA ("Arca Assicurazioni") and Arca Vita International DAC ("Arca International"). When these agreements were renewed, the distribution by the above-mentioned banks of the "health" insurance products of UniSalute SpA ("UniSalute") was also governed by autonomous agreements that were also entered into.
The agreements make it possible to continue the partnership with BPER and BPSO for a period of 5 years starting from 1 January 2023, at terms substantially aligned with those expiring at the end of December 2022.
As BPER qualifies as a related party of UnipolSai, the signing of the agreements is a transaction of "greater relevance" for it, pursuant to the Regulation adopted by CONSOB with resolution no. 17221 of 12 March 2010, as amended ("RPT Regulation"), and the "Procedure for transactions with related parties" adopted by the UnipolSai Board of Directors ("RPT Procedure"). Therefore, the transaction was approved by the UnipolSai Board of Directors after obtaining the favourable opinion of the Related Party Transactions Committee regarding the interest of UnipolSai and its subsidiaries (specifically, Arca Vita, Arca Assicurazioni, Arca International and UniSalute) in the completion of the transaction as well as the cost effectiveness and substantial fairness of the relative conditions.
For additional information on the transaction, please refer to the information document drawn up by UnipolSai pursuant to and for the purposes of Article 5 of the RPT Regulation, as well as Article 14 of the RPT Procedure, made available to the public, on 22 December 2022, at the headquarters of UnipolSai, on the authorised storage mechanism eMarket Storage (), and on the website of UnipolSai (www.unipolsai.com - "Governance/Related-Party Transactions" section).
On 21 September 2022, UnipolSai launched a structured and integrated plan of actions in favour of populations affected by the September floods in the Marche region, with the aim of supporting customers and agencies resident in areas affected by the flood.
In a context of difficulty and suffering, UnipolSai committed to facilitating claims management, granting significant extensions and deferrals and providing adequate and timely responses by activating a dedicated toll-free number.
In February 2022, UnipolSai and Linear announced the launch of the roadside assistance service as part of the Pedius app, which integrates functions for the hearing impaired and all individuals who cannot, temporarily or permanently, communicate verbally, transforming into a voice message any text entered and thereby removing communication barriers through the use of voice recognition and synthesis technologies.
Since 20 June 2022, the first paediatric hub dedicated to patients aged 0 to 14 years has been in operation at the Dyadea Medical Centres in Bologna. The hub is coordinated by a paediatrician and will include a team of professionals consisting of 27 physicians covering 21 specialities to meet all healthcare needs, the only private multi-disciplinary paediatric hub in Bologna which is also equipped to handle emergencies.

In October 2022, UnipolSai and the other Italian subsidiary insurance companies signed trade union agreements on voluntary early retirement arrangements for the employees of those companies that meet pension requirements by 2027. In view of preliminary enrolments by potential members of the pre-retirement plan, a charge of €199m (€137m net of taxes) was recognised at Group level.
Please also note that during the 2020-2021 two-year period, trade union agreements were entered into in relation to mutually agreed termination of employment contracts for executive personnel meeting pension requirements by 31 December 2024. These personnel will receive a cheque paid by the company that is equivalent to the future pension, until the state pension requirements are met. The mutually agreed termination of contract involved 12 executives in 2022.
UnipolSai Assicurazioni is one of the founding members of "Tecnopolo" (National HPC, BigData and Quantum Computing Centre), established in September 2022 with the triple purpose of building a supercomputing infrastructure unique in Italy, to aggregate research and innovation resources in strategic sectors for the country and becoming the national reference platform for scientific and business initiatives.
In October 2022, Snam and UnipolSai entered into an agreement for the creation of a third-party liability policy that takes into account the ESG (Environment, Social and Governance) objectives of the San Donato Milanese company. Through the insurance agreement with Snam, UnipolSai recognises the significance of policies and actions linked to sustainability in the pricing of risk, but above all rewards the policyholder's commitment to risk prevention with a view to creating shared value.
With this in mind, the UnipolSai Third Party Liability policy provides for a reduction in the annual premium of Snam Rete Gas upon the achievement of certain objectives regarding the reduction of methane emissions that contribute to the abatement of the company's "Scope 1" emissions, thanks to investments made in modernising and monitoring gas network infrastructure.
Through this initiative, UnipolSai aims to reward Snam's ability to implement actions intended to reduce environmental risks, as an example of a virtuous company in the Italian landscape. Indeed, companies that translate ESG (Environment, Social and Governance) values into concrete actions can obtain more advantageous insurance coverage by virtue of their ability to reduce the operational risks associated with their business.
By developing different investment formats linked to specific environmental or social results, this initiative makes a significant contribution to the development of the first ESG-Linked insurance instruments that generate savings for companies capable of demonstrating their achievement of the United Nations 2030 Agenda Sustainable Development Goals.


8 March 2022 saw the renewal, for the sixth consecutive year, of the partnership between UnipolSai and the Borgo Panigale team for the 2022 MotoGP World Championship.
At the World Championships in Budapest, which ended on 3 July 2022, the Italian athletes on the Italian Swimming Federation's National Team, of which UnipolSai is the main sponsor, won 22 medals, setting the new all-time record for medals won at the World Championships.
In September, one of the four groups of the final round of the 2022 Davis Cup was held in Bologna, with the support of the Unipol Group as Regional Partner.
Again for the 2022/2023 season, which began in September, UnipolSai is supporting the Serie A Basketball League as Title Sponsor of the LBA Championship and Presenting Sponsor of the Final Eight of the Italian Cup and Super Cup.
At the insurance excellence awards night on 24 February 2022, UnipolSai, UniSalute and Arca Vita received different recognitions in the "Companies of Value" category. Added to these was the Special ESG Insurance Elite Award for the best Standard Ethics sustainability rating for an Italian insurance company which went to UnipolSai.
On 31 March 2022, as part of the Best Brands 2022 programme, UnipolSai came in third in the "Best Phygital Brands" ranking. This initiative, in its seventh edition this year, ranks the best Italian Brands according to the Best Brands research conducted by GfK and Serviceplan Italia in collaboration with traditional partners Rai Pubblicità, 24ORE System, IGP Decaux and ADC Group and with the support of UPA.
According to the latest Brand Finance ranking, dated 9 May 2022, the UnipolSai brand is growing and ranked second after Ferrari in terms of brand strength.
During May 2022 the Italy Protection Forum Awards were held, recognising insurance sector companies based on their insurance protection and market personality. UnipolSai received a recognition for its agency network, thanks to its excellent health insurance performance and, in Non-Life protection, with the "Agricoltura e Servizi" product. An additional award was received by UnipolSai for the growth capacity of the agency network in the Long Term Care offer. Incontra Assicurazioni was also rewarded for the enhancement of ESG issues, to the benefit of customers' wellbeing.
In May 2022, the iconic Milan urban design hotel once again won the "Best business hotel for business travellers" award at the ninth edition of the Italian Mission Awards, an event dedicated to leading operators in the business travel sector at national and international level.
On 21 September 2022, at the Health & Medmal Insurance Awards, the annual event that recognises Italian excellence in the area of private healthcare operators, UniSalute received awards for "Evolution of Leadership through the offer of retail and SME solutions in the Healthcare sector accessed through Unipol Group agencies and partner banks" and for "Excellence in the digital offer of health policies". Incontra Assicurazioni also received the award "For the brilliant commercial performance achieved thanks to the mix of coverage quality and support for customers".

In September 2022, the Milan urban design hotel was recognised as "Italy's Leading Lifestyle Hotel 2022" during the 29th edition of the World Travel Awards, the most prestigious, sought-after and comprehensive programme of awards in the global travel and tourism sector.
In October 2022, at the first edition of the 2022 European Mission Awards, Gruppo UNA was recognised in the "Best In-House Safe & Clean Programme for Business Travellers" category. The recognition was due to its UNAsafe protocol, thanks to which Gruppo UNA was one of the first operators to offer high service standards in terms of health and safety, thus allowing business travel to resume in full compliance with post-pandemic requirements.
At the NC Digital Awards ceremony held in October 2022, in the "Integrated Digital Campaign - Travel, Transport and Tourism" category, the UnipolMove communication campaign was awarded first prize by more than 50 industry experts amongst the most important companies in Italy.
Also thanks to this campaign, which had omnichannel planning across the main means of communication, with a particular focus on the entire digital area, UnipolMove achieved 19% spontaneous awareness, 30% solicited awareness and over 410,000 devices sold in less than ten months in 2022.
On 21 November 2022, the data of the largest survey on the service level offered by companies in Italy, named "Best in Italy - 2023 Service Champions", were published in La Repubblica-Affari & Finanza. UnipolSai and UniSalute ranked among the top positions in the "Insurance" category and UnipolRental was among the leaders in the "long-term car rental/company fleet rental" category.
On 30 November 2022, at the Insurance Connect Awards, UnipolSai won the following: Innovation Award, for capably innovating its business model by creating diversified ecosystems; Art and Culture Award, for its strong commitment to the enhancement of artistic heritage and for support to the world of art and museum activities in Italy; Award for the Best Sustainability Strategy, thanks to the partnership with Snam for the development of ESG-linked insurance products.

In 2022, the UnipolSai Group achieved results in line with the objectives of the 2022-2024 Strategic Plan, with a consolidated net profit of €651m compared to €723m in the previous year.
Net of the extraordinary components that characterised the 2021 and 2022 results, including the recognition of a solidarity fund for the early retirement of approximately 900 employees accounted for in the final quarter of last year, the 2022 normalised net profit of €789m is significantly higher than the 2021 normalised profit of €596m. In particular, it should be noted that the 2021 results were positively influenced, for €33m (€42m before taxes), by the effects of the agreement relating to the settlement on the liability actions lodged against former directors and statutory auditors of Fondiaria-Sai and Milano Assicurazioni and the tax realignment of certain goodwill and real estate for €94m.
On the other hand, the 2022 results were negatively impacted, for €137m (€199m before taxes), by the recognition of a solidarity fund for the early retirement of approximately 900 employees.
At 31 December 2022, direct insurance premiums, gross of reinsurance, stood at €13,645m, up (+2.4%) compared to €13,329m at 31 December 2021.
Non-Life direct premiums, amounting to €8,304m, recorded significant growth (+4.5%) compared to €7,943m at 31 December 2021.
UnipolSai, which recorded Non-Life premiums of €6,883m (+2.4%), and the other Group companies contributed to this amount. In particular, UniSalute achieved premiums of €574m (+10.6%) and Arca Assicurazioni reported premiums of €245m (+29.1%), confirming the strategic nature of the relationship with the banking partners through which the Group's products are distributed.
The MV segment was up by 1.3% compared to the previous year, recording premiums of €3,888m. 2022 was characterised by a gradual recovery in the claims frequency after the Covid-19 pandemic, accompanied by a significant increase in the average cost of claims due, in particular, to the pressure of inflation on vehicle repair costs. The Group's MV premiums were positive, thanks to both the increase in the customer portfolio and the sale of accessory guarantees ("Land Vehicle Hulls" classes), which recorded 5.6% growth in premiums.
The performance of the Non-MV segment was very positive, with premiums of €4,416m and growth of 7.6% compared to 31 December 2021. All of the Group's main sales channels and business units contributed to this result, particularly those in the Welfare ecosystem.
With reference to the Non-Life segment, all of the Ecosystems business lines showed positive performance in terms of premiums. In particular, the Mobility ecosystem recorded €4,237m in premiums (+1.8%) and was further consolidated through the continuous growth of UnipolRental, the Group's long-term rental company, and UnipolMove, the new electronic toll system. In particular, despite unfavourable automotive market trends caused by supply chain disruptions, in 2022 UnipolRental recorded a significant increase in contracts acquired (approximately 78k compared to approximately 60k at the end of 2021), also thanks to the excellent commercial results achieved by UnipolSai agencies. The total number of vehicles registered at 31 December 2022 was 23,377, compared to 14,438 in the same period of last year.
In 2022, the Welfare Ecosystem reported €1,650m in premiums (+11.0%), with a significant increase in the Health Class (+17.3%), while the Property Ecosystem, with premiums of €2,417m, grew by 5.4%.
The combined ratio of direct business was 91.0% at 31 December 2022 (93.8% net of reinsurance), compared to 92.5% at 31 December 2021 (95.0% net of reinsurance). The direct business loss ratio was 62.2% (compared to 64.0% in 2021), while the direct business expense ratio stood at 28.8% (compared to 28.5% at 31/12/2021), affected by a production mix more oriented towards products with a higher commission rate, but also with higher margins.
The Non-Life pre-tax profit amounted to €711m, compared to €752m in the previous year; excluding non-recurring components, the 2022 profit, equal to €889m, is significantly higher than the €730m recorded in 2021.
In the Life segment, the Group achieved direct premiums of €5,341m, substantially in line (-0.8%) with the €5,386m recorded in 2021, in an unfavourable market context characterised by high levels of inflation, high financial market volatility and rising interest rates. In this scenario, Italian households have focused more on supporting growing current expenses, driving down demand for Life policies. The funding mix was mainly oriented towards multisegment

products, in keeping with a strategy aimed at reducing capital absorption and containing the guaranteed minimum rate (at the end of 2022, 47% of the reserves had a guaranteed rate of zero).
UnipolSai's direct premiums rose to €3,392m (+18.2% compared to 2021), benefitting from the recognition in the third quarter of new pension fund management mandates, while in the bancassurance channel, Arca Vita together with its subsidiary Arca Vita International recorded direct premiums of €1,894m (-21.8% compared to 2021).
The Life pre-tax profit was €275m, compared to €218m in 2021 (the normalised results were €295m and €210m, respectively). This growth was due to the improvement in both technical and financial margins, favoured by the context of rising current and prospective interest rates.
With regard to the real estate sector, the investments made in 2022 favoured prestigious locations and the completion of a new office building in Piazza Gae Aulenti in Milan.
As regards the other sectors in which the Group operates, the hotel sector recorded a significant recovery starting from the summer season, closing in the black after two years penalised by the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The pre-tax result of the Real Estate and Other Businesses sectors was loss of €65m (loss of €75m at 31/12/2021). Net of extraordinary components, the normalised results came to -€65m in 2022 and -€87m in 2021.
Financial management benefitted from the increase in the profitability of new investments, focusing on investment grade securities with a good coupon profile, with a simultaneous improvement in terms of diversification and the overall risk-return profile.
The Group's insurance financial investment portfolio obtained a return of 3.2% of invested assets (3.1% at 31/12/2021), thanks to the excellent contribution of the coupons and dividends component.
At 31 December 2022, consolidated shareholders' equity amounted to €5,813m (€8,234m at 31/12/2021) of which €5,569m attributable to the owners of the Parent. The change during the period was affected by the reduction in the market values of the bonds and shares in the portfolio.
The individual Solvency ratio of UnipolSai at 31 December 2022 was 288% (326% at the end of 2021), while the consolidated Solvency ratio based on economic capital was 274% (284% at 31/12/2021).


The UnipolSai Group's Consolidated Financial Statements at 31 December 2022 closed with a net profit of €651m (€723m at 31/12/2021), net of taxation for the year 2022 of €269m. Net of non-recurring transactions carried out in the two years compared, the profit at 31 December 2022 would have been €789m versus a profit of €596m at 31 December 2021.
The Insurance sector contributed €709m to consolidated net profit (€793m at 31/12/2021), of which €523m related to Non-Life business (€618m at 31/12/2021), and €186m related to Life business (€175m at 31/12/2021). Net of the nonrecurring transactions carried out in the two periods being compared, the results are:
Insurance sector: €847m at 31 December 2022 and €676m at 31 December 2021;
Non-Life business: €646m at 31 December 2022 and €522m at 31 December 2021;
Life business: €200m at 31 December 2022 and €154m at 31 December 2021.
The results of the other sectors in which the Group carries out business are as follows:
the Other Businesses sector recorded a -€12m loss (-€7m at 31/12/2021; -€8m net of non-recurring transactions);
the Real Estate sector recorded a -€46m loss (-€63m at 31/12/2021; -€72m net of non-recurring transactions).
Among the other important factors that marked the performance of the Group, note the following:
have started disposal activities or for which the related preliminary sales contracts have already been signed (€133m at 31/12/2021);
• technical provisions and financial liabilities amounted to €60,908m (€65,540m in 2021).
A summary of the Consolidated Operating Income Statement at 31 December 2022 is illustrated below, broken down by business segment: Insurance (Non-Life and Life), Other Businesses and Real Estate, compared with the data at 31 December 2021.

| NON-LIFE BUSINESS |
LIFE BUSINESS |
INSURANCE SECTOR |
|||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. |
| Net premiums | 7,875 | 7,780 | 1.2 | 3,491 | 4,098 | (14.8) | 11,366 | 11,879 | (4.3) |
| Net commission income | (51) | (1) | n.s. | 11 | 11 | 7.7 | (40) | 9 | n.s. |
| Financial income/expenses (**) | 452 | 458 | (1.4) | 1,102 | 1,072 | 2.8 | 1,554 | 1,530 | 1.6 |
| Net interest income | 360 | 288 | 24.8 | 1,075 | 1,000 | 7.5 | 1,434 | 1,288 | 11.4 |
| Other income and charges | 130 | 86 | 50.4 | 86 | 58 | 48.3 | 216 | 145 | 49.5 |
| Realised gains and losses | 58 | 89 | (34.2) | (46) | (6) | n.s. | 12 | 83 | (85.1) |
| Unrealised gains and losses | (96) | (5) | n.s. | (13) | 20 | (167.2) | (109) | 15 | n.s. |
| Net charges relating to claims | (5,031) | (5,095) | (1.3) | (3,944) | (4,642) | (15.0) | (8,975) | (9,737) | (7.8) |
| Operating expenses | (2,306) | (2,222) | 3.8 | (266) | (254) | 4.7 | (2,572) | (2,476) | 3.9 |
| Commissions and other acquisition expenses |
(1,769) | (1,741) | 1.6 | (118) | (116) | 1.9 | (1,887) | (1,857) | 1.6 |
| Other expenses | (537) | (481) | 11.7 | (148) | (139) | 7.1 | (686) | (620) | 10.6 |
| Other income/charges | (228) | (168) | (36.0) | (119) | (67) | (78.8) | (347) | (234) | (48.2) |
| Pre-tax profit (loss) | 711 | 752 | (5.5) | 275 | 218 | 26.2 | 985 | 970 | 1.6 |
| Income taxes | (188) | (134) | 39.9 | (88) | (43) | 107.1 | (276) | (177) | 56.1 |
| Profit (loss) from discontinued operations |
|||||||||
| Consolidated profit (loss) | 523 | 618 | (15.4) | 186 | 175 | 6.5 | 709 | 793 | (10.6) |
| Profit (loss) attributable to the Group |
#REF! | #REF! | #REF! | #REF! | #REF! | #REF! |
Profit (loss) attributable to non-
controlling interests #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF!
(*) The Real Estate sector only includes real estate companies controlled by UnipolSai.
(**) Excluding assets and liabilities at fair value relating to insurance contracts issued by insurance companies where the investment risk is borne by policyholders and arising from pension fund management

| OTHER BUSINESSES SECTOR |
REAL ESTATE SECTOR (*) |
Inter-segment eliminations |
TOTAL CONSOLIDATED |
|||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. |
| 11,366 | 11,879 | (4.3) | ||||||||
| 130.3 | 75.3 | (40) | 9 | n.s. | ||||||
| (2) | 8 | n.s. | (7) | (29) | n.s. | (15) | (14) | 1,531 | 1,496 | 2.3 |
| 3 | 3 | 5.8 | (2) | (2) | 16.3 | 1,435 | 1,289 | 11.4 | ||
| 5 | 6 | (11.7) | 58 | 49 | 18.6 | (15) | (14) | 265 | 186 | 42.7 |
| (4) | n.s. | (6) | n.s. | 2 | 83 | (97.5) | ||||
| (6) | n.s. | (57) | (76) | (25.4) | (172) | (62) | 178.4 | |||
| (8,975) | (9,737) | (7.8) | ||||||||
| (172) | (111) | 54.6 | (38) | (35) | 9.5 | 14 | 11 | (2,769) | (2,611) | 6.0 |
| (89.9) | (1,887) | (1,857) | 1.6 | |||||||
| (172) | (111) | 54.6 | (38) | (35) | 9.5 | 14 | 11 | (882) | (754) | 16.9 |
| 155 | 91 | 69.9 | (2) | n.s. | 1 | 3 | (193) | (140) | (37.5) | |
| (18) | (11) | (61.8) | (47) | (64) | 26.0 | 920 | 895 | 2.8 | ||
| 6 | 4 | 41.8 | 2 | 1 | 57.5 | (269) | (172) | 56.4 | ||
| (12) | (7) | (74.0) | (46) | (63) | 27.3 | 651 | 723 | (9.9) | ||
| #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! |
597 | 688 | (13.4) | |||||||
| #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! #REF! |
55 | 35 | 58.1 |

The Group's insurance business closed the period with a profit of €709m (€793m at 31/12/2021), of which €523m relating to the Non-Life sector (€618m at 31/12/2021) and €186m relating to the Life sector (€175m at 31/12/2021). Net of the non-recurring transactions carried out in the two periods being compared, the results are:
Investments and cash and cash equivalents of the Insurance sector, including properties for own use, at 31 December 2022 totalled €57,625m (€66,676m at 31/12/2021), of which €14,563m in the Non-Life business (€16,363m at 31/12/2021) and €43,062m in the Life business (€50,313m at 31/12/2021).
Financial liabilities amounted to €9,052m (€8,372m at 31/12/2021), of which €1,590m in the Non-Life business (€1,429m at 31/12/2021) and €7,462m in the Life business (€6,943m at 31/12/2021). The change relates to the increase in liabilities relating to contracts with risk borne by policyholders.
Total premiums (direct and indirect premiums and investment products) at 31 December 2022 amounted to €13,843m (€13,600m at 31/12/2021, +1.8%).
Life premiums amounted to €5,341m (€5,386m at 31/12/2021, -0.8%) and Non-Life premiums totalled €8,502m (€8,214m at 31/12/2021, +3.5%).
All Non-Life premiums of the Group insurance companies are classified under insurance premiums, as they meet the requirements of the IFRS 4 standard (presence of significant insurance risk).
As for Life premiums, investment products at 31 December 2022, for €1,831m, related to Class III (Unit- and Index-Linked policies) and Class VI (pension funds).
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life direct premiums | 8,304 | 7,943 | 4.5 | ||
| Non-Life indirect premiums | 198 | 271 | (27.0) | ||
| Total Non-Life premiums | 8,502 | 61.4 | 8,214 | 60.4 | 3.5 |
| Life direct premiums | 3,510 | 4,114 | (14.7) | ||
| Life indirect premiums | (11.7) | ||||
| Total Life premiums | 3,510 | 25.4 | 4,114 | 30.3 | (14.7) |
| Total Life investment products | 1,831 | 13.2 | 1,272 | 9.4 | 44.0 |
| Total Life business | 5,341 | 38.6 | 5,386 | 39.6 | (0.8) |
| Overall total | 13,843 | 100.0 | 13,600 | 100.0 | 1.8 |
Direct premiums amounted to €13,645m (€13,329m at 31/12/2021, +2.4%), of which Non-Life premiums totalled €8,304m and Life premiums €5,341m.
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life direct premiums | 8,304 | 60.9 | 7,943 | 59.6 | 4.5 |
| Life direct premiums | 5,341 | 39.1 | 5,386 | 40.4 | (0.8) |
| Total direct premiums | 13,645 | 100.0 | 13,329 | 100.0 | 2.4 |
Non-Life and Life indirect premiums totalled €199m at 31 December 2022 (€272m in 2021, -26.9%), €198m of which referred to premiums from Non-Life business (€271m in 2021, -27%) and €0.3m to the Life business (€0.3m at 31/12/2021, -11.7%).
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life indirect premiums | 198 | 99.9 | 271 | 99.9 | (27.0) |
| Life indirect premiums | 0.1 | 0.1 | (11.7) | ||
| Total indirect premiums | 199 | 100.0 | 272 | 100.0 | (26.9) |
Group premiums ceded totalled €543m (€479m in 2021, +13.4%), €524m of which from Non-Life premiums ceded (€463m in 2021, +13.2%) and €19m from Life premiums ceded (€16m at 31/12/2021, +20.2%).
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life premiums ceded | 524 | 96.5 | 463 | 96.7 | 13.2 |
| Retention ratio - Non-Life business (%) | 93.8% | 94.4% | |||
| Life premiums ceded | 19 | 3.5 | 16 | 3.3 | 20.2 |
| Retention ratio - Life business (%) | 99.5% | 99.6% | |||
| Total premiums ceded | 543 | 100.0 | 479 | 100.0 | 13.4 |
| Overall retention ratio (%) | 95.5% | 96.1% |
The retention ratio is the ratio of premiums retained (total direct and indirect premiums net of premiums ceded) to total direct and indirect premiums. In calculating the ratio, investment products are not considered.
At 31 December 2022, the technical result of premiums ceded was positive for reinsurers in the Non-Life as well as the Life business.

Total Non-Life premiums (direct and indirect) at 31 December 2022 were €8,502m (€8,214m at 31/12/2021, +3.5%).
Direct business premiums alone amounted to €8,304m (€7,943m at 31/12/2021, +4.5%). Indirect business premiums were €198m (€271m at 31/12/2021, -27%).
The breakdown for the main classes and the changes with respect to 31 December 2021 are shown in the following table:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Motor vehicles - TPL and sea, lake and river (classes 10 and 12) | 2,994 | 2,992 | 0.1 | ||
| Land Vehicle Hulls (class 3) | 894 | 846 | 5.6 | ||
| Total premiums - Motor vehicles | 3,888 | 46.8 | 3,838 | 48.3 | 1.3 |
| Accident & Health (classes 1 and 2) | 1,650 | 1,486 | 11.0 | ||
| Fire and Other damage to property (classes 8 and 9) | 1,322 | 1,277 | 3.5 | ||
| General TPL (class 13) | 771 | 723 | 6.7 | ||
| Other classes | 674 | 619 | 8.9 | ||
| Total premiums - Non-Motor vehicles | 4,416 | 53.2 | 4,105 | 51.7 | 7.6 |
| Total Non-Life direct premiums | 8,304 | 100.0 | 7,943 | 100.0 | 4.5 |

Premiums in the MV TPL business, still concerned by strong rate competition, were €2,994m, in line with 2021. Growth was reported in the Land Vehicle Hulls business with premiums equal to €894m (+5.6%), while premiums in the Non-MV segment were up, totalling €4,416m (+7.6%).
In 2022, there was a gradual recovery in the claims frequency after the Covid-19 pandemic: this situation was accompanied by an even more significant increase in the average cost of claims due to the pressure of inflation on vehicle repair costs and recent regulatory adjustments of the reference values of losses for minor injuries and family member losses. The year 2022 was characterised by very different inflationary dynamics compared to the past, marking discontinuity with respect to the trend of the last decade. The rise in inflation was driven by the increase in energy costs due to the onset of the war between Russia and Ukraine, accentuated by its continuation, as well as by supply chain slowdowns and the scarcity of raw materials and electronic components, sectors already in crisis after the blocks imposed during the pandemic period were lifted.
The net profit (loss) of the claims experience for the main businesses is provided in the following table:
| Amounts in €m | Net breakdown at 31/12/2022 | Net breakdown at 31/12/2021 |
|---|---|---|
| MV TPL | 243 | 97 |
| Land Vehicle Hulls | 11 | 6 |
| General TPL | 276 | 76 |
| Other Classes | 239 | 157 |
| Total | 769 | 336 |
The claim ratio (loss ratio of only direct business for the Non-Life business), including the OTI ratio, stood at 62.2% (64% in 2021).
The number of claims reported, without considering the MV TPL class, fell by 2.5%. The table with the changes by class is provided below.
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Land Vehicle Hulls (Class 3) | 353,804 | 334,746 | 5.7 |
| Accident (Class 1) | 103,128 | 95,738 | 7.7 |
| Health (Class 2) | 4,235,328 | 4,437,135 | (4.5) |
| Fire and Other damage to Property (Classes 8 and 9) | 282,821 | 294,333 | (3.9) |
| General TPL (Class 13) | 86,476 | 86,384 | 0.1 |
| Other classes | 518,298 | 477,413 | 8.6 |
| Total | 5,579,855 | 5,725,749 | (2.5) |
As regards the MV TPL class, where the CARD2 agreement is applied, in 2022 cases reported relating to "fault" claims (Non-Card, Debtor Card or Natural Card) totalled 543,525, up by 5.9% (513,079 in 2021).
2 CARD - Convenzione tra Assicuratori per il Risarcimento Diretto - Agreement between Insurers for Direct Compensation: MV TPL claims may be classified as one of three cases of claims managed:
- Non-Card claims: claims governed by the ordinary regime, to which CARD is not applied;
- Debtor Card claims: claims governed by CARD where "our" policyholder is fully or partially liable, which are settled by the counterparty's insurance companies, to which "our" insurance company must pay a flat rate pay-out ("Debtor Flat Rate");
- Handler Card claims: claims governed by CARD where "our" policyholder is fully or partially not liable, which are settled by "our" insurance company, to which the counterparty's insurance companies must pay a flat rate pay-out ("Handler Flat Rate").
However, it must be noted that this classification is a simplified representation because, in reality, each individual claim may contain damages included in each of the three above-indicated cases.

Claims reported that present at least a Debtor Card claims handling numbered 314,205, up by 5.7% compared to the same period in the previous year.
Handler Card claims were 388,145 (including 82,467 Natural Card claims, i.e. claims between policyholders at the same company), up by 4% compared to the previous year. The settlement rate in 2022 was 78.7%, down from the same period of last year (79.4%).
The weight of cases to which the Card agreement may be applied (both Handler Card and Debtor Card claims) out of total cases (Non-Card + Handler Card + Debtor Card) in 2022 was equal to 82.7% (83.3% in 2021).
The average cost (amount paid plus amount reserved) for claims reported and handled (including claims reported late) increased by 4.3% in 2022 (-0.9% in 2021). The average cost of the amount paid out rose by 5% (-1.2% in 2021).
Expense ratio of the Non-Life direct business was 28.8% (28.5% at 31/12/2021).
The combined ratio of direct Non-Life business was 91% (92.5% in 2021).
The performance of the main Group insurance companies at 31 December 2022 is summarised in the following table:
| Amounts in €m | Premiums written |
% Var. | Investments | Gross Technical Provisions |
Technical Provisions - Reinsurers' share |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NON-LIFE INSURANCE SECTOR | |||||
| UNIPOLSAI ASSICURAZIONI SpA | 7,200 | 2.8 | 14,730 | 12,604 | 499 |
| ARCA ASSICURAZIONI SpA | 245 | 29.1 | 407 | 298 | 52 |
| DDOR NOVI SAD ADO | 103 | 11.7 | 100 | 94 | 3 |
| INCONTRA ASSICURAZIONI SpA | 154 | 41.4 | 306 | 352 | 114 |
| COMPAGNIA ASSICURATRICE LINEAR SpA |
193 | 3.8 | 384 | 294 | 10 |
| UNISALUTE SpA | 614 | 11.1 | 543 | 456 | 181 |
| SIAT SpA | 173 | 14.4 | 135 | 288 | 196 |
UnipolSai, the Group's main company, had direct premiums of €6,883m (€6,721m at 31/12/2021, +2.4%), of which €3,621m in the MV classes (€3,583m at 31/12/2021, +1.1%) and €3,263m in the Non-MV classes (€3,138m at 31/12/2021, +4.0%). Also considering indirect business, premiums acquired during the year amounted to roughly €7,200m (€7,004m at 31/12/2021).
In particular, in the MV sector, thanks to the portfolio development actions launched in March the MV TPL class recorded a recovery in the collection trend already starting from the second quarter of 2022, which led to a substantially nil change in premiums at year-end, in sharp contrast to the significant drops recorded in previous years. The number of individual policy contracts at the end of 2022 also showed basically no change, mainly due to new business relaunch actions. The growth recorded in the company car fleets segment, consistent with market trends, which reward innovative vehicle use methods such as long-term rental and car sharing, made it possible to record a slight increase in the overall portfolio. On the other hand, as already mentioned above, during 2022 a series of factors negatively affected this class's technical KPIs, such as the increase in the circulation of vehicles, inflation trends and the updating of the MISE Tables relating to minor injuries and amendments made by the Court of Milan on the mechanisms for quantifying family member losses on claims with fatalities.
For the Land Vehicle Hulls class, premium growth was recorded once again in 2022, due in particular to the individual policy development trend. The increase in the number of contracts in the portfolio as well as the recovery in the average premium, driven by tariff changes made particularly on several significant guarantees, such as Natural Events, were amongst the main factors impacting premium growth.
Also in 2022, actions were put into place to improve the efficiency of settlement processes for MV claims. For example, the Black Box project continued, which was launched in partnership with UnipolTech, aiming to improve the effectiveness of the boxes and increase the available dataset. With a view to the evolution of the electronic settlement process and the innovative use of the information provided by the Black Box, on the Unico platform, renewed in 2021, the predictive models for the dynamics of the claim were perfected, in order to improve the verification, by the adjuster, of consistency between what was declared and the actual dynamics of the event.
The optimisation of the Real Time claims management process continued, which envisages the opening of a claim from the moment of a crash detected in Black Box data, at the same time triggering initial contact with the policyholder and anticipating the information collection stage. Prototype of a Digital Amicable Accident Notification (CAI) released to facilitate the customer's user experience at their time of greatest need, in addition to reducing claim investigation timing.
In 2022, activities continued for the improvement of the criteria adopted to identify fraud, guaranteeing an adequate system for combating fraudulent phenomena through the evolution of the Anti-Fraud Engine and the platform created for the management of relationship charts, which makes it possible to identify the correlation between events and parties and easily perform advanced searches in order to support investigations.
The booking process also continued to be optimised for visits at the Medical Report Centre (Centro Perizia Medica, CPM), a service provided to the claimant who has suffered modest injuries (MV, Accident or General TPL) and that provides the option of a legal-medical visit directly at the offices of the Company in order to reach an immediate settlement, improving the customer contact service and introducing the use of a digital agenda for booking medical visits. In addition to the CPMs located in the Territorial Settlement offices, covering particularly vast areas or with a high incidence of examinations, UnipolSai relies on Medical Booking Services (Servizi di Prenotazione Medica, SPM), for which the service is instead performed directly at the doctor's office of the independent expert, where the adjuster also goes. In order to improve the customer experience by offering innovative services, it is now possible to make direct CPM and SPM bookings from the UnipolSai App. At the end of 2022, geographical coverage was guaranteed by 73 CPMs and 322 SPMs.
Actions were also taken to optimise the management of claims with injuries by implementing various tools and procedures, which strengthened data use to identify injury type/severity and optimise the injury management and provisioning process. The MV Territorial Settlement network was also reorganised, with the creation as of May 2022 of a pool of adjusters specialised in the management of claims with injuries.
These topics were addressed during the meetings held for the Agency Change Management project, which evolved the UnipolSai-agency relationship model in order to perfect claims management in the agency and improve the adoption of the MV Settlement Model. As of 30 June 2022, the project reached maturity, involving all agencies, with important signs of improvement in performance.
In the Non-MV segment, premium growth was widespread across all classes, with the exception of Railway Rolling Stock and Marine Vessels, which were down.
As regards the General classes, particularly with reference to General Classes (GC) Direct Repair, as mentioned above, the project set forth in the Strategic Plan for the creation of a network of UnipolSai craftsmen is under way, with the creation of UnipolHome, to favour the transition of the current GC Direct Repair model to a more structured one, with full supervision by UnipolSai. The ultimate goal of this action is to achieve benefits in terms of cost and service on Property settlement. UnipolHome, with a network of trusted repair specialists, will gradually take over the following activities throughout the country:
The review of the Customer Journeys of customers who suffer an MV or Property claim is another of the priorities of the current Strategic Plan. Customer data and digital data collected during and after the claim using new technologies will be used to set up personalised interventions that will guarantee a multichannel, simple and rapid experience that keeps pace with the times, thus impacting average cost containment as well as the Company's reputation.
Arca Assicurazioni achieved a net profit at 31 December 2022 of €40.8m (€30.5m at 31/12/2021), recording direct premiums for €245.4m (+29.1%), with a significant increase in the Non-MV classes (+35%) and in the MV segment (+7.8%). The breakdown of the portfolio among the distribution channels is almost totally focused on the banking channel which, at 31 December 2022, recorded 99% of the total Non-Life premiums (in line with 2021). Overall, the

banking channel recorded a 29.2% increase in premiums compared to the previous year, with premiums written totalling approximately €243.0m.
DDOR Novi Sad recorded a €0.3m loss (Non-Life and Life segments) at 31 December 2022 (profit of €6m at 31/12/2021), even following growth in premiums (Non-Life and Life segments), from €110.5m at the end of 2021 (of which €92.2m in the Non-Life segment) to €121.7m at 31 December 2022 (of which roughly €103m in the Non-Life segment). With regard to the technical result of the Non-Life segment, it should be noted that the MV TPL class (which represents approximately 28% of total premiums), whose rate is set by the Serbian regulatory authority, was negatively affected by inflationary pressures that increased the current claim generation cost by 18%. In addition, it is worth noting that the technical result of the Life segment was in turn negatively affected by late one-off claims in the bancassurance business. Finally, uncertainties still loom over the Serbian economy due to the geopolitical and macroeconomic tensions triggered by the conflict in Ukraine and rising energy costs, which have driven up prices, pressures that have added to inflation, which is already high in and of itself. The company continues to be a sector leader, with Non-Life premium growth of 11.7% and Life premium growth of 2.1%.
Incontra Assicurazioni recorded a roughly €31m profit at 31 December 2022 (profit of €15.6m at 31/12/2021), with premiums equal to €154.4m, up compared to the previous year (€109.2m in 2021, +41.4%), mainly concentrated in the Health and Pecuniary Losses classes (65% and 17%, respectively, of the total gross premiums written). The loss ratio remained at very low levels (equal to 20%, compared to 24% in 2021). At 31 December 2022, the volume of total investments reached €306m (€277m at 31/12/2021), almost entirely concentrated in available-for-sale financial assets, while gross technical provisions amounted to €352m (€342m at 31/12/2021).
Linear, a company specialised in direct sales (online and call centre) of MV products, in 2022 generated a profit of €10.2m, down compared to 31 December 2021 (€13.2m) due to the increase in the total cost of claims (amount paid plus amount reserved) during the year and the rise in the loss ratio. Total gross premiums at €192.6m were up compared to 2021 (€185.5m). The partnership for the sale of Home Assistance insurance with Hera, an Italian multiutility based in Bologna, generated premiums written for €1.9m in 2022 (€2.5m at 31/12/2021). The contribution of the product "Poste Guidare Sicuri LN", placed through the Poste Italiane network, was also positive, recording premiums of around €7.3m (€3.1m at 31/12/2021). At the end of 2022, there were close to 698k contracts in the portfolio (+3.5%), thus confirming the portfolio development experienced in recent years.
SIAT recorded a roughly €5.4m profit in 2022 (€4.6m at 31/12/2021) with total gross premiums (direct and indirect) up and amounting to around €173m (€151.2m in 2021). The increase is mainly attributable to the Hulls and Goods sectors. In particular: for the Hulls segment, the increase is essentially due to both extra premiums collected as a result of the continuing war between Russia and Ukraine and the appreciation of the dollar compared to last year, which generated a positive effect on business in foreign currency, while in the Goods segment the increase was due to the underwriting of new business, digital development and the increase in the value of raw materials and the resulting increase in premiums relating to commodities policies.
UniSalute confirms its leadership in the Healthcare segment, increasing direct premiums by 10.6% (7.5% at 31/12/2021). Total premiums (including indirect business) amounted to €614.3m (€553.0m at 31/12/2021), up by 11.1%. In terms of claims, the number of claims reported declined by 7.3%, from 3,944,808 in 2021 to 3,656,308 in the period under review. The decrease can be attributed to the Health class and is due primarily to the extraordinary nature of 2021 figures, which were impacted by Covid coverage that no longer existed in 2022. 2022 posted a profit of €64.1m, up compared to €44.7m at the end of 2021.

In the MV TPL and Land Vehicle Hulls segment, the "UnipolMove" device has been marketed since March 2022, which is UnipolSai's new electronic toll collection offer which establishes no restrictions in the case of withdrawal and is easy to use with a dedicated app. Through their reserved area on the website or the app, customers can check their movements, manage the offer and receive assistance. The offer also provides free insurance coverage against theft or loss of the device and, in the coming months, it will be possible to purchase an additional range of Land Vehicle Hulls guarantees.
During the period, MV rates were adjusted as of 1 March 2022, with a revision of the discounts applied to new vehicle sector policies through the installation of Unibox, with a view to improving especially competitiveness with customers who use their vehicles to a limited extent.
To further promote the marketing of policies with Unibox, with an initiative that concluded on 31 October 2022, the cost of the fee was reduced by €10 for new installations of all types of devices. The initiative concerned both new policies and new installations on policies in the portfolio that had not yet opted for a device. Starting from November 2022, the new "time-based" tariff option was implemented to replace the previous "mileage-based" approach, thus modifying the variable subject to detection by Unibox (from the number of kilometres recalibrated according to road types and time of day to time, measured in hours of travel). This option offers advantages to the customer such as a reduction of the premium both when signing the contract and when calculating the renewal premium, in the latter case verifying how long the vehicle was actually used.
For Land Vehicle Hulls, the "real value" tariff option was introduced, which reduces the premium for the coverages concerned (Fire, Theft and Robbery, Natural Events, Sociopolitical Events, Collision and Comprehensive) by changing the criteria for determining the loss amount: the commercial value of the vehicle at the time of the accident is considered in the event of a total loss and the depreciation from use of the spare parts in the event of a partial loss.
The "Full Assistance" guarantee was also integrated, with a particular focus on electric vehicles, providing for,
During 2022, the new "BeReBel Motor Vehicles" product was launched, resulting from the partnership between BeReBel and Linear. This is an innovative product for MV TPL, Other MV risks and Land Vehicle Hulls insurance, with monthly payment and mileage pricing, that involves the installation of the "RebelBot" satellite device. It is managed with the help of the new Linear target platform and distribution takes place via an app.
In the Non-MV segment, the year 2022 was characterised by the following activities:

Preventing and impeding insurance fraud are consolidated activities and an integral aspect of the core business. The results of these activities not only make positive impacts directly on the financial statements of the Group companies, but also generate deterrent effects on the proliferation of offences, with consequent benefits for the customers as well.
Decree Law no. 1/2012, converted with amendments by Law no. 27 of 24 March 2012, envisages that insurance companies are required to provide an estimate of the reduced charges for claims arising from verification of fraud in their Management Report or in the Notes to the Financial Statements annexed to the annual financial statements and to publish it on their websites or using another appropriate form of disclosure.
Pursuant to and in accordance with Art. 30, paragraph 2 of Decree Law no. 1/2012, the estimate of the reduction of charges for claims arising from this activity totals approximately €20m.
This estimate consists of the sum of provisions/forecasts of expense for claims to be investigated for antifraud purposes that were settled without follow-up in 2022, regardless of the year when they are generated.
Lastly, it should be noted that following the indications received from IVASS, there was a revision of the extraction indicators of claims without follow-up and the reasons for closure used by the settlement network for anti-fraud purposes: for the year 2022 this revision generated a reduction in the volume of claims belonging to that category and, as a result, the relative estimated reduction in charges (approximately €39m at 31/12/2021).
Total Life premiums (direct and indirect) were €5,341m (€5,386m at 31/12/2021, -0.8%).
The direct premiums, which represent almost all of the premiums, are broken down as follows:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total premiums | |||||
| I – Whole and term Life insurance | 2,878 | 53.9 | 3,449 | 64.0 | (16.6) |
| III - Unit-linked/index-linked policies | 946 | 17.7 | 1,119 | 20.8 | (15.5) |
| IV - Health | 14 | 0.3 | 9 | 0.2 | 63.2 |
| V - Capitalisation insurance | 199 | 3.7 | 224 | 4.1 | (10.9) |
| VI - Pension funds | 1,304 | 24.4 | 585 | 10.9 | 122.8 |
| Total Life business direct premiums | 5,341 | 100.0 | 5,386 | 100.0 | (0.8) |
| of which Premiums (IFRS 4) | |||||
| I – Whole and term Life insurance | 2,878 | 82.0 | 3,449 | 83.8 | (16.6) |
| III - Unit-linked/index-linked policies | 79 | 2.3 | 34 | 0.8 | 136.5 |
| IV - Health | 14 | 0.4 | 9 | 0.2 | 63.2 |
| V - Capitalisation insurance | 199 | 5.7 | 224 | 5.5 | (10.9) |
| VI - Pension Funds | 339 | 9.7 | 399 | 9.7 | (15.0) |
| Total Life business premiums | 3,510 | 100.0 | 4,114 | 100.0 | (14.7) |
| of which Investment products (IAS 39) | |||||
| III - Unit-linked/index-linked policies | 866 | 47.3 | 1,086 | 85.4 | (20.2) |
| VI - Pension funds | 965 | 52.7 | 186 | 14.6 | n.s. |
| Total Life investment products | 1,831 | 100.0 | 1,272 | 100.0 | 44.0 |
New business in terms of APE, net of non-controlling interests, amounted to €562m at 31 December 2022 (€548m at 31/12/2021).
Even within the current difficult economic context, the UnipolSai Group has maintained its strong position in the supplementary pensions market.
UnipolSai Assicurazioni managed a total of 23 Occupational Pension Fund mandates at 31 December 2022 (18 of them for accounts "with guaranteed capital and/or minimum return"). At the same date, resources under management totalled €4,390m (€3,811m of which with guaranteed capital). At 31 December 2021, UnipolSai managed a total of 21 Occupational Pension Fund mandates (17 of which "with guaranteed capital and/or minimum return"); resources under management totalled €4,032m (of which €3,389m with guaranteed capital).
As regards Open Pension Funds, at 31 December 2022 the UnipolSai Group managed 2 open pension funds (UnipolSai Previdenza FPA and Fondo Pensione Aperto BIM Vita) that at that date had a total of 41,103 members and total assets of €881m. At 31 December 2021, the Open Pension Funds managed total assets of €963m and a total of 41,370 members.

The performance of the main Group companies at 31 December 2022 is summarised in the following table:
| Amounts in €m | Premiums written (*) |
% Var. | Investments | Gross Technical Provisions |
Technical Provisions - Reinsurers' share |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LIFE INSURANCE SECTOR | |||||
| UNIPOLSAI ASSICURAZIONI SpA | 2,172 | (10.1) | 31,775 | 26,899 | 14 |
| ARCA VITA & ARCA VITA INTERNATIONAL | 1,299 | (20.3) | 12,584 | 9,828 | 9 |
| BIM VITA SpA | 21 | (58.8) | 581 | 466 |
(*) excluding financial products
UnipolSai collected a total of direct premiums amounting to €2,172m (€2,416m at 31/12/2021, roughly -10%) in addition to financial products amounting to €1,221m (€454m at 31/12/2021, +169%).
The individual policy sector recorded a 7.7% decline compared to 31 December 2021. Please also note that in 2022 premiums for Class I and Class IV single-premium revaluable products were limited to customers that reinvested sums deriving from the benefits due from the Company on the basis of other insurance contracts.
Again in the individual sector, Class IV premiums continued to increase (+63.2%) which shows the constantly growing interest in products with long-term care coverage. Compared to the previous year, there was also a slight decrease in Class III premiums (−3.9%).
Collective policy premiums showed an increase compared to the same period of the previous year (+56.0%) due to the acquisition of the new Class VI pension funds (+123.4%).
The slight decrease in first-year premiums compared to the previous year (-1.4%) is mainly attributable to Class I premiums (-4.2%), while single premiums increased (+21.9%), particularly due to the increase in Class VI (+123.4%). Periodic premiums (+5.3%) and single premiums (+21.9%) were up.
In the bancassurance channel, Arca Vita and its subsidiary Arca Vita International recorded premiums (including investment products) amounting to €1,894m (€2,423m at 31/12/2021). The volume of total investments reached the amount of €12,584m (€13,894m at 31/12/2021). The profit of Arca Vita, net of dividends collected from the subsidiaries, was €61.1m (up compared to €39.4m recognised at 31/12/2021), and that of Arca Vita International was €0.5m (€0.8m at 31/12/2021).
BIM Vita recorded a profit of €1.5m at the end of 2022, down compared to 31 December 2021 (€1.9m). Gross premiums written amounted to around €21m (down compared to around €51m at 31/12/2021). The volume of total investments reached the amount of €581m (€704m at 31/12/2021).
During 2022, the Group renewed its offer of Multisegment products by modifying the GestiMix line products, UnipolSai Investimento GestiMix and UnipolSai Risparmio GestiMix. The main new features regard the introduction of new internal funds, with the replacement of the Segment 3 benchmark fund in favour of three flexible funds Valore Equilibrato, Valore Dinamico and MegaTrend, as well as an increase of the minimum investment in the Class III share from 20% to 30% of the invested capital.
The structure of the products calls for two investment profiles (Balanced and Dynamic) and the presence of a free managed balancing service, which enables customers to delegate the Company to make decisions for the allocation of their investment, within the minimum and maximum limits prescribed by the selected profile. With the update of the Gestimix products, changes were made to the cost structure, the surrender penalties and the death bonus. For the "UnipolSai Risparmio GestiMix" product, an update was also made of the financial guarantee for the component linked to segregated funds, offering a minimum benefit equal to the invested capital recognised on maturity, in the case of death or surrender only starting from the tenth anniversary of the contract start date. This change was made to make the financial guarantee of the Savings product consistent with that already provided for the Investment product. At the same time, the minimum contract duration was extended to 15 years.
Continuing with premium placement activities, to optimise flows and returns of the Segregated Funds, the Group updated the segregated fund underlying the "UnipolSai Investimento MixSostenibile" multisegment product.
With regard to the risks underwritten in the Non-Life business, the reinsurance strategy proposed the same cover structures in place in 2021, maximising the effectiveness of the most operational part of the main non-proportional treaties, which were renewed in 2022 in continuity with those expiring.
At Group level, the following cover was negotiated and acquired in 2022:
The risks underwritten in the Life business in 2022 are mainly covered at Group level with two proportional treaties, one for individual risks and one for collective risks in excess of the risk premium. Retention is protected with a nonproportional cover in excess of loss by event that regards the Life and/or Accident classes. There are also three proportional covers for LTC guarantees, one proportional cover for Individual Serious Illnesses and one for Weighted Risks.
To minimise counterparty risk, reinsurance coverage continued to be spread out and placed with the major professional reinsurers that have been given a high credit rating by major rating agencies, in order to provide a comprehensive and competitive service. As regards Legal Expenses and part of Transport risks, these were instead ceded to specialised reinsurers and/or specialist Group companies.

The main income statement figures for the Real Estate sector are summarised below:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gains on other financial instruments and investment property | 80 | 68 | 16.9 |
| Other revenue | 41 | 37 | 11.5 |
| Total revenue and income | 121 | 105 | 15.0 |
| Losses on other financial instruments and investment property | (86) | (97) | (10.7) |
| Operating expenses | (38) | (35) | 9.5 |
| Other costs | (43) | (37) | 16.8 |
| Total costs and expenses | (168) | (169) | (0.4) |
| Pre-tax profit (loss) for the year | (47) | (64) | 26.0 |
The pre-tax result at 31 December 2022 was a loss of €47m (-€64m at 31/12/2021; -€72m net of non-recurring transactions).
Investments and cash and cash equivalents of the Real Estate sector (including business properties for own use) totalled €2,548m at 31 December 2022 (€2,344m at 31/12/2021), consisting mainly of Investment property and Properties for own use amounting to €2,428m (€2,216m at 31/12/2021).
Financial liabilities at 31 December 2022 totalled €222m (€202m at 31/12/2021).
During the year 2022, investments were made privileging high-value locations in Rome and Milan and the logistics sector. Specifically, in Rome, two properties were acquired (office and residential use) and in Milan an office property was acquired, while, with respect to the logistics sector, a property was acquired in Cavriglia (AR), near the A1 motorway. Two residential units and one for commercial use were also acquired in Rome.
Investment geographical diversification activities also continued, through the selective purchase of pan-European core funds, for €97m.
As concerns sales, around twenty properties (land and buildings) or units deemed unprofitable were sold.
Real estate asset renovation and development activities continued on more than 120 properties for around €123m. The sector was impacted by difficulties in obtaining raw materials and the resulting price increase, a trend that was accentuated in Italy by the tax incentives promoted by the government. In this scenario, the Russia-Ukraine conflict also had a negative impact, leading to a strong increase in energy prices.
As regards the main projects developed during the period, please note specifically that construction continued on a new elliptical-shaped multi-storey headquarters building in Piazza Gae Aulenti (Porta Nuova Garibaldi area). The building is roughly 125 metres tall, with 23 floors above ground and 3 floors underground, for a total surface area of 31,000 m2. The property was designed and built to receive the best certification in terms of energy and water saving and ecological quality of the spaces (Leed Platinum certification).
The scope of the disclosure on Group real estate business also includes properties owned by the companies in sectors other than the Real Estate sector.
The key income statement figures regarding the Other Businesses sector are provided below:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Income from investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | 5 | 6 | (13.9) |
| Gains on other financial instruments and investment property | 4 | 4 | 18.2 |
| Other revenue | 262 | 155 | 69.3 |
| Total revenue and income | 272 | 164 | 65.1 |
| Losses on other financial instruments and investment property | (11) | (1) | n.s. |
| Operating expenses | (172) | (111) | 54.6 |
| Other costs | (107) | (64) | 68.4 |
| Total costs and expenses | (290) | (176) | 64.9 |
| Pre-tax profit (loss) for the year | (18) | (11) | (61.8) |
The pre-tax result at 31 December 2022 was a loss of €18m (-€11m at 31/12/2021).
The items Other revenue and Other costs include revenue and costs for secondment of personnel and for services provided to and received from companies of the Group belonging to other sectors, eliminated during the consolidation process.
At 31 December 2022, Investments and cash and cash equivalents of the Other Businesses sector (including properties for own use of €162m) totalled €520m (€519m at 31/12/2021).
Financial liabilities amounted to €56m (€37m at 31/12/2021).
In 2022, the non-insurance diversified companies worked within a context of slow recovery, with several after-effects of the COVID-19 emergency influencing first quarter results, while starting from the second the effects on costs and revenues caused by the international scenario were seen. The structures worked with a view to the normalisation of activities, whenever possible, with a focus on cost curbing and respect for the economic and business plans developed.
As regards the hotel sector, after a very slow first four months of the year due to COVID restrictions, in continuity with the end of 2021, starting from May there was a gradual recovery that continued until the end of the year. The revenues of the subsidiary Gruppo UNA increased by approximately 123% compared to 31 December 2021 (from approximately €66.8m to around €149m). At 31 December, 31 facilities under direct management were open out of a total of 33. The period ended with a profit of approximately €1m.
As concerns agricultural activities, packaged wine sales of the company Tenute del Cerro recorded an increase of just under 1% compared to 31 December 2021, surpassing €9.4m, while total revenues rose from €10.7m to €11.3m, also as a result of the excellent performance of agri-tourism businesses. Despite good business trends, the period closed with a loss of €7.5m deriving substantially from capital losses on sales of land for a total of €4.4m and write-downs on land still in the portfolio of €5.2m.
Casa di Cura Villa Donatello closed 2022 with revenue of €40.5m, up by around 8.6% compared to 2021 (€37.3m). Revenue trends show a continuation of the positive performance in the core business, for hospitalisation (hospital stays and outpatient surgery) as well as clinic activities (visits and diagnostics). The company closed with a loss of €1.5m (profit of €1m in the previous year).

At 31 December 2022, Group Investments and cash and cash equivalents totalled €60,504m (€69,339m at 31/12/2021), with the following breakdown by business segment:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance | 57,625 | 95.2 | 66,676 | 96.2 | (13.6) |
| Other Businesses | 520 | 0.9 | 519 | 0.7 | 0.2 |
| Real Estate | 2,548 | 4.2 | 2,344 | 3.4 | 8.7 |
| Inter-segment eliminations | (188) | (0.3) | (200) | (0.3) | (5.7) |
| Total Investments and cash and cash equivalents (*) | 60,504 | 100.0 | 69,339 | 100.0 | (12.7) |
(*) including properties for own use
The breakdown by investment category is as follows:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Property (*) | 3,852 | 6.4 | 3,657 | 5.3 | 5.3 |
| Investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | 162 | 0.3 | 176 | 0.3 | (8.0) |
| Held-to-maturity investments | 366 | 0.6 | 367 | 0.5 | (0.3) |
| Loans and receivables | 4,894 | 8.1 | 5,245 | 7.6 | (6.7) |
| Debt securities | 3,948 | 6.5 | 4,019 | 5.8 | (1.8) |
| Deposits with ceding companies | 114 | 0.2 | 106 | 0.2 | 7.7 |
| Other loans and receivables | 833 | 1.4 | 1,120 | 1.6 | (25.7) |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 41,283 | 68.2 | 50,435 | 72.7 | (18.1) |
| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 9,121 | 15.1 | 8,574 | 12.4 | 6.4 |
| held for trading | 336 | 0.6 | 230 | 0.3 | 46.2 |
| at fair value through profit or loss | 8,786 | 14.5 | 8,345 | 12.0 | 5.3 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 826 | 1.4 | 885 | 1.3 | (6.7) |
| Total Investments and cash and cash equivalents | 60,504 | 100.0 | 69,339 | 100.0 | (12.7) |
(*) including properties for own uses
In 2022, the investment policies adopted in the financial area continued to apply, in the medium/long term, the general criteria of prudence and preservation of asset quality, in compliance with the Guidelines defined in the Group Investment Policy.
Specifically, financial operations were geared towards reaching profitability targets consistent with the asset return profile and with the trend in liabilities over the long-term, maintaining a high-quality portfolio through a process of selecting issuers on the basis of their diversification and strength, with a particular focus on the liquidity profile.
As regards bonds, a prudent approach was maintained, assuming a positioning consistent with a context of rising interest rates and persistent inflation.
The year was characterised by a restructuring of the exposure to government bonds and a reduction in exposure to Italian government bonds.
The non-government bond component recorded an increase in the Life segment and a reduction in the Non-Life segment during the year, concerning primarily financial issuers in the category of subordinated and corporate bonds to reduce the portfolio's risk profile, also in view of the now upcoming transition to the new IFRS 9 accounting standard.
Exposure to level 2 and 3 structured bonds remained essentially unchanged during 2022.
The following table shows the Group's exposure to structured securities:
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | variation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Carrying amount |
Market value |
Implied +/- |
Carrying amount |
Market value |
Implied +/- |
Carrying amount |
Market value |
| Structured securities - Level 1 | 14 | 14 | 40 | 40 | 1 | (26) | (27) | |
| Structured securities - Level 2 | 262 | 218 | (43) | 262 | 262 | (44) | ||
| Structured securities - Level 3 | 2 | 1 | (1) | 2 | 1 | (1) | ||
| Total structured securities | 277 | 233 | (44) | 303 | 303 | (26) | (70) |
Equity exposure rose in 2022 by €260m. Transactions concerned securities of issuers diversified in terms of both sector criteria and geographical factors, reducing the exposure to ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) and privileging single stock acquisitions. Almost all equity instruments belong to the main share indexes of developed countries. Strategies in options (calls and call spreads) at 3 and 5 years were also carried out, replicating the acquisition of the Eurostoxx50 index, for a total value of roughly €500m. This strategy makes it possible to benefit from any market increase over the next 4 years, limiting negative impacts to only the expense incurred for the acquisition of the premium.
Exposure to alternative funds, a category that includes Private Equity Funds, Hedge Funds and investments in Real Assets, amounted to €2,059m, an increase of approximately €486m compared to 31 December 2021.
Currency operations were actively managed following the performance of currency prices with a view to managing net exposure to the currency risk of outstanding equity and bond positions.
The overall duration of the Group portfolio was 5.28 years, down compared to the end of 2021 (6.66 years). With reference to the Group insurance portfolio, the Non-Life duration was 2.62 years (3.13 years at the end of 2021); the Life duration was 6.33 years (7.85 years at the end of 2021). The fixed rate and floating rate components of the bond portfolio amounted respectively to 91.1% and 8.9%. The government component accounted for approximately 63.8% of the bond portfolio whilst the corporate component accounted for the remaining 36.2%, split into 25.7% financial and 10.5% industrial credit.
88.5% of the bond portfolio was invested in securities with ratings equal or above BBB-. 10.6% of the total is positioned in classes AAA to AA-, while 19.1% of securities had an A rating. The exposure to securities in the BBB rating class was 58.8% and includes Italian government bonds, which make up 42.8% of the total bond portfolio.
4 The scope of the disclosure on financial transactions, in terms of the breakdown of investments, does not include investments the risk of which is borne by the policyholders and customers and, in terms of companies, does not include the foreign companies DDOR and DDOR Re, the investment values of which are of little significance on the whole within the Group's overall portfolio.
The breakdown of net gains (losses) on investments and financial income is shown in the table below:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Investment property | (22) | (1.3) | 25 | 1.6 | n.s. |
| Gains/losses on investments in subsidiaries and associates and interests in joint ventures |
15 | 0.9 | 11 | 0.7 | 28.5 |
| Net gains on held-to-maturity investments | 16 | 1.0 | 17 | 1.1 | (8.1) |
| Net gains on loans and receivables | 199 | 12.3 | 135 | 8.5 | 47.5 |
| Net gains on available-for-sale financial assets (*) | 1,595 | 98.9 | 1,417 | 89.6 | 12.6 |
| Net gains on held-for-trading financial assets held for trading and at fair value through profit or loss (**) |
(194) | (12.0) | (24) | (1.5) | n.s. |
| Balance of cash and cash equivalents | 5 | 0.3 | 1 | 0.1 | n.s. |
| Total net gains on financial assets, cash and cash equivalents | 1,613 | 100.0 | 1,582 | 100.0 | 2.0 |
| Net losses on other financial liabilities | (83) | (86) | 4.3 | ||
| Total net losses on financial liabilities | (83) | (86) | 4.3 | ||
| Total net gains (***) | 1,531 | 1,496 | 2.3 | ||
| Net gains on financial assets at fair value (****) | (925) | 365 | |||
| Net losses on financial liabilities at fair value (****) | 551 | (293) | |||
| Total net gains on financial instruments at fair value (****) | (375) | 72 | |||
| Total net gains on investments and net financial income | 1,156 | 1,568 | (26.3) |
(*) Excluding the valuations of financial assets available for sale subject to hedge accounting
(**) Excluding net gains and losses on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss for which investment risk is borne by customers (index- and unitlinked) and arising from pension fund management, including the valuations of financial assets available for sale subject to hedge accounting
(***) Excluding net gains and losses on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss for which investment risk is borne by customers (index- and unitlinked) and arising from pension fund management
(****) Net gains and losses on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss with investment risk borne by customers (index-and unit-linked) and arising from pension fund management.
At 31 December 2022, impairment losses were recognised in the Income Statement on financial instruments classified in the Available-for-sale asset category for €12m (€7m at 31/12/2021), in addition to net write-downs on investment property for €23m (net write-backs of €43m at 31/12/2021).
Movements in shareholders' equity recognised during the year with respect to 31 December 2021 are set out in the attached Statement of changes in Shareholders' equity.
Shareholders' equity, excluding non-controlling interests, breaks down as follows:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | var. in amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Share capital | 2,031 | 2,031 | |
| Other equity instruments | 496 | 496 | |
| Capital reserves | 347 | 347 | |
| Income-related and other equity reserves | 3,236 | 3,146 | 90 |
| (Treasury shares) | (3) | (1) | (2) |
| Reserve for foreign currency translation differences | 4 | 4 | |
| Gains/losses on available-for-sale financial assets | (1,129) | 1,285 | (2,414) |
| Other gains and losses recognised directly in equity | (11) | (34) | 22 |
| Profit (loss) for the year | 597 | 688 | (92) |
| Total shareholders' equity attributable to the owners of the Parent | 5,569 | 7,964 | (2,395) |
The main changes in the year in the Group's shareholders' equity were as follows:
Shareholders' Equity attributable to non-controlling interests was €244m (€270m at 31/12/2021).
At 31 December 2022, UnipolSai held a total of 1,162,312 ordinary treasury shares (336,768 at 31/12/2021), of which 988,160 directly and 174,152 indirectly through the following subsidiaries:
The changes concerned the following transactions in execution of the Compensation plans based on financial instruments (performance share type) for the executive staff of UnipolSai and its subsidiaries:
acquisition of a total of 1,800,000 UnipolSai shares by UnipolSai and its subsidiaries;
assignment of 974,456 UnipolSai shares in implementation of the Short Term Incentive compensation plan based on financial instruments for the year 2021.
At 31 December 2022, UnipolSai held, directly or through its subsidiaries, a total of 651,889 shares issued by the holding company Unipol Gruppo SpA (196,248 at 31/12/2021).

During the year, 1,000,000 shares were assigned to Company executives and 544,359 shares as part of the compensation plans based on financial instruments (performance share type).
In accordance with Consob Communication 6064293 of 28 July 2006 the statement reconciling the Group result for the year and shareholders' equity, including the corresponding figures for the Parent, is shown below:
| Amounts in €m | Share capital and reserves |
Profit(loss) for the year |
Shareholders' equity at 31/12/2022 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent balances in accordance with Italian GAAP | 6,022 | 145 | 6,167 |
| IAS/IFRS adjustments to the Parent's financial statements | (236) | 450 | 214 |
| Differences between net carrying amount and shareholders'equity and profit (loss) for the year of consolidated investments, of which: - Translation reserve |
(1,118) 4 |
211 | (907) 4 |
| - Gains or losses on available-for-sale financial assets | (192) | (192) | |
| - Other gains or losses recognised directly in equity | (21) | (21) | |
| Consolidation differences | 295 | 295 | |
| Companies measured using the equity method | 21 | 10 | 31 |
| Intercompany elimination of dividends | 167 | (167) | |
| Other adjustments | 10 | 3 | 12 |
| Consolidated Shareholders' equity | 5,161 | 651 | 5,813 |
| Non-controlling interests | 189 | 55 | 244 |
| Shareholders' equity attributable to the owners of the Parent | 4,972 | 597 | 5,569 |

At 31 December 2022, Technical provisions amounted to €51,766m (€57,128m at 31/12/2021) and Financial liabilities amounted to €9,142m (€8,411m at 31/12/2021).
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life technical provisions | 14,538 | 14,715 | (1.2) |
| Life technical provisions | 37,229 | 42,413 | (12.2) |
| Total technical provisions | 51,766 | 57,128 | (9.4) |
| Financial liabilities at fair value | 6,839 | 6,356 | 7.6 |
| Investment contracts - insurance companies | 6,685 | 5,911 | 13.1 |
| Other | 155 | 445 | (65.3) |
| Other financial liabilities | 2,303 | 2,055 | 12.1 |
| Subordinated liabilities | 1,367 | 1,446 | (5.5) |
| Other | 935 | 609 | 53.6 |
| Total financial liabilities | 9,142 | 8,411 | 8.7 |
| Total | 60,908 | 65,540 | (7.1) |
For a correct representation of the accounts under examination, information is provided below of financial debt only, which is the total amount of the financial liabilities not strictly associated with normal business operations.
The situation is summarised in the following statement:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | var. in amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subordinated liabilities | 1,367 | 1,446 | (79) |
| Payables to banks and other lenders | 802 | 478 | 324 |
| Total debt | 2,169 | 1,924 | 245 |
The subordinated liabilities issued by UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA amounted to €1,367m and relate for €1,250m to hybrid bonds and for €80m to subordinated bonds. This item includes accrued interest for a total of €37m.
Other loans, amounting to €802m (€478m at 31/12/2021), mainly consisted of:


The sustainability guidance function is performed by the Board of Directors, which approves Policies that define the Group's ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) commitments, the Integrated Three-Year Strategic Plan and the Sustainability Report. Since 2022, the Board has been supported by the Appointments, Governance and Sustainability Board Committee established within UnipolSai, which performs propositional, advisory, investigation and support functions for the Board of Directors with regard to ESG topics, coordinating – for the areas of competence – the policies, processes, initiatives and activities designed to monitor and promote the efforts of the Company for the pursuit of sustainable success. The implementation of the strategies is supported by the Sustainability Function, which reports to the Chief Executive Officer.
Sustainability is integrated within business activities, pursuing the objective of creating shared value, support for sustainable development and the prevention and mitigation of ESG risks; this approach is developed based on the Unipol Group Charter of Values and Code of Ethics.
The commitments made in these documents are concretely expressed in the Sustainability policy, which outlines the strategies for pursuing sustainable success objectives and defines the Group's commitments for improving its sustainability results and managing and mitigating: (i) the ESG risks to which it is exposed, in line with the overall Group risk management system as well as (ii) the impacts on ESG factors generated by the Group as a result of its activities and business relationships. One of the main developments in 2022 includes the definition of "The Unipol strategy on climate change", which establishes the Group's commitments to dealing with the risks and taking advantage of the opportunities related to the climate, defining new medium/long-term targets for reducing its greenhouse gas emissions to support its decarbonisation process.
ESG risk monitoring is then operationally broken down into Business policies, namely:
UnipolSai believes that the opportunities and well-being of the customers and people who work with the Group on a daily basis are the necessary conditions for its market development capacity and its sustainable success. Therefore, in the "Opening New Ways" 2022-2024 Strategic Plan, in relation to each of the five strategic areas, ESG objectives are identified and integrated, i.e. lines of action that, starting from opportunities linked to social, environmental and governance aspects, are aimed at generating positive impacts for stakeholders and society as well and contributing to sustainable development.
The main work areas identified in the Strategic Plan include:

To support this objective, in May 2022 the holding company Unipol joined the Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance, a United Nations initiative which at the end of 2022 involved 84 institutional investors, thus committing to reducing the emissions of its investment portfolios to net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and acting to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through the engagement of investee companies.
In this manner, the Group is committed to contributing to the achievement of the UN 2030 Agenda Goals 3 (Good health and well-being), 8 (Decent work and economic growth), 11 (Sustainable cities and communities), 12 (Responsible production and consumption) and 13 (Climate action).
In order to monitor respect for the commitments assumed, three sustainability indicators have been shared with the market, which measure (i) the increase in premiums for the sale of socially and environmentally impactful products (with a view to reaching 30% of the corresponding product families at the end of 2024), (ii) the increase in thematic investments, bringing them from 862m to 1,300m in the course of the Plan and (iii) the maintenance of a reputational performance above the financial-insurance sector average.
The role of non-financial factors amongst long-term variable remuneration criteria was strengthened significantly, to support the adoption of integrated thinking in the managerial structure; in the 2022-2024 period, these factors account for 20% of the long-term variable remuneration, considering the following objectives:
During the year, social initiatives continued as well: insurance education through the UnipolEos project and with FEduf (Foundation for Financial Education and Savings) for schools, the campaigns with Legambiente ("Bellezza Italia") and Libera, and the initiatives to support a widespread culture of respect for women. The stakeholder engagement and management activities of the Unipol Regional Councils continued with an action to renew governance and involve new organisations active in the various communities. The CreAree project has also entered a new phase: on one hand, with the concrete launch of the projects identified, and on the other with the activation of training courses promoted by transversal working groups. These actions advanced and intensified the engagement of the stakeholders and partners involved in the development of internal areas and marginal communities.
At international level, the holding company Unipol has signed on to the United Nations Global Compact, the Principles for Responsible Investing (UN PRI) and, as of 2021, the Principles for Sustainable Insurance (PSI), the global framework on sustainability in the insurance sector promoted by the United Nations Environmental Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI).
The total number of Group employees at 31 December 2022 was 12,315 (+434 compared with 2021).
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | Variation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of UnipolSai Group employees | 12,315 | 11,881 | 434 |
| of which on a fixed-term contract | 534 | 471 | 63 |
| Full Time Equivalent - FTE | 11,775 | 11,339 | 436 |
This includes 173 seasonal staff of Gruppo UNA at 31 December 2022 (53 at 31/12/2021), and foreign company employees (1,375) include 520 agents.
The increase of 434 compared to 31 December 2021 was due, net of transfers to fixed-term contracts or changes due to seasonal work that began and ended during the year, to 1,040 entries and 614 departures and 8 cases of incoming intra-group mobility from a company outside the UnipolSai scope.
At 31 December 2022, 2,361 agencies were in operation, of which 2,117 of UnipolSai (at 31/12/2021, the agencies were 2,442, of which 2,213 of UnipolSai), with 3,914 agents (4,093 at 31/12/2021). In 2022, consolidation and optimisation actions continued, with the aim of building a network of agencies to manage more consistent portfolios, with highly skilled specialist structures that guarantee the development of all the business ecosystems.
The leading bancassurance companies of the Group placed their products through the following sales networks:
As part of its Strategic Plan, the Group implemented consolidation and optimisation actions with the aim of building a network of agencies to manage more consistent portfolios, with highly skilled specialist structures that guarantee the development of all the business ecosystems.
In 2022, the Group's commercial actions were characterised, on the one hand, by the simplification and digitalisation of remote sale processes and, on the other, by the development of processes to strengthen the active role of the agencies in customer relationships. The opportunities for agencies to operate digitally were expanded further, to guarantee the possibility for the network to provide prompt support to its customers, operating in full mobility as regards consulting, quote management, policy issue and payments. In particular, in 2022 the new omnichannel sales method was introduced: existing or potential customers can calculate a quote online (on the website and app) for various Non-Life covers and purchase the policy directly online, in any event with the option of contacting the agency for advice and finalisation of the contract. Similarly, agencies can issue a quote for such covers and make it available to the customer in the reserved area for subsequent purchase. In addition, a specific contact centre service takes care of potential customers who have completed the online quote process, to facilitate the conclusion of the contract.
During 2022, activities were structured according to the areas set forth in the Strategic Plan and, in particular, along 3 lines of action.
Process Automation and Insurance Core Business Digitalisation through the intensive use of robotisation, process automation and artificial intelligence technologies. In particular:
Hybrid sales were extended to Home and UnipolMove products, in addition to Pet and Travel, and a new Data Driven Design (D3) approach was introduced to optimise the User Experience and product configuration with the intensive use of Digital Analytics.
App and Reserved Area registration with Digital Identity (SPID) was enabled to speed up the process and improve the quality of the data collected, and a Digital Workplace was created for the Claims Department, winner of the 2022 Intranet Italia Day.
New IT platforms were created for the management of electronic toll collection (UnipolMove), payments (UnipolPay) and Property claim repairs (UnipolHome), the Cyber platforms were enhanced, new Threat Intelligence services were introduced (no incidents detected despite the increased number of cyber attacks identified, also connected to the international situation) and training and Cyber awareness initiatives were carried out.
The Procedure for related-party transactions (the "Procedure") − prepared pursuant to Art. 4 of Consob Regulation no. 17221 of 12 March 2010 as amended (the "Consob Regulation") and updated most recently by the Company's Board of Directors on 23 June 2022 − defines the rules, methods and principles that ensure the transparency and substantive and procedural fairness of the transactions with related parties carried out by UnipolSai, either directly or through its subsidiaries.
The Procedure is published in the "Corporate Governance/Related Party Transactions" section of UnipolSai 's website (www.unipolsai.com).
With regard to the execution of Transactions with Related Parties qualified as of "Major Significance", it should be noted that, as specified in the previous paragraph "Significant events during the year", in December 2022, UnipolSai signed agreements for the renewal of the partnership in the bancassurance area (the "Renewal of Agreements" or the "Transaction") with BPER Banca SpA, a related party of the Company, and Banca Popolare di Sondrio SpA concerning the distribution of insurance products in the Life and Non-Life segments of Arca Vita SpA, Arca Assicurazioni SpA and Arca Vita International DAC. In the context of the Renewal of Agreements, the distribution by the above-mentioned banks of the "health" insurance products of the subsidiary UniSalute SpA was also governed by autonomous agreements that were also entered into.
The Transaction was approved on 15 December 2022 by the Board of Directors of the Company, after obtaining the favourable opinion of the Related Party Transactions Committee.
For additional information on this matter, see the Information Document concerning Transactions of "Major Significance" with Related Parties, drawn up by UnipolSai pursuant to Art. 5 of the CONSOB Regulation as well as Art. 14 of the Procedure, posted on 22 December 2022 on the website www.unipolsai.com, in the "Governance/Related Party Transactions" section.
In 2022, UnipolSai did not approve, or carry out, directly or through subsidiaries, any related-party transactions qualified as of "Major Significance", or which significantly influenced the financial position or profit and loss of the companies, pursuant to Art. 5, paragraph 8 of the CONSOB Regulation.
As regards the disclosure required by IAS 24, please refer to paragraph 5.6 - Transactions with related parties in the Notes to the financial statements.
The information required by the Art. 123-bis, Italian Legislative Decree 58 of 24 February 1998 as amended is included in the Annual Report on corporate governance and ownership structures, approved by the Board of Directors and published together with the management report.
The Annual Report on Corporate Governance and Ownership Structures is available in the "Governance/Corporate Governance System/Annual Report" Section on the Company's website (www.unipolsai.com).

Pursuant to the requirements set forth in Art. 2.6.2, paragraph 8 of the Regulation governing markets organised and managed by Borsa Italiana SpA with reference to subsidiaries subject to the management and coordination of another company, it is hereby stated that the conditions set forth in Art. 16 of Consob Regulation no. 20249/2017 exist for UnipolSai SpA.

On 23 January 2023, during the official presentation of Ducati for the 2023 season of the MotoGP World Championship, the partnership between UnipolSai and the Borgo Panigale team was renewed, for the seventh consecutive year confirming the common path of two Italian excellences united in the sharing of values, passion and approach to innovation.
On 2 February 2023, following the unanimous approval of the final liquidation financial statements by the ordinary Shareholders' Meeting, the associate Hotel Villaggio Città del Mare SpA in liquidazione was cancelled from the Register of Companies of Modena. No allocation was made as the final assets were equal to zero.
At the meeting of 7 February 2023, the Board of Directors of UnipolReC SpA, in acknowledging that, following the sale en bloc without recourse of the entire loan portfolio in favour of AMCO – Asset Management Company SpA, completed pursuant to Art. 58 of the Consolidated Law on Banking on 14 December 2022, the continuation of financial intermediation activities pursuant to Art. 106 of the Consolidated Law on Banking no longer satisfies the interests of the Unipol Group, resolved, among other things, on the proposal to adopt a new corporate purpose with consequent waiver of exercise of the activity reserved to it pursuant to Art. 106 of the Consolidated Law on Banking. This proposal will be submitted for approval to an upcoming Shareholders' Meeting of UnipolReC, subject to the issue by the Bank of Italy of the authorisation required pursuant to Bank of Italy Circular no. 288 of 3 April 2015, as requested on 24 February 2023.
On 7 February 2023, Matteo Laterza, Chief Executive Officer of UnipolSai, received the Insurer of the Year award at the Milano Finanza 2023 Insurance Awards, the recognition reserved for excellence in the insurance sector.
On 20 February 2023, the share capital increase of the subsidiary DDOR Novi Sad of RSD 587,497,887.08 (approximately €5m) resolved by the Shareholders' Meeting of 30 January was fully subscribed and paid up.
On 26 January 2023, a further capital contribution of €15m was made to the subsidiary Meridiano Secondo for continuation of the work on real estate initiatives in progress.
On 23 February 2023, a capital contribution of €5m was made in favour of the subsidiary Cambiomarcia to complete the capital needs of a total €13m recorded by the company for 2022.
On 24 February 2023, an initial capital contribution of €9m was made in favour of the subsidiary UnipolPay as part of the funding envisaged in the Strategic Plan for 2023.


The Boards of Directors of UnipolRe DAC and UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA, which met on 20 March and 23 March 2023, respectively, approved the plan to merge UnipolRe DAC into UnipolSai Assicurazioni. This merge, conditional upon the necessary authorisation, has no accounting effects on the consolidated financial statements as UnipolRe is a wholly-owned subsidiary.
At its meeting on 23 March 2023, the Board of Directors of UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA approved an industrial project in the long-term rental business with BPER Banca SpA which, inter alia, calls for the integration via merger by incorporation of SIFÀ - Società Italiana Flotte Aziendali SpA (a company belonging to the BPER Group) into UnipolRental SpA. This project is part of the "Beyond Insurance Enrichment" strategic area, more specifically the "Mobility" ecosystem, of the "Opening New Ways" 2022-2024 Strategic Plan and is aimed at creating an operator of national significance in the long-term rental sector. As a result of this merger, BPER will hold a 20% investment in the share capital of UnipolRental.
The international macroeconomic forecasts for the year 2023 are characterised by extreme uncertainty, with positive effects generated by the drop in energy prices offset by the negative effects caused by the persistence of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, sustained levels of inflation and the ensuing continuous interest rate hikes applied by the ECB, which will contribute towards limiting the development of the Eurozone economy. In Italy, after the decisive recovery seen in 2021 and 2022, GDP could record growth close to zero this year.
With reference to the financial markets, after a start to the year characterised by a generalised recovery in bond and equity prices, in March a phase of high volatility and declines began, linked to uncertainties about the capital strength and financial statements of some banking institutions, with fears of contagion risk and instability.
All of this reflects on the Group's financial investments and on the financial management which continues to be aimed, especially in the current highly volatile context, at the consistency of assets and liabilities and optimising the risk/return and liquidity profile of the portfolio, also in order to maintain an adequate level of solvency.
In 2023, the insurance business will be witnessing the evolution of important projects, envisaged in the 2022-2024 Strategic Plan and launched in 2022:
In the Non-Life business, to combat the effects of inflation, we will aim to further strengthen our settlement specialisations thanks to the know-how gained by the Group in the area of telematics and a constant push to route MV claims to the UnipolService and UnipolGlass network, which offers excellent results in terms of the limitation of average repair costs.
In the Life business, considering the recovery in market interest rates, multisegment products were supported by the offer of traditional Class I products in order to favour the profitability of segregated funds.
In 2023, growth activities will continue in the Mobility ecosystem, where the commercial integration of the agency network with UnipolRental continues with great success, in addition to the commercial expansion of UnipolMove, our device for the payment of motorway tolls and other services linked to mobility. Furthermore, in 2023, our offer will be enhanced with new services in the Welfare and Property ecosystems, which were strengthened during 2022 with new acquisitions.
The information currently available makes it possible to confirm, in the absence of currently unforeseeable events, also linked to the aggravation of the reference context, that its consolidated income trends for the year under way are in line with the objectives laid out in the 2022-2024 Strategic Plan.
Bologna, 23 March 2023
The Board of Directors



\65
2.Consolidated Financial Statements
Consolidated Financial Statements
at 31 December 2022 Tables of
bianco

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | INTANGIBLE ASSETS | 1,143.1 | 962.9 |
| 1.1 | Goodwill | 602.1 | 513.7 |
| 1.2 | Other intangible assets | 541.1 | 449.3 |
| 2 | PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT | 2,784.0 | 2,431.0 |
| 2.1 | Property | 1,492.9 | 1,500.8 |
| 2.2 | Other tangible assets | 1,291.2 | 930.2 |
| 3 | TECHNICAL PROVISIONS - REINSURERS' SHARE | 761.6 | 831.3 |
| 4 | INVESTMENTS | 58,185.7 | 66,953.5 |
| 4.1 | Investment property | 2,359.1 | 2,155.8 |
| 4.2 | Investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | 162.3 | 176.5 |
| 4.3 | Held-to-maturity investments | 365.7 | 366.7 |
| 4.4 | Loans and receivables | 4,894.1 | 5,245.1 |
| 4.5 | Available-for-sale financial assets | 41,283.0 | 50,435.0 |
| 4.6 | Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 9,121.4 | 8,574.3 |
| 5 | SUNDRY RECEIVABLES | 3,471.6 | 3,424.9 |
| 5.1 | Receivables relating to direct insurance business | 1,416.2 | 1,398.0 |
| 5.2 | Receivables relating to reinsurance business | 191.7 | 204.5 |
| 5.3 | Other receivables | 1,863.7 | 1,822.4 |
| 6 | OTHER ASSETS | 3,039.2 | 970.8 |
| 6.1 | Non-current assets or assets of a disposal group held for sale | 532.6 | 132.6 |
| 6.2 | Deferred acquisition costs | 102.1 | 100.1 |
| 6.3 | Deferred tax assets | 885.0 | 108.1 |
| 6.4 | Current tax assets | 36.3 | 9.1 |
| 6.5 | Other assets | 1,483.3 | 620.9 |
| 7 | CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS | 825.8 | 884.8 |
| TOTAL ASSETS | 70,211.0 | 76,459.3 |
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY | 5,812.6 | 8,233.8 |
| 1.1 | attributable to the owners of the Parent | 5,568.6 | 7,964.0 |
| 1.1.1 | Share capital | 2,031.5 | 2,031.5 |
| 1.1.2 | Other equity instruments | 496.2 | 496.2 |
| 1.1.3 | Capital reserves | 346.8 | 346.8 |
| 1.1.4 | Income-related and other equity reserves | 3,236.4 | 3,146.1 |
| 1.1.5 | (Treasury shares) | (2.8) | (0.7) |
| 1.1.6 | Reserve for foreign currency translation differences | 4.1 | 3.9 |
| 1.1.7 | Gains or losses on available-for-sale financial assets | (1,128.6) | 1,285.4 |
| 1.1.8 | Other gains or losses recognised directly in equity | (11.4) | (33.6) |
| 1.1.9 | Profit (loss) for the year attributable to the owners of the Parent | 596.5 | 688.5 |
| 1.2 | attributable to non-controlling interests | 244.0 | 269.8 |
| 1.2.1 | Share capital and reserves attributable to non-controlling interests | 224.8 | 216.8 |
| 1.2.2 | Gains or losses recorded directly in equity | (35.8) | 18.3 |
| 1.2.3 | Profit (loss) for the year attributable to non-controlling interests | 54.9 | 34.8 |
| 2 | PROVISIONS | 595.9 | 422.0 |
| 3 | TECHNICAL PROVISIONS | 51,766.2 | 57,128.3 |
| 4 | FINANCIAL LIABILITIES | 9,142.0 | 8,411.2 |
| 4.1 | Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss | 6,839.1 | 6,356.4 |
| 4.2 | Other financial liabilities | 2,302.9 | 2,054.8 |
| 5 | PAYABLES | 1,497.6 | 1,191.5 |
| 5.1 | Payables arising from direct insurance business | 198.1 | 187.6 |
| 5.2 | Payables arising from reinsurance business | 143.7 | 104.5 |
| 5.3 | Other payables | 1,155.7 | 899.5 |
| 6 | OTHER LIABILITIES | 1,396.7 | 1,072.4 |
| 6.1 | Liabilities associated with disposal groups | 388.0 | 3.1 |
| 6.2 | Deferred tax liabilities | 0.8 | 107.6 |
| 6.3 | Current tax liabilities | 12.5 | 39.4 |
| 6.4 | Other liabilities | 995.5 | 922.3 |
| TOTAL SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY AND LIABILITIES | 70,211.0 | 76,459.3 |

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.1 | Net premiums | 11,365.6 | 11,878.5 |
| 1.1.1 | Gross premiums earned | 11,906.9 | 12,349.1 |
| 1.1.2 | Earned premiums ceded to reinsurers | (541.3) | (470.6) |
| 1.2 | Commission income | 49.0 | 45.3 |
| 1.3 | Gains and losses on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss | (312.9) | 188.8 |
| 1.4 | Gains on investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | 22.7 | 13.0 |
| 1.5 | Gains on other financial instruments and investment property | 2,325.0 | 1,860.2 |
| 1.5.1 | Interest income | 1,512.3 | 1,368.1 |
| 1.5.2 | Other income | 345.3 | 233.6 |
| 1.5.3 | Realised gains | 466.7 | 238.5 |
| 1.5.4 | Unrealised gains | 0.7 | 19.9 |
| 1.6 | Other revenue | 1,154.4 | 935.1 |
| 1 | TOTAL REVENUE AND INCOME | 14,603.8 | 14,921.0 |
| 2.1 | Net charges relating to claims | (8,600.1) | (9,809.2) |
| 2.1.1 | Amounts paid and changes in technical provisions | (8,782.8) | (9,992.1) |
| 2.1.2 | Reinsurers' share | 182.7 | 183.0 |
| 2.2 | Commission expenses | (88.6) | (36.4) |
| 2.3 | Losses on investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | (8.0) | (1.6) |
| 2.4 | Losses on other financial instruments and investment property | (870.9) | (492.5) |
| 2.4.1 | Interest expense | (80.0) | (82.2) |
| 2.4.2 | Other charges | (31.6) | (27.8) |
| 2.4.3 | Realised losses | (412.6) | (115.8) |
| 2.4.4 | Unrealised losses | (346.7) | (266.8) |
| 2.5 | Operating expenses | (2,768.8) | (2,611.0) |
| 2.5.1 | Commissions and other acquisition costs | (1,886.6) | (1,856.6) |
| 2.5.2 | Investment management expenses | (135.4) | (125.3) |
| 2.5.3 | Other administrative expenses | (746.7) | (629.1) |
| 2.6 | Other costs | (1,347.4) | (1,075.5) |
| 2 | TOTAL COSTS AND EXPENSES | (13,683.8) | (14,026.1) |
| PRE-TAX PROFIT (LOSS) FOR THE YEAR | 920.0 | 894.9 | |
| 3 | Income tax | (268.5) | (171.7) |
| PROFIT (LOSS) FOR THE PERIOD AFTER TAXES | 651.5 | 723.2 | |
| 4 | PROFIT (LOSS) FROM DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS | 0 | 0 |
| CONSOLIDATED PROFIT (LOSS) | 651.5 | 723.2 | |
| of which attributable to the owners of the Parent | 596.5 | 688.5 | |
| of which attributable to non-controlling interests | 54.9 | 34.8 |

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
|---|---|---|
| CONSOLIDATED PROFIT (LOSS) | 651.5 | 723.2 |
| Other income items net of taxes not reclassified to profit or loss | 11.0 | (0.8) |
| Change in the shareholders' equity of the investees | 0.0 | (0.0) |
| Change in the revaluation reserve for intangible assets | 0.1 | 0 |
| Change in the revaluation reserve for property, plant and equipment | 0 | 0 |
| Gains and losses on non-current assets or disposal groups held for sale | 0 | 0 |
| Actuarial gains and losses and adjustments relating to defined benefit plans | 10.9 | 0.4 |
| Other items | 0 | (1.3) |
| Other income items net of taxes reclassified to profit or loss | (2,456.7) | (44.2) |
| Change in the reserve for foreign currency translation differences | 0.2 | (0.1) |
| Gains or losses on available-for-sale financial assets | (2,468.2) | (12.1) |
| Gains or losses on cash flow hedges | 16.7 | (42.1) |
| Gains or losses on hedges of a net investment in foreign operations | 0 | 0 |
| Change in the shareholders' equity of the investees | (5.4) | 10.1 |
| Gains and losses on non-current assets or disposal groups held for sale | 0 | 0 |
| Other items | 0 | 0 |
| TOTAL OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (EXPENSE) | (2,445.7) | (45.0) |
| TOTAL CONSOLIDATED COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (EXPENSE) | (1,794.2) | 678.2 |
| of which attributable to the owners of the Parent | (1,795.1) | 645.8 |
| of which attributable to non-controlling interests | 0.9 | 32.4 |

| Amounts in €m | Balance at 31/12/2020 |
Changes to closing balances |
Amounts allocated |
Adjustments from reclassif. to profit or loss |
Transfers | Changes in investments |
Balance at 31/12/2021 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Share capital | 2,031.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2,031.5 | |
| Other equity instruments | 496.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 496.2 | |
| Capital reserves | 346.8 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 346.8 | |
| Income-related and other equity reserves |
2,889.2 | 0 | 256.9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3,146.1 | |
| (Treasury shares) | (1.3) | 0 | 0.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | (0.7) | |
| Shareholders' Equity attributable to the owners of the Parent |
Profit (loss) for the year | 820.0 | 0 | 406.0 | 0 | (537.5) | 0 | 688.5 |
| Other comprehensive income/(expense) |
1,298.4 | 0 | (190.5) | 147.8 | 0 | 0 | 1,255.8 | |
| Total attributable to the owners of the Parent |
7,880.8 | 0 | 472.9 | 147.8 | (537.5) | 0 | 7,964.0 | |
| Shareholders' Equity controlling interests attributable to non- |
Share capital and reserves attributable to non-controlling interests |
209.5 | 0 | 7.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 216.8 |
| Profit (loss) for the year | 33.1 | 0 | 27.5 | 0 | (25.8) | 0 | 34.8 | |
| Other comprehensive income/(expense) |
20.6 | 0 | (6.3) | 3.9 | 0 | 0 | 18.3 | |
| Total attributable to non-controlling interests |
263.3 | 0 | 28.5 | 3.9 | (25.8) | 0 | 269.8 | |
| Total | 8,144.0 | 0 | 501.4 | 151.7 | (563.4) | 0 | 8,233.8 |
| Balance at 31/12/2021 |
Changes to closing balances |
Amounts allocated |
Adjustments from reclassif. to profit or loss |
Transfers | Changes in investments |
Balance at 31/12/2022 |
||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Share capital | 2,031.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2,031.5 | |
| Other equity instruments | 496.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 496.2 | |
| Capital reserves | 346.8 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 346.8 | |
| Shareholders' Equity attributable to the owners of the Parent |
Income-related and other equity reserves |
3,146.1 | 0 | 122.2 | 0 | (31.9) | 0 | 3,236.4 |
| (Treasury shares) | (0.7) | 0 | (2.1) | 0 | 0 | 0 | (2.8) | |
| Profit (loss) for the year | 688.5 | 0 | 445.5 | 0 | (537.4) | 0 | 596.5 | |
| Other comprehensive income/(expense) |
1,255.8 | 0 | (1,874.7) | (516.9) | 0 | 0 | (1,135.9) | |
| Total attributable to the owners of the Parent |
7,964.0 | 0 | (1,309.1) | (516.9) | (569.3) | 0 | 5,568.6 | |
| Share capital and reserves attributable to non-controlling interests |
216.8 | 0 | 8.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 224.8 | |
| Profit (loss) for the year | 34.8 | 0 | 46.7 | 0 | (26.5) | 0 | 54.9 | |
| Shareholders' Equity controlling interests attributable to non- |
Other comprehensive income/(expense) |
18.3 | 0 | (48.2) | (5.8) | 0 | 0 | (35.8) |
| Total attributable to non controlling interests |
269.8 | 0 | 6.4 | (5.8) | (26.5) | 0 | 244.0 | |
| Total | 8,233.8 | 0 | (1,302.7) | (522.8) | (595.8) | 0 | 5,812.6 |
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-tax profit (loss) for the year | 920.0 | 894.9 |
| Change in non-monetary items | 2,250.7 | 364.5 |
| Change in Non-Life premium provision | 101.1 | (20.2) |
| Change in claims provision and other Non-Life technical provisions | 45.0 | 347.5 |
| Change in mathematical provisions and other Life technical provisions | (5,184.6) | (902.0) |
| Change in deferred acquisition costs | (3.2) | (0.9) |
| Change in provisions | 173.9 | (15.7) |
| Non-monetary gains and losses on financial instruments, investment property and investments | 918.1 | (202.9) |
| Other changes | 6,200.4 | 1,158.8 |
| Change in receivables and payables generated by operating activities | (99.6) | (360.7) |
| Change in receivables and payables relating to direct insurance and reinsurance | 13.6 | 16.3 |
| Change in other receivables and payables | (113.2) | (377.0) |
| Paid taxes | (155.8) | (99.6) |
| Net cash flows generated by/used for monetary items from investing and financing activities | (697.2) | 1,233.1 |
| Liabilities from financial contracts issued by insurance companies | 950.4 | 1,723.2 |
| Payables to bank and interbank customers | 0 | 0 |
| Loans and receivables from banks and interbank customers | 0 | 0 |
| Other financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss | (1,647.7) | (490.1) |
| TOTAL NET CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES | 2,218.1 | 2,032.2 |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for investment property | (266.0) | 24.2 |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures (*) | (73.8) | 0.1 |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for loans and receivables | (1,175.3) | (366.4) |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for held-to-maturity investments | 3.5 | 56.7 |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for available-for-sale financial assets | 232.6 | (184.2) |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for property, plant and equipment and intangible assets | (817.1) | (235.1) |
| Other net cash flows generated by/used for investing activities | 24.2 | 96.8 |
| TOTAL NET CASH FLOW GENERATED BY/USED FOR INVESTING ACTIVITIES | (2,071.8) | (607.9) |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for equity instruments attributable to the owners of the Parent | (24.5) | 0 |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for treasury shares | (1.9) | 0.8 |
| Dividends distributed attributable to the owners of the Parent | (537.4) | (537.5) |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for share capital and reserves attributable to non-controlling interests | (26.5) | (25.8) |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for subordinated liabilities and equity instruments | (80.0) | (641.7) |
| Net cash flow generated by/used for other financial liabilities | 469.2 | (15.8) |
| TOTAL NET CASH FLOW GENERATED BY/USED FOR FINANCING ACTIVITIES | (201.1) | (1,220.0) |
| Effect of exchange rate gains/losses on cash and cash equivalents | 0.0 | (0.0) |
| CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AT 1 JANUARY (**) | 885.0 | 680.7 |
| INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS | (54.8) | 204.3 |
| CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS AT 31 DECEMBER (***) | 830.2 | 885.0 |
(*) The 2022 figure includes the difference between the purchase price paid for I.Car, Muriana Manuela, Tanto Svago Srl, Anton Maria Valsalva Srl, Unicasa Italia S.p.A., Gratia et Salus Srl et DaVinci Healthcare Srl. and cash and cash equivalents transferred post-acquisition.
(**) Include cash and cash equivalents of non-current assets or those of a disposal group held for sale (2022: €0.2m; 2021: €0.1m).
(***) Include cash and cash equivalents of non-current assets or those of a disposal group held for sale (2022: €4.4m; 2021: €0.2m).



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The UnipolSai Group, consisting of UnipolSai SpA ("UnipolSai") and its subsidiaries, operates in all Non-Life and Life insurance and reinsurance and capitalisation business; it may issue investment contracts and may set up and manage Open Pension Funds, in compliance with the provisions of Art. 9 of Italian Legislative Decree 124 of 21 April 1993 and subsequent amendments.
To support the insurance business and the relative ecosystems, it has developed instrumental commercial activities relating in particular to vehicle repair and vehicle glass replacement, the management of black boxes and other telematic devices, the management of payments in mobility, long-term vehicle rental and the marketing of anti-theft systems for vehicles.
It also carries out real estate, and to a lesser extent, financial, hotel, agricultural, healthcare and flexible benefits activities.
The UnipolSai Group operates primarily in Italy: outside Italy, the Group operates in Serbia, through the subsidiary DDOR Novi Sad and the dedicated captive reinsurance company Ddor Re, and in Ireland with UnipolRe, a professional reinsurance company.
UnipolSai is a joint-stock company, has its registered office in Bologna (Italy) at via Stalingrado 45 and is listed on the Milan Stock Exchange.
UnipolSai's Consolidated Financial Statements were drawn up in accordance with Art. 154-ter of Italian Legislative Decree 58/1998 (Consolidated Law on Finance) and of ISVAP Regulation no. 7 of 13 July 2007, as amended. They conform to the IAS/IFRS standards issued by the IASB and endorsed by the European Union, along with the interpretations issued by IFRIC, in accordance with the provisions of Regulation (EC) no. 1606/2002 in force on the closing date of the financial statements.
The Consolidated Financial Statements consist of:
The layout conforms to the provisions of ISVAP Regulation no. 7 of 13 July 2007, Part III as amended, relating to the layout of the Consolidated Financial Statements of insurance and reinsurance companies that must adopt international accounting standards.
The information requested by Consob Communications DEM/6064293 of 28 July 2006 and DEM/11070007 of 5 August 2011 is also provided.
The Consolidated Financial Statements are drawn up on the assumption that the company will continue as a going concern, in application of the principles of accrual accounting, materiality and truthfulness of accounting information, in order to provide a true and fair view of the equity-financial position and economic result, in compliance with the principle of the prevalence of the economic substance of transactions over their legal form.
The going concern assumption is considered to be confirmed with reasonable certainty given that companies belonging to the UnipolSai Group have sufficient resources to ensure that they will continue to operate for the foreseeable future. In addition, the liquidity risk is deemed to be very remote.
The layout of the financial statements offers a comparison with the figures of the previous year. Where necessary, in the event of a change to the accounting standards, measurement or classification criteria, the comparative data are re-stated and reclassified in order to provide homogeneous and consistent information.
The presentation currency is the euro and all the amounts shown in the financial statements and these notes are in €m, except when specifically indicated, rounded to one decimal place; therefore the sum of the individual amounts is not always identical to the total.

The Consolidated financial statements of UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA are subject to an audit by independent auditors EY SpA, the company tasked with performing the legally-required audit of the consolidated financial statements for the 2021/2029 period.
The "Transparency Directive" (2004/109/EC) requires listed companies to publish their annual financial report in the "single electronic reporting format". To this end, Regulation (EU) 2019/815 of 2018 (the "ESEF Regulation"), as supplemented by national regulations, imposed the obligation of drafting such reporting in XHTML format starting from 2021, also marking up certain information in the consolidated financial statements using XBRL specifications. Consistent with the provisions of the Regulation, which starting this year has extended the information elements subject to the mark-up obligation, these consolidated financial statements contain the mark-up of numerical data contained in the statement of financial position, the income statement and the comprehensive income statement, the statement of changes in shareholders' equity and the statement of cash flows, as well as the information elements identified in Annex II of the regulation if they are reported in the explanatory notes. It should be noted that, due to certain technical limitations recognised by ESMA in its ESEF Reporting Manual, when some information contained in the explanatory notes is extracted from the XHTML format in an XBRL instance, it may not be reproduced in a manner identical to the corresponding information that can be viewed in the consolidated financial statements in XHTML format, which could therefore cause difficulties in the readability of such extracted information.
The UnipolSai Group's Consolidated Financial Statements at 31 December 2022 were drawn up by combining the figures of UnipolSai and those for the 58 direct and indirect subsidiaries (IFRS 10). At 31 December 2021 a total of 49 companies were consolidated on a line-by-line basis. Subsidiaries deemed to be too small to be of relevance are excluded from line-by-line consolidation.
There are no jointly-controlled interests.
Associates (20 companies), in which the investment percentage ranges between 20% and 50%, and subsidiaries considered immaterial (2 companies), are measured using the equity method (IAS 28) or maintained at the carrying amount. At 31 December 2021, a total of 21 associates and subsidiaries were considered immaterial.
Investments consolidated on a line-by-line basis and those measured using the equity method are listed in the tables showing the Consolidation scope and Details of unconsolidated investments, respectively, which are appended to these Notes.
The year 2022 was characterised by numerous entries of companies into the scope of consolidation in relation to the implementation of the guidelines of the 2022-2024 Strategic Plan aimed at the development of the Mobility, Welfare and Property ecosystems. The changes in the scope of consolidation during the year are described below.
On 13 January 2022, on obtaining authorisation from the Antitrust Authority, the proposed contract for the purchase by UnipolSai of 100% of I.Car Srl, active in the sector of anti-theft systems for vehicles, and 100% of the share capital of Muriana Manuela Srl (insurance intermediary) was executed.
On 20 January 2022, the deed of incorporation of the company UnipolHome SpA, wholly-owned by UnipolSai and intended, as part of the Property ecosystem, to achieve benefits in terms of cost and service for the settlement of insurance claims, was filed with the Register of Companies.

On 10 February 2022, UnipolSai Investimenti Sgr SpA, as the management company and in name and on behalf of the closed-end real estate investment fund Athens R.E. Fund, acquired 100% of the share capital of the sole member limited liability company Nuove Terme Petriolo Srl, owner of the concessions for the exploitation of a thermal establishment.
The company Welbee SpA, a wholly-owned subsidiary of UnipolSai, was established on 6 July 2022, with the aim of carrying out platform provider activities in the flexible benefits market, in the welfare and healthcare sectors, within the framework of the Beyond Insurance Enrichment strategic area of the 2022-2024 Strategic Plan.
On 6 July 2022, UnipolSai acquired an overall equity investment amounting to 68.865% of the share capital of the company Tantosvago Srl. As set forth in the agreement, on the same date, a share capital increase reserved to UnipolSai was also approved, subscribed and paid up, bringing the percentage of capital held to 75%. Tantosvago Srl is active in the flexible benefits market, or those goods and services that a company can provide within the welfare plan for its employees, with the role of aggregator - a company that holds the technology and the know-how to proceed with the acquisition and aggregation of individual products/services provided by various suppliers (such as insurance companies, healthcare facilities, gyms, travel agencies, training organisations) within a digital catalogue of services set up to be integrated within dedicated platforms.
On 3 August 2022, the Subsidiary Centri Medici Dyadea Srl completed the acquisition of the equity investment representing 100% of the share capital of Anton Maria Valsalva Srl, a company that manages a multi-specialty health centre located in Imola.
On 26 October, a UnipolHome SpA capital contribution was made for the acquisition of an equity investment representing 70% of the share capital of Unicasa Italia SpA, a company that provides integrated real estate services, specifically in the condominium administration sector, through a network of franchise administrators. The acquisition was completed on 27 October 2022.
On 14 November 2022, a further Centri Medici Dyadea Srl capital contribution was made for the acquisition of the 100% interest in the share capital of Gratia et Salus Srl, a company that manages a multi-specialty health centre located in Bologna specialised in occupational medicine.
On 30 November, the shareholders' meeting approved the final liquidation financial statements of the subsidiary Unica Lab Srl and the allotment activities set forth in the distribution plan were carried out. The closure of the liquidation meant that the company was struck off the Register of Companies on 16 December.
On 13 December 2022, UnipolSai acquired the entire equity investment held by UnipolRental SpA in Immobiliare C.S. Srl, representing 100% of the share capital, in order to centralise instrumental real estate companies, resulting in the operational and management simplification of the relative activities.
Following the exercise of the option set forth in the Investment Agreement signed with the Founding Shareholders of the company DaVinci Healthcare Srl, active in innovative telemedicine services, on 14 December 2022 UnipolSai acquired 26.09% of the share capital. Taking into account the shares previously acquired on 14 November 2022 through a share capital increase reserved for UnipolSai, amounting to 39.91%, the total investment held by UnipolSai in this company is now 66%.
Furthermore, on 7 April 2022 the wholly-owned subsidiary MNTTN SpA changed its company name to BeRebel SpA.
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On 11 April 2022, a capital contribution of the subsidiary Meridiano Secondo of €15m was made against the request sent on 19 January 2021 for a total of €60m. This payment, originally planned for October 2021, was requested only in April 2022 due to delays in construction work on the Unipol Tower - the main work in progress of the subsidiary resulting from tensions in the construction materials market and rules on social distancing at construction sites. On 25 August and 14 November 2022, two payments were made, of €15m and €18m, respectively, referring instead to the budget of the works planned for 2022.

On 16 June 2022, a capital contribution of €10m was made in favour of the subsidiary BeRebel SpA, aimed at supporting investment commitments relating to the hiring of resources, technological platform development and management and marketing activities for the construction of the app and the website.
On 23 September 2022, a capital contribution was made in favour of the subsidiary Cambiomarcia Srl of €8m to support the investment commitments relating to the development and evolution of the platforms for the Tenutabene, Cambiobike and Autostimo brands, the purchase of e-bike products for the 2023 season, national marketing campaigns and the expansion of the workforce.
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On 13 January 2022, UnipolSai acquired 100% of I.Car Srl share capital at the price of €60m and 100% of Muriana Manuela Srl share capital for €3.3m. The two companies operate in the vehicle anti-theft system sector and insurance brokerage sector, respectively. On 1 June 2022, in application of the criteria set forth in the sale agreement, UnipolSai paid an additional €10m as a purchase price adjustment for I.Car. The I.Car price will be subject to subsequent integration through the payment of an additional variable tranche of around €7m, which will be determined on a definitive basis after approval of the I.Car financial statements for 2022.
The values of the assets and liabilities acquired, calculated on the accounting positions of those companies at 31 December 2021, are reported below:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2021 |
|---|---|
| Other intangible assets | 18.1 |
| Property, plant and equipment | 4.2 |
| Other receivables | 33.1 |
| Other assets | 0.7 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 11.2 |
| Provisions | -2.7 |
| Other financial liabilities | -2.8 |
| Other payables | -29.7 |
| Other liabilities | -3.3 |
| Total Net identifiable assets | 28.7 |
The difference between the acquisition cost (estimated at €80m, inclusive of the future price integration) and the net identifiable assets led to the recognition of goodwill of €51.3m.

On 6 July 2022, UnipolSai acquired 68.87% of the share capital of Tantosvago Srl for a total of €11.7m. On the same date, the shareholders' meeting of Tantosvago approved a share capital increase reserved to UnipolSai in the amount of €4.2m, which was subscribed and paid up at that time. As a result of these transactions, UnipolSai now holds 75% of the share capital of Tantosvago. A price adjustment mechanism is also established on the basis of 2022 EBITDA, with a maximum outlay for UnipolSai of €6m.
Put and call option contracts were signed between UnipolSai and the sellers on the remaining 25%.
The values of the assets and liabilities acquired, calculated on the accounting positions of Tantosvago at 30 June 2022, are reported below:
| Amounts in €m | 30/06/2022 |
|---|---|
| Other intangible assets | 1.1 |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 0.1 |
| Other receivables | 8.1 |
| Other assets | 0.1 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 4.7 |
| Other financial liabilities | -1.9 |
| Other payables | -8 |
| Other liabilities | -0.1 |
| Total Net identifiable assets | 4.1 |
| Total Net identifiable assets attributable to the owners of the Parent | 3.1 |
The difference between the acquisition cost (estimated at €20.1m, inclusive of the future price integration) and the net identifiable assets attributable to the owners of the Parent led to the recognition of goodwill of €18.1m.
On 3 August 2022, Centri Medici Dyadea acquired 100% of the share capital of Anton Maria Valsalva Srl, a company that manages the multi-specialty health centre of the same name based in Imola, for a total of €4.3m. The values of the assets and liabilities acquired, calculated on the accounting positions of Anton Maria Valsalva at 30 June 2022, are reported below:
| Amounts in €k | 30/06/2022 |
|---|---|
| Other intangible assets | 39.2 |
| Property, plant and equipment | 656.8 |
| Other receivables | 192.3 |
| Other assets | 82 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 509.5 |
| Other financial liabilities | -611.6 |
| Other payables | -539.8 |
| Other liabilities | -40.9 |
| Total Net identifiable assets | 287.6 |
The difference between the acquisition cost and the net identifiable assets led to the recognition of goodwill for €4.1m.
On 27 October 2022, UnipolHome acquired 70% of the share capital of Unicasa Italia SpA for a total of €2.6m. On the remaining 30%, UnipolHome and the sellers signed put and call option contracts, the exercise prices of which will be determined on the basis of a multiple of EBITDA net of the NFP of the company calculated at 31 December 2027.
The values of the assets and liabilities acquired, calculated on the accounting positions of Unicasa Italia at 30 September 2022, are reported below:
| Amounts in €k | 30/09/2022 |
|---|---|
| Other intangible assets | 4.2 |
| Other tangible assets | 84.7 |
| Loss and receivables | 15.4 |
| Other receivables | 1,664.7 |
| Other assets | 43.0 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 262.0 |
| Provisions | (16.8) |
| Other financial liabilities | (244.1) |
| Other payables | (828.9) |
| Other liabilities | (154.0) |
| Total Net identifiable assets | 830.2 |
| Total Net identifiable assets attributable to the owners of the Parent | 581.2 |
The difference between the acquisition cost and the net identifiable assets attributable to the owners of the Parent led to the recognition of goodwill for €2m.
On 14 November 2022, Centri Medici Dyadea acquired 100% of the share capital of Gratia et Salus Srl, for a total of €3.6m. A price adjustment mechanism is also established on the basis of the average 2022-2023-2024 EBITDA, with a maximum outlay for Centri Medici Dyadea of €1.7m which, based on the information available to date, is not expected to be disbursed.
The values of the assets and liabilities acquired, calculated on the accounting positions of Gratia et Salus at 31 October 2022, are reported below:
| Amounts in €k | 31/10/2022 |
|---|---|
| Other intangible assets | 132.2 |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 1.0 |
| Other receivables | 293.0 |
| Other assets | 54.0 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 526.4 |
| Other payables | (321.8) |
| Other liabilities | (81.7) |
| Total Net identifiable assets | 603.2 |
The difference between the acquisition cost (estimated at €3.6m) and the net identifiable assets attributable to the owners of the Parent led to the recognition of goodwill for €3m.

On 14 December, UnipolSai acquired 66% of DaVinci Healthcare Srl for a total outlay of €8.2m.
On the remaining 34%, UnipolSai and the sellers entered into put and call option contracts the exercise prices of which will be determined based on a multiple of the First Margin (referring to the most recent financial statements approved by the Company when the Option is exercised) net of the company's NFP (referring to the Option exercise date).
In the 2023/2024 period, two reserved share capital increases of €6m and €3m could be subscribed by UnipolSai, as a result of which UnipolSai would hold an interest of 77% (if only the first increase were carried out) and 79.4% (if both were carried out).
It should also be noted that, if the Company achieves the agreed results at 31 December 2024, UnipolSai has undertaken to pay an additional consideration on the shares acquired, as earn-out, up to a maximum of €4.8m.
The values of the assets and liabilities acquired, calculated on the accounting positions of DaVinci Healthcare at 31 December 2022, are reported below:
| Amounts in €k | 31/12/2022 |
|---|---|
| Other intangible assets | 891.4 |
| Other tangible assets | 18.7 |
| Other receivables | 467.8 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 5,015.4 |
| Other financial liabilities | (1,328.3) |
| Other payables | (364.7) |
| Total Net identifiable assets | 4,700.2 |
| Total Net identifiable assets attributable to the owners of the Parent | 3,102.2 |
The difference between the acquisition cost (€13m inclusive of the estimated amount for the additional earn-out payment) and the net identifiable assets attributable to the owners of the Parent led to the recognition of goodwill for €9.9m.
It should be noted that, with reference to the acquisitions of Tantosvago Srl, Anton Maria Valsalva Srl, Unicasa Italia SpA, Gratia et Salus Srl and DaVinci Healthcare Srl, the values of the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed are still to be considered provisional and may be restated within 12 months of the acquisition, as set forth by IFRS 3.
The reporting date of the Consolidated Financial Statements is 31 December 2022, the date the Separate Financial Statements of UnipolSai closed. All the consolidated companies close their financial statements at 31 December with the exception of the following:
The Consolidated Financial Statements were drawn up using restatements of the separate financial statements of the consolidated companies, adjusted to comply with IAS/IFRS standards, as applied by UnipolSai and approved by the Boards of Directors of the companies concerned.
This method provides for the consolidation on a line-by-line basis of the assets, liabilities, gains and losses of the consolidated companies as from the date they were acquired, with the carrying amount of the investment being offset against the corresponding amount of the shareholders' equity of each individual subsidiary and, in the case of investments not wholly owned, the separate recognition of the amount of the equity and the profit or loss for the year attributable to non-controlling interests.
The amount of equity attributable to non-controlling interests is recognised under shareholders' equity as "Share capital and reserves attributable to non-controlling interests", whilst the corresponding share of consolidated profit or loss is shown under "Profit (loss) for the year attributable to non-controlling interests".
The financial statements of the subsidiaries are consolidated on a line-by-line basis with the exception of small subsidiaries, for which the equity method is used.
If the cost of acquiring investments in subsidiaries exceeds the fair value of the identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities, the excess amount is recognised as goodwill under intangible assets.
This goodwill represents a payment made in the expectation of future economic benefits arising from assets that cannot be identified individually and recognised separately.
In the years after the year of acquisition, goodwill is measured at cost, net of any impairment losses accumulated. Ancillary acquisition costs are recognised in the income statement during the year in which the costs are incurred or the services provided.
Under IFRS 10.23 changes in investments in subsidiaries that do not lead to a loss of control are recognised as equity transactions. Any positive difference between the proportion of net fair value of identifiable assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities of the subsidiary and the fair value of the price paid or received is recognised directly in profit for the period and allocated to the members of the holding company.
When this method is used the carrying amount of the investment is adjusted to the corresponding portion of shareholders' equity, including the profit/loss for the year and all the adjustments made when consolidation is on a line-by-line basis. Any difference between the portion of shareholders' equity acquired and the fair value of the price paid (goodwill) is recognised in the carrying amount of the investment. Changes in interests in an associate which do not entail the acquisition of control or the loss of significant influence are treated as purchases or sales of shares, even if due to reasons other than purchases or sales, and therefore result in income or expenses recognised in the income statement and calculated on the basis of the difference between any consideration due or received and the change in the share of the investee's shareholders' equity held by the investor.
The amounts receivable and payable between companies included in the consolidation scope, the gains and losses relating to transactions carried out between these companies and the profits and losses resulting from transactions carried out between these companies and not yet realised with parties external to the Group are eliminated during the preparation of Consolidated Financial Statements.
In the presence of put options granted by the Group on the shareholders' equity of subsidiaries held by noncontrolling shareholders, and in the absence of mechanisms for determining the exercise price that in substance

already expose the Group to the risks and benefits deriving from holding such shareholders' equity, the following accounting treatment is adopted:
at economic level, the result for the period of the subsidiary is divided between the share attributable to the owners of the Parent and the share attributable to non-controlling interests on the basis of the share actually held by the two categories of shareholders during the year;
at asset level, a financial liability is recognised in an amount equal to the present value of the put option exercise price and, as a balancing entry, the shareholders' equity attributable to non-controlling interests subject to the put option is cancelled. Any differences between the two values are recognised as a reduction or increase in the shareholders' equity attributable to the owners of the Parent.
If, on the other hand, the above-mentioned put options granted by the Group on the shareholders' equity of subsidiaries held by non-controlling shareholders substantially already expose the Group to the risks and benefits deriving from holding such shareholders' equity, the transaction would be treated like a purchase of non-controlling interests with deferred payment.
Segment reporting is provided according to the provisions of IFRS 8 and structured on the basis of the major business segments in which the Group operates:
Segment reporting is carried out by separately consolidating the accounting items for the individual subsidiaries and associates that belong to each identified segment, eliminating intragroup balances between companies in the same segment and cancelling, where applicable, the carrying amount of the investments against the corresponding portion of shareholders' equity.
In the column "Intersegment eliminations", the intragroup balances between companies in different sectors are eliminated.
This rule does not apply in the following cases:
No segment reporting based on geographical area has been provided since the Group operates mainly at the national level and there appears to be no significant diversification of risks and benefits, for a given type of business activity, based on the economic situation of the individual regions.
The segment reporting layout conforms to the provisions of ISVAP Regulation no. 7/2007.
The changes to the accounting standards previously in force are summarised below, whose application took effect from 1 January 2022, for which no accounting impacts worthy of note were recorded.
Regulation (EU) 2021/1080 of 28 June 2021 endorsed several amendments to IAS/IFRS which include some limited amendments to three accounting standards, as well as improvements to a number of standards. In particular:
• IFRS 3 "Business combinations": the reference present in IFRS 3 was updated to the new revised Conceptual Framework in order to resolve certain issues deriving from the distinction between the acquisition of a business and the acquisition of a group of assets. However, this specification does not make any amendment to the provisions of that standard;
• IAS 16 "Property, plant and equipment": prohibition of deducting from the cost of the asset the amount received from the sale of goods produced prior to when the asset is ready for use. These sales revenues and the relative costs should therefore be recognised in the income statement;
• IAS 37 "Provisions, contingent liabilities and contingent assets": a clarification has been included with respect to the cost items to be considered in order to evaluate whether a contract could be defined as onerous;
• Annual Improvements: slight amendments were made to IFRS 1 "First-time Adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards", IFRS 9 "Financial instruments", IAS 41 "Agriculture" and to the illustrative examples accompanying IFRS 16 "Leases".
The documents published by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) listed below could be significant for the Group, but are still not applicable since they have not yet been endorsed by the European Union or have not yet entered into force at the reporting date.
The standards IFRS 17 and IFRS 9, both applicable to the entire scope of the Group from 1 January 2023, significantly changed the accounting representation of insurance contracts and financial instruments. As mentioned in previous years, due to the strict correlation between the two standards, starting from 2018 undertakings or groups that conduct insurance business had the option to defer the application of IFRS 9 up to the date of first-time adoption of IFRS 17. This option was also exercised by the UnipolSai Group. It is also noted that, specifically due to the close interrelation of the two standards, the Group intends to adopt the option provided for by the "classification overlay" set forth in Regulation (EU) 2022/1491 to ensure full representation of the joint impact of the new context of the accounting standards, therefore adopting both IFRS 9 and IFRS 17 in determining the comparative data for 2022 presented in the accounting reports for 2023. The most significant changes introduced by the above-mentioned standards are described below, along with a disclosure regarding the main accounting policies that the Group intends to adopt.
Note that, primarily referring to IFRS 17, the methodological and valuation approaches used and reported below could be subject to refinements, also pending the consolidation of the interpretations of specific issues and additional analyses that will be conducted for the actual application of the standard, starting with interim and annual financial statements referring to 2023.
IFRS 17 "Insurance Contracts", applicable from 1 January 2023, establishes new criteria for measuring and accounting rules for insurance products, replacing IFRS 4, an "interim" standard issued in 2004, which provided for the application

of local accounting practices, potentially different from each other, complicating the comparison of the financial results of insurance companies. The process of formation and approval of the standard was particularly complex: specifically, in the version approved by the IASB on 18 May 2017, the date of entry into force was set for 1 January 2021. With the two following interventions by the IASB, the date of entry into force was postponed to 1 January 2023, also considering the numerous requests to amend the standard proposed by the various stakeholders in the months immediately following the publication of the first version of the standard.
The amendments to the standard were adopted by the IASB on 25 June 2020 and, afterwards, the process of endorsement of the new standard in the European Union was activated, which was completed on 23 November 2021 with the publication of Regulation (EU) 2021/2036. It is noted that, in the endorsement phase, in line with that desired by the Italian and European industry, partially adjusting what is set out in the version of the standard approved by the IASB, the possibility was introduced of not applying the grouping into annual cohorts of Life insurance contracts characterised by intergenerational mutualisation and cash flow consistency.
Very briefly, IFRS 17 will introduce the following updates:

The Unipol Group has been strongly committed to planning for the future application of IFRS 17 since 2017, with extensive involvement of the main corporate functions. After a thorough assessment to determine the impact of this

standard and measuring the gaps in terms of processes, IT systems, accounting, actuarial calculations, business and risk, at the beginning of 2018 the IFRS 17 transition project was launched which, under the guidance of UnipolSai, has gradually also involved the other insurance companies in the Group, with a view to implementing a single data processing and management model within the Group, leveraging common policies, processes and IT applications. Following long, extensive work of analysis, development and testing, during the second quarter of 2022, the parallel run phase was launched, which firstly involved UnipolSai and subsequently involved the other insurance companies of the Group.
A brief examination of the activities carried out in relation to the main areas of impact concerning the application of IFRS 17 is provided below.
IFRS 17 is applied to all products featuring significant insurance risk and to insurance contracts with elements of direct participation. Based on that criterion, the scope of application included Non-Life contracts and, with reference to the Life business, all products in class I, IV and V and a limited portion of products relating to class III, where they contain, at the date of first time application of IFRS 17, a significant insurance risk higher than the investment risk. It should be noted that, due to this approach, all products relating to class VI (pension funds) will be excluded from the scope of insurance contracts.
Furthermore, to determine the scope of cash flows included in the contract boundary for the purpose of accounting for insurance contracts compared to the scope considered based on the previous accounting criteria, the following changes are expected:
For the purpose of aggregating insurance contracts, the concept of portfolio ("contracts subject to similar risks and managed together") set out in the standard, was interpreted by the Group as follows:
For the purpose of identifying the unit of account, i.e., the level of aggregation, also defined based on the level of expected profitability of the contracts, to which the accounting criteria set out in the standard are applied, the Group will include in the same UOA all contracts issued during each financial year (period 1/1 – 31/12, corresponding to the "annual cohort" concept). Accounting for charges for claims on the basis of "cohorts" of issue of insurance contracts, and not by the year of occurrence constitutes a significant change, especially with regard to the Non-Life business, compared to the representation criteria based on the provisions of IFRS 4.
It is also noted that the Group intends to apply the option set out in Reg. EU 2021/2036, which permits, for contracts with direct participation features that are specifically intergenerationally mutualised (identified within the scope of the UnipolSai Group as revaluable Life products linked to segregated funds), not applying the breakdown of UOA into annual cohorts of issue.
With regard to the aggregation criteria used under IFRS 4, the different level of granularity introduced by IFRS 17 could result in a higher possibility of recognising onerous UOAs, in the initial accounting phase, resulting in the recording of the expected loss directly in the year of issue.
To determine the discount rate to apply to future cash flows, in the absence of binding rules on the matter, the Group intends to apply a bottom-up approach. This approach calls for the identification of a "risk free" curve adjusted on the basis of a factor ("Illiquidity Premium") that expresses the illiquidity characteristics of insurance contracts. To identify the risk free curve, the Group will adopt a methodology similar to the one used in the area of prudential supervision. The Illiquidity Premium will be calculated using an approach proposed in the context of the revision of the Solvency II standard formula, but using the characteristics of the real asset portfolio underlying insurance liabilities. In other words, the Illiquidity Premium will be differentiated based on the liquidity characteristics of the cash flows being discounted, distinguishing, for example, between flows that are dependent on the returns of a portfolio of underlying financial assets and those that are not.
The Group intends to adopt a methodology for determining the Risk Adjustment calculated using metrics derived from the Solvency II framework, based on the probability distribution of the set of risks to which cash flows are subject, and also considering the benefits of diversification existing between the various UOAs. In particular, the diversification effect will be applied between the insurance portfolios of the same entity, but not between different sectors or between legal entities. With reference to the confidence level on the basis of which the amount of the Risk Adjustment will be determined, in general the Group intends to adopt a level equal to the 75th percentile, which may be supplemented with a prudential buffer up to the 98th percentile in light of situations of particular uncertainty in the reference context.
For insurance contracts entered into as of the transition date, the Group will generally apply the following accounting approaches:
These accounting approaches will be applied accordingly to contracts signed prior to the transition date as well, with the exception of Non-Life contracts, accounted for on the basis of:
The Group will adopt the options to reduce accounting misalignment deriving from the methods of valuation of liabilities and assets subject to IFRS 17 and/or IFRS 9. Specifically, the options set out in paragraphs 88, 89 and 90 of IFRS 17 allow for recognising as an offsetting entry through Other Comprehensive Income, rather than the Income Statement, a portion of the finance income or expenses relating to insurance contracts. That option makes it possible:
revaluation of insurance liabilities. That approach makes it possible to move on from the shadow accounting practice set forth in IFRS 4, with the aim of reducing the existing accounting misalignment between the valuation criteria of financial assets and those of the correlated insurance liabilities.
On first-time adoption, the standard IFRS 17 requires the recalculation of the statement of financial position and income statement balances at the transition date (which, for the UnipolSai Group, is 1 January 2022, as the 2023 Financial Statements must present the previous year's Statement of Financial Position and income statement for comparative purpose) based on the full retrospective approach, i.e., assuming that the standard had been applied from the date of initial recognition of the insurance contracts. Based on the complexity of the standard's provisions and the changes introduced to the existing accounting methods, the standard also provides the option, where it is not possible to fully retrospectively apply the standard, to use two simplified approaches, as alternatives to each other, to calculate the amount of accounting items linked to insurance contracts: the modified retrospective approach or the fair value approach.
In order to verify the possibility of reconstructing the data necessary for the application of the full retrospective approach, the Group carried out a detailed analysis on the transactional flows of the years prior to the transition date ("actual" flows), the cash flows ("expected" data) and the values, subject to the allocation processes, not directly attributable to the contracts. On the basis of these analyses, the information, especially relating to past years, was not fully available in the portfolio or could not be found except by making efforts deemed excessive, incurring unreasonable costs with respect to the (limited) information advantage and/or adopting excessively arbitrary assumptions and simplifications, sometimes the result of derivation rules made more uncertain by changes in operations. In this context, the Group believes that there are well-justified reasons that make the full retrospective approach not applicable for the transition to IFRS 17 and, in line with the provisions of the same standard, has therefore decided to apply both the fair value approach and the modified retrospective approach to net insurance liabilities outstanding at the transition date.
In particular:
As a result of the above, it is estimated that the fair value transition approach will affect approximately 89% of the Non-Life business existing at the transition date and 47% of the Life business; while the modified retrospective approach will be applied to 53% of the Life business and 11% of the Non-Life business. As already mentioned above, the transition approach, limited to the Non-Life business, also influenced the selection of the accounting approach to be applied to the business existing at the transition date, with the PAA model reserved only to Non-Life business with transition according to the modified retrospective approach and with the application of the BBA to Non-Life business with transition according to the Fair Value approach.
It should also be noted that, for the same reasons that do not allow for the application of the full retrospective approach, in the application of the transition approaches the Group decided to adopt the following simplifications with respect to what is set forth for the application of the full retrospective approach:
for contracts for which the BBA or PAA is applied, setting the amount cumulatively recognised under Other Comprehensive Income to zero, as a disaggregation of the effects on insurance liabilities and assets of the change in the discount rate compared to that of initial recognition;
for contracts for which the VFA is applied, setting the cumulative amount of the Other Comprehensive Income referring to insurance liabilities equal to the corresponding value recognised in Other Comprehensive Income with reference to the financial instruments underlying the insurance liabilities.
With reference to the methods for calculating the FV, it should be noted that this was determined as an aggregation between:
The CSM at the transition date will be determined as the difference between the FV and the present value of the expected future cash flows adjusted for the risk for each UOA.
The standard IFRS 9 - Financial Instruments was effective at the beginning of 2018. This standard was issued by IASB at end July 2014 and was endorsed by EU Regulation 2016/2067, which reformed provisions envisaged by IAS 39 on the following main issues:
In particular, as regards Classification and Measurement, unlike in the IAS 39, which requires mainly the analysis of the type of financial asset or liability, as well as the related holding period, the IFRS 9 standard introduced classification criteria of financial instruments based on the measurement of the related business model, as well as the analysis of the characteristics of the contractual cash flows resulting from the instruments themselves, with the application of the so-called SPPI test, aimed at verifying the position of Solely Payments of Principal and Interest. Moreover, in view of measuring what business model should be assigned to the financial instrument, the IFRS 9 envisages more objective parameters, based on various requirements such as: performance, risk, remuneration and turnover.
The new regulations also revised some guidelines on the possible reassignment of the business model that must however be very uncommon and shall meet special conditions involving significant changes, both "internal" with respect to the company and "demonstrable" with respect to external parties.
On completion of a process of analysis and implementation in the management, IT and accounting systems, the Group activated a parallel management and accounting environment aligned with the requirements of IFRS 9 for the entities that hold financial instruments. It is noted that, to ensure a more accurate application of the rules set out for the VFA, it was necessary to identify and autonomously manage a higher number of portfolios of financial assets than in the context of the current IAS 39. Specifically, a portfolio of financial instruments was activated for each portfolio to which the VFA is applied.

A brief examination of the activities carried out in relation to the main areas of impact is provided below.
Classification and measurement of financial assets (credits and debt securities) was defined by the UnipolSai Group based on the following elements:
As regards the first classification element of financial assets, initiatives and procedures have been performed aimed at evaluating whether the contractual cash flows of debt securities in portfolio, at the date of transition to the standard, exclusively reflect the payment of principal and interests accrued on the amount of capital to be returned (so-called SPPI Test – Solely Payment of Principle and Interest, supplemented by the Benchmark Test in the absence of a perfect correspondence between the periodical redefinition of the interest rate and the related tenor).
As regards the Group's securities portfolio subject to first-time adoption of IFRS 9, the following is noted:
The IFRS 9 impairment model is based on (quantitative) objective and quality criteria to determine the significant increase of credit risk used to classify the credit lines in Stage 1 or Stage 2. Specifically, the UnipolSai Group will recognise in Stage 2 any situations of non-payment for at least 30 days from the reporting date and any exposures whose rating assigned to the security has been specifically downgraded (in terms of the number of notches). As regards downgrading, it is noted that, in defining a significant increase in credit risk, the option will be exercised to exclude a portion of the securities portfolio, which is characterised by a low credit risk (i.e., "Low credit risk exemption"). Specifically, that option will be applied to debt securities with "investment grade" ratings.
All exposures that show objective evidence of loss will be classified in Stage 3.
Different modalities to measure value adjustments were defined for each Stage, based on the concept of "Expected Loss" or "Expected Credit Losses" (ECL), and, specifically:
In the risk parameters used to calculate the ECL, measurement models of expected losses include the Point-in-Time risk measures and the Forward looking risk measures on the future dynamics of macro-economic factors on which the lifetime expected loss depends.
As regards Hedge Accounting, the Group will exercise the option to maintain the accounting model as envisaged by IAS 39.
The main decisive factors of the impacts on shareholders' equity deriving from the transition to IFRS 17 and 9 are shown below, based on the choices described above.
The total value of Non-Life net insurance liabilities recognised in application of IFRS 4, understood as the aggregation of the items relating to the technical provisions of direct and indirect business, net of the portion retroceded to reinsurers and the relative intangible assets (i.e. commissions to be amortised and the residual value of the portfolios acquired in business combinations), is basically aligned with the corresponding net liabilities recognised in application of IFRS 17.
More specifically, in light of a negligible effect deriving from discounting due to the level of market rates at the date of initial application, the recognition of IFRS 17 liabilities referring to expected future profitability (CSM) and risk adjustment components should almost completely offset the positive difference existing between the total amount of the technical provisions recognised on the basis of IFRS 4 and the estimate of expected net cash flows allocated to the provision of future insurance services calculated on the basis of the forecasts of IFRS 17.
With reference to Life net insurance liabilities, understood as:
on the other hand, a negative impact on shareholders' equity is expected at the transition date.
financial instruments, which will be retained by the companies. On the other hand, under IFRS 4, this portion of future margins is instead represented under the shareholders' equity reserves as the difference between the capital gains recognised on AFS securities included in the portfolios of the segregated funds and the share of these capital gains attributed to policyholders, as a result of the application the shadow accounting technique envisaged by the standard.
The main effect of the application of IFRS 9 on shareholders' equity will be attributable to the portion of financial assets classified as loans and receivables under IAS 39 reclassified to the categories Financial assets measured at fair value through other comprehensive income (FVOCI) and FVPL. Taking into account the positive difference between the fair value and the amortised cost on this set of financial assets, the reclassification will result in an increase in shareholders' equity at the transition.
Taking into account all of the adjustments summarised above and the relative tax effects, it is estimated that the shareholders' equity at the transition date determined on the basis of these accounting standards is approximately 10% lower than that determined on the basis of the previous accounting standards.
The total amount of the contractual service margin at the transition date is estimated at approximately €3.2bn, gross of the relative tax effect, of which €1.1bn referring to the Non-Life business (largely relating to the contracts to which the fair value approach was applied and therefore accounted for according to the BBA), and €2.1bn to the Life business. It should be noted that, as mentioned above, most of the Non-Life insurance contracts entered into after the transition date will be accounted for with the PAA, which does not provide for the separate recognition of the CSM. Therefore, it is expected that the value of the CSM relating to the Non-Life business will tend to gradually decrease with the reversal to the Income Statement of the coverage units linked to the transition UOA.
Information is provided below on the main expected effects deriving from the application of IFRS 17 and 9 on the Consolidated Statement of Financial Position at 31 December 2022. It should be noted that this information is to be considered preliminary as, at the date of preparation of these consolidated financial statements, the process of producing the accounting data is still in progress.
As previously noted, the introduction of an explicit discount rate to apply to all insurance liabilities/assets is one of the main changes introduced by the standard IFRS 17, as the calculation of technical provisions under the previous IFRS 4, with the exception of any additional provisions for Shadow Accounting and the LAT, is based on specific valuation methods set out in the national regulations of each of the Group companies. Considering that context, the classification of most of the Group's portfolio of financial assets based on fair value and the method of calculating the discount rates partially linked to the current rates of return of the asset portfolio, compared to the accounting situation governed by IFRS 4 and IAS 39, previously in force, the Group expects lower volatility in the total shareholders' equity in relation to fluctuations in market rates of return.
The main expected impact on the profit for the year 2022 deriving from the adoption of the new accounting metrics is linked to the higher incidence, in the Group's portfolio, of financial instruments mandatorily classified at FVPL on the basis of IFRS 9 and not included in the portfolios of revaluable contracts accounted for using the VFA method. The reduction in the fair value of these instruments, particularly significant in 2022 as a result financial market performance, will have a negative impact on the profit for the period, only partially offset by an expected improvement in the Non-Life and Life insurance margin.

On 23 January 2020, the IASB published the document "Classification of Liabilities as Current or Non-current (Amendments to IAS 1)" defining a more general approach for the classification of payables - and other liabilities - by providing several criteria for the distinction between "current" and "non-current". Specifically, the classification should be based on the substantial right, existing at the end of the year, to defer (or otherwise) the payment by at least twelve months.
On 31 October 2022, the IASB also published the document "Non-current Liabilities with Covenants" proposing several amendments to IAS 1 "Presentation of financial statements", with a view to improving the information that companies provide on long-term debt with covenants.
The entire set of the above-mentioned amendments will enter into force for financial years beginning on or after 1 January 2024. On 22 December 2022, EFRAG issued the draft Endorsement Advice, the consultation of which ended on 1 March 2023.
On 3 March 2022, Regulation (EU) 2022/357 was published, which incorporated the amendments to IAS 1 "Presentation of financial statements" and IAS 8 "Accounting policies, changes in accounting estimates and errors", published by the IASB on 12 February 2021 with a view to improving the communication of the accounting policies of companies, which should privilege information that is more relevant and effective for investors and users of financial statements. Specifically, the amendments to IAS 1 and IFRS Practice Statement 2 provide guidelines on how to apply the concept of materiality to the disclosure on the accounting policy adopted, while those to IAS 8 have the dual objective of introducing a new definition of "accounting estimate" and clarifying how entities should distinguish between changes in the accounting standards applied and changes in accounting estimates. This differentiation is of fundamental importance as the latter are applied on a prospective basis only to future transactions, while amendments to accounting standards are generally applied retroactively to past events as well. The amendments are effective from 1 January 2023.
Regulation (EU) 2022/1392 published on 12 August 2022 adopted several amendments to IAS 12 "Income taxes" to specify how to account for deferred taxes on certain transactions that may generate assets and liabilities of an equal amount, such as leases and decommissioning obligations. The amendments apply from 1 January 2023.
On 21 September 2022, the IASB published the document "Lease Liability in a Sale and Leaseback", which amends IFRS 16 "Leases", clarifying the methods for accounting for a sale and leaseback transaction that calls for variable payments based on the performance or use of the asset involved in the transaction. On 30 January 2023, EFRAG issued the Endorsement Advice, expressing a positive opinion on the matter. The amendment will be effective from 1 January 2024.
On 21 December 2022, the IASB published the Project Report and Feedback Statement, which concluded the Post-Implementation Review (PIR) on the classification and measurement requirements of IFRS 9. Specifically, the IASB did not identify any fundamental critical issues with regard to clarity or the adequacy of the objectives of the standard's requirements, as they are applicable consistently by entities without having to incur unexpected additional costs, without prejudice to some issues subject to a specific future standard setting project, such as financial instruments with sustainability characteristics (financial assets with ESG-linked features) and electronic cash transfers as settlement of a financial asset or liability, on which the publication of an Exposure Draft is currently expected in the course of 2023.

As anticipated in the previous chapter on "Main regulatory developments", on 16 December 2022 Directive (EU) 2022/2464 (CSRD - Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive) on sustainability reporting, already subject to accounting Directive (EU) 2013/34 as revised by Directive (EU) 2014/95 (NFRD - Non-Financial Reporting Directive). This regulation is applicable starting from 2024 only for companies that are public-interest entities (e.g. banks, insurance companies, listed companies) with more than 500 employees (while for the remaining entities, including listed SMEs, the provisions will be gradually applied until 2028). This disclosure, which must be both qualitative and quantitative in nature, both prospective and retrospective, must be included in the management report and drawn up in compliance with the European Sustainability Reporting Principles (ESRS) issued on 22 November 2022 by EFRAG (which must first be adopted by the EC through delegated acts by 30/06/2023 and, subsequently, subject to scrutiny by the EU Parliament and the Council). Similar to the provisions of the NFRD, the CSRD allows reporting to be provided only at consolidated level by the parent, thus exempting other group entities falling within the scope of subjects to which this regulation applies.
The accounting standards and the most significant criteria used in drawing up the Consolidated Financial Statements are set out below.
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The paragraph numbers are the same as those of the corresponding items in the Statement of Financial Position and Income Statement, which are laid out in accordance with ISVAP Regulation no. 7/2007.
In accordance with the provisions of IAS 38, the only intangible assets that may be capitalised are those that can be identified and controlled by the company and from which the company will derive future financial benefits.
The following assets are recognised as intangible assets with a finite life:
Projects under development are not amortised until the year in which they are first used.
Goodwill paid when companies are acquired or merged is also included among intangible assets, as already mentioned in the previous paragraph Basis of consolidation (also provisionally, determined on the basis of IFRS 3). As this goodwill has an indefinite useful life, it is not amortised, but it is tested for impairment at least once a year, or each time there is any indication of impairment; durable impairments are recognised in the Income Statement and cannot be reversed in subsequent years.
The item includes properties used for business purposes, plant, other machines and equipment owned by the Group and rights of use acquired through lease contracts for the use of a tangible asset, except for contracts with a duration equal to or less than 12 months or referring to assets of a modest unit value.
For recognising and measuring this category of assets the Group has adopted the cost model, which systematically depreciates the asset's depreciable amount over its useful life. With reference to property, plant and equipment deriving from right of use recognition, as envisaged in IFRS 16, the initial recognition value corresponds with the present value of future payments to the lessor over the contractual duration of the lease, also including amounts due to the lessor for the exercise of any purchase option on the asset if such exercise is considered reasonably certain. Depreciation, which is carried out each year on a straight-line basis, begins when the asset is available and ready for use and ends when the asset has come to the end of its useful life (which in the case of property is estimated at 33.4 years). In the case of wholly-owned properties (land and buildings) depreciation is carried out only on the building.
Consolidated real estate companies include in the carrying amount the borrowing costs incurred for loans specifically for acquiring and renovating property, if this can be justified.
The costs of improvements and conversions are capitalised if they result in an increase in the useful life or the carrying amount of the assets.
Assets that suffer impairment losses are written down.
The carrying amount of property acquired as a result of business combinations is reassessed on the basis of the current value on the date of acquisition.

This item includes reinsurers' liabilities arising from reinsurance contracts governed by IFRS 4.
This item includes property or rights of use (IFRS 16) held either to earn rental income or for capital appreciation or for both.
Investment property is recognised by applying the cost method, as allowed by IAS 40 (an alternative to the fair value method).
If the final recoverable amount of property is estimated to be less than the carrying amount (or zero) it is depreciated annually on a straight-line basis, based on the recoverable amount and the estimated useful life (33.4 years).
If the recoverable amount of the property is estimated to exceed the carrying amount, no depreciation is applied. In the case of wholly-owned properties (land and buildings) depreciation is carried out only on the building.
The costs of improvements and conversions are capitalised if they result in an increase in the carrying amount, the useful life or the profitability of the assets.
Assets that suffer impairment losses are written down. The market value is determined at least once a year by means of expert appraisals conducted by outside companies.
The carrying amount of property acquired as a result of business combinations is reassessed on the basis of the current value on the date of acquisition.
This item includes investments in associates as defined in IAS 28 and investments in subsidiaries that because of their size are considered immaterial, which are measured using the equity method or at cost.
IAS 39 provides that debt and equity instruments, receivables, payables and derivatives must be classified according to the purposes for which they are held. The following categories are provided for:
There is a specific standard for recognising and measuring each of these categories.
It should be mentioned that the Group recognises financial transactions on the value date.
With respect to financial instruments, for the purpose of the drawing up of its consolidated financial statements, starting from the 2018 Financial Statements the UnipolSai Group decided to avail itself of the deferral option in applying IFRS 9, as envisaged by the IASB, based on the deferral approach method.
As a consequence, except for certain financial entities consolidated at equity and for which the application of IFRS 9 is mandatory on a separate basis, all entities consolidated on a line-by-line basis or at equity continued to apply IAS 39 in drawing up their consolidated financial statements.
Investments in securities held to maturity are recognised at amortised cost, net of any impairment losses.
This category includes bonds that the Group intends and is in a financial position to hold to maturity, for example most of the fixed-yield bonds acquired to match special Life tariffs.
If a substantial number of securities in this category are sold early (or reclassified), all the remaining securities must be reclassified as Available-for-sale financial assets and the category cannot be used for the next two financial years.
Receivables in this category consist of agreements for which the Group holds a right to the cash flows arising from the loan agreement. They are characterised by fixed or determinable payments and are not listed on an active market. This category also includes mortgages and loans provided to the insurance companies, reinsurers' deposits, loan repurchase agreements, term deposits exceeding 15 days, receivables for agents' reimbursements, unlisted debt securities not held for sale which the Group intends to hold for the foreseeable future, including bonds reclassified following application of IAS 39 paragraphs 50D and 50E.
In accordance with the provisions of IAS 39, loans and receivables must be initially recognised at their fair value, which corresponds to the amount granted including the transaction costs and the commissions and fees chargeable directly. Following the initial recognition receivables are measured at the amortised cost, which is represented by the initial carrying amount net of repayments, plus or minus any difference between the initial amount and the amount on maturity because of amortisation calculated in accordance with the criterion of effective interest method and less any impairment loss or reduction due to non-recoverability.
Applying the effective interest rate method enables the financial effect of a loan transaction to be spread evenly over its expected life, which makes financial sense. In fact, the effective interest rate is the rate that discounts all the future cash flows of the loan and establishes a present value corresponding to the amount granted including all the transaction costs and income pertaining to it. When the cash flows and the contractual term of the loan are being estimated, all the contractual terms that can affect the amounts and the maturity dates (for instance, early repayments and the various options that may be exercised) are taken into account but not the losses expected on the loan. Following initial recognition, for the whole life of the loan the amortised cost is determined by continuing to apply the effective interest rate fixed at the start of the transaction (original interest rate). This original interest rate does not vary over time and is also used in the case of any contractual amendments to the interest rate or events as a result of which the loan has in practice stopped bearing interest (for instance, due to insolvency proceedings).
The amortised cost method is applied only to loans with an original term of at least eighteen months, on the assumption that in the case of shorter loans the application of this method does not involve significant changes to the financial effect. Loans with a term of less than eighteen months and those that have no fixed maturity date and revocable loans are therefore measured at their historical cost.
On the reporting date for each set of annual or interim financial statements, the loans are assessed to identify those for which there is objective evidence of impairment due to events that have occurred after their initial recognition.
The original value of the loans is reinstated in subsequent years only in the event that the reasons that led to the impairment in question no longer exist. Impairment losses can be reversed up to an amount not exceeding the carrying amount that it would have been recognised if the amortised cost had been applied without prior impairment.
Investments classified as available-for-sale financial assets are measured at fair value. The differences with respect to the carrying amount must be recognised in the shareholders' equity in a specific reserve for unrealised gains/losses (net of tax). In the event of sale or impairment established as a result of impairment testing, unrealised gains or losses accumulated in shareholders' equity until that time are transferred to the income statement.

Information on how the fair value is determined is provided in the section "Fair value measurement criteria – IFRS 13".
The amortised cost of the debt securities in this category calculated using the effective rate of return is recognised in the income statement. The comparison with the fair value is made after the proportion of the amortised cost for the year has been recognised.
This category includes debt securities, equity securities, UCITS units, and investments deemed to be of strategic importance (less than 20% of the share capital, of commercial or corporate strategic importance).
IAS 39, paragraph 58, provides for companies to carry out assessments on each reporting date whether there is objective evidence that a financial asset or a group of financial assets is impaired.
In order to determine whether a financial asset or a group of financial assets shows signs of impairment, a regular impairment test must be carried out.
Indicators of a possible impairment are, for instance, the issuer's significant financial difficulties, failure to pay the full amount of interest or principal, the possibility of the beneficiary becoming bankrupt or entering into another insolvency proceeding and the disappearance of an active market for the asset.
Pursuant to paragraph 61 of IAS 39, a "significant or prolonged" decline in the fair value of an equity instrument below its cost must be considered as "objective evidence of impairment".
IAS 39 does not define the two terms "significant" and "prolonged" but implies, partly on the basis of an IFRIC guideline, that their meaning should be left to the directors' judgement, whenever annual or interim financial statements must be prepared under IAS, provided that the meaning is determined in a reasonable manner and complies with paragraph 61 of IAS 39.
Without prejudice to the case of any investments in equity instruments qualified within the consolidated financial statements of the Parent Unipol as an equity investment in an associate, the Group has defined as "significant" a reduction of more than 50% in the market value of equity instruments classified as Available-for-sale (AFS) financial assets with respect to the initial recognised value and as "prolonged" the permanence of market value at levels below the initially recognised amount for more than 36 months.
Therefore, for equity instruments, the impairment test is carried out by selecting all the instruments to which at least one of the following conditions applies:
The impairment of these instruments is deemed to be confirmed and the total change in fair value is recognised in the income statement, with elimination of gains or losses on the underlying available-for-sale financial assets. With reference to the equity instruments qualified within the consolidated financial statements of the Parent Unipol as an equity investment in an associate, the recognition of any impairment is evaluated on the basis of the economic/capital performance of the investee company, irrespective of the occurrence of the conditions applicable for all equity instruments.
For debt securities, whenever payment of a coupon or repayment of principal is late or missed and this is confirmed by the custodian bank, the Group Finance Department immediately notifies the Risk Management Department, so that the latter can carry out the assessments within its competence on the need to recognise an impairment on these instruments.
Investments in this category are recognised at fair value and the differences (positive or negative) between fair value and carrying amount are recognised through profit or loss.
Information on how the fair value is determined is provided in the section "Fair value measurement criteria – IFRS 13".

There are two further sub-items:
Derivatives are initially recognised at the purchase cost representing the fair value and subsequently measured at fair value. Information on how the fair value is determined is provided in the section "Fair value measurement criteria – IFRS 13".
Derivatives may be acquired for "trading" or "hedging" purposes. For hedging transactions IAS 39 sets out cumbersome and complex rules to assess, by preparing appropriate documentation, the effectiveness of the hedge from the time it is activated and throughout its entire term (hedge accounting).
All derivatives are placed in the category "Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss". .
If an available-for-sale financial asset is transferred to the held-to-maturity investments category, the fair value recognised on the date of transfer becomes its new cost or amortisable cost. Any previous gain or loss on this asset that has been recognised directly in equity is recognised through profit or loss throughout the remaining useful life of the investment held to maturity using the effective interest method.
If a financial asset is no longer held for sale or repurchased in the short term (although the financial asset may have been acquired or held mainly for sale or repurchase in the short term), it may be transferred from fair value through profit or loss if the following requirements are met:
A financial asset classified as available for sale that would have come under loans and receivables (if it had not been designated as available for sale) may be transferred from "available for sale" to "loans and receivables" if the entity has the intention and the ability to hold the financial asset for the foreseeable future or to maturity (IAS 39, paragraph 50E).
If an entity reclassifies a financial asset from fair value through profit or loss or from "available for sale", it must reclassify the financial asset at its fair value on the date of reclassification and the gain or loss already recognised in the income statement must not be reversed. The fair value of the financial asset on the date of reclassification becomes its new cost or amortised cost (IAS 39, paragraphs 50C and 50F).
In the case of a financial asset reclassified from "available for sale", the previous gain or loss on the asset recognised directly in equity must be amortised in the income statement throughout the asset's remaining useful life using the effective interest method.
If the entity has reclassified a financial asset from fair value through profit or loss or from "available for sale", the following is some of the information that must be provided (IFRS 7):

for the financial year in which the financial asset was reclassified, the fair value gain or loss on the financial asset;
for each year after reclassification (including the year in which the financial asset was reclassified) until the financial asset is derecognised, the fair value gain or loss that would have been recognised if the financial asset had not been reclassified.
The Group invests in notes issued by SPVs with rather similar purposes and management methods as those that characterise investments in structured and unstructured bonds, made as part of the ordinary financial management of resources derived from normal business. This financial management is characterised, in relation to the Group's business sector, by a special degree of complexity, which requires, under certain circumstances, the subscription of financial assets with specific characteristics (e.g. in terms of maturity, creditworthiness and payoff) that are not always easy to find on the financial markets. The investment opportunities offered via SPVs also make it possible, owing to their specific nature, to expand the range of financial investments available.
The Group classifies and records the bonds issued by SPVs based on the instructions provided in IAS 39, deeming the circumstance that they have been issued by SPVs irrelevant, in consideration of the fact that the SPV is, in fact, considered merely a technical instrument through which to structure complex financial instruments whose risk/return profile is essentially evaluated by jointly taking into consideration the contracts that govern the notes issued by the SPV, the associated derivative contracts (generally swap agreements) and any other contractual clauses such as financial guarantee or similar clauses, or yet other "ancillary" clauses which may, in theory, make provision, when given conditions are satisfied, for the liquidation of the securities. The SPVs whose bonds are held by the Group in fact, consistently replicate, with the arranger, the positions they assume with noteholders, as the risks or returns of the transaction cannot be retained within it.
Therefore, investments in notes issued by SPVs are accounted for on the basis of IAS 39, with the same criteria applied for the investments in structured and unstructured bonds, with particular regard to the presence of embedded derivatives and valuations regarding any segregation.
In fact, an entity must only consolidate an SPV in the event the entity exercises control over it pursuant to IFRS 10, paragraphs 6 and 7.
The Group, with regard to bonds issued by SPVs in the portfolio at 31 December 2022, does not exercise any form of control over the SPVs, in the sense that it is not able to govern the management process of the SPVs (which, in fact, is defined by the arrangers of the investment transaction in which the Group participates by subscribing the notes and other relevant contracts) and does not obtain any benefits from the SPVs other than those strictly dependent on the formally subscribed financial instrument. The Group holds the notes issued by the SPV and can only dispose of these autonomously, as it does not have the power to dispose of the financial instruments held by the vehicle. It is reasonable to infer, from this, that the Group holds no form of control of the SPVs pursuant to IFRS 10.
In cases where, through the SPV internal segments, which segregate the risks and benefits of issues, the majority of said risks and benefits are transferred to the Group, the consolidation of the segments would lead to the need to replace the debt securities issued by the SPV and subscribed by the Group with a financial asset which, in terms of the associated risks and returns, exactly replicates the financial profile of the notes cancelled as a result of the consolidation.
In fact, the segments consistently replicate, with the arranger, the positions the latter assume with noteholders, as the risks or benefits of the transaction cannot be retained within it. The result is that the financial asset to be recognised due to the consolidation of the segments would have, substantively speaking and therefore for the purposes of classification and measurement pursuant to IAS 39, characteristics identical to those of the notes cancelled as a result of the consolidation of said segment; the result being that, in the case of consolidation of segments in which the risks/benefits of the asset pertain fully to the Group, there would be no substantive effects on the accounting representation of the transaction, essentially confirming the fact that, in effect, the SPVs are technical instruments for realising an investment in financial assets with characteristics which are, for all intents and purposes, equivalent to those of the notes issued by the SPV itself and segregated in the segment.
Sundry receivables are recognised at their nominal value and subsequently assessed at their estimated realisable value.
The item Sundry receivables includes receivables due within twelve months, in particular Receivables relating to direct insurance business, Receivables relating to reinsurance business and Other receivables, such as trade receivables and tax receivables.
This item includes Non-current assets held for sale and any discontinued operations as defined by IFRS 5.
Assets held for sale are recognised at the carrying amount or fair value, whichever is the lower, less costs to sell.
If an investment in a subsidiary consolidated using the line-by-line method is to be sold within the time limit set by IFRS 5, all the assets of the company to be sold are reclassified as "Non-current assets or assets of a disposal group held for sale" in the consolidated statement of financial position (item 6.1 of the Assets) and the liabilities are similarly reclassified under the single item "Liabilities associated with disposal groups" (item 6.1 of the Liabilities).
Both items appear in the Consolidated financial statements net of intragroup transactions with the company to be sold.
If a group continues to operate in the business of the company to be sold, income statement items relating to the assets held for sale or disposal groups are recognised in accordance with the normal rules of consolidation on a lineby-line basis. .
This item includes acquisition costs for multiyear insurance contracts, paid in advance and amortised on a straightline basis over the maximum life of the contracts.
This item includes deferred tax assets based on the deductible temporary differences between the carrying amounts and the amounts for tax purposes of the assets and liabilities of the individual consolidated companies and on the consolidation adjustments. If there are any tax losses, deferred tax assets are also recognised provided there is a probability that taxable income for which they can be used will be available in future.
Deferred taxes are based on the tax rates applied at the end of the year or on the rates that are expected to be applied in the future according to the information available at the end of the financial year.
If assets are revalued solely for tax purposes and relate neither to a revaluation of the carrying amount for a previous year nor to one that is to be carried out in a subsequent year, the tax effects of the adjustment for tax purposes must be recognised in the income statement.
Deferred tax assets and liabilities, distinguished by type of tax, are offset at the level of single Group company or at the consolidated level, within the limits of the scope of the tax consolidation agreement set up by Unipol Gruppo.

This item includes assets related to current taxation.
Among other things, this item includes prepayments and accrued income and deferred commission expense for investment contracts with no discretionary participation feature, as these are additional costs incurred to acquire the contract, amortised on a straight-line basis over the whole life of the contract. As recommended by Bank of Italy/Consob/IVASS document no. 9 of the Coordination Group on the application of IAS/IFRS, this item also includes tax credits relating to tax subsidies (such as the ecobonus and the sismabonus) acquired from third parties (direct beneficiaries or previous purchasers) and recoverable by offsetting future payments according to methods and timing established in the reference regulation.
Cash and cash equivalents include cash on hand, cash in current accounts available on demand, and term deposits for periods not exceeding 15 days.
The item includes the share capital of the consolidating company.
This item includes perpetual regulatory capital instruments qualifiable as Restricted Tier 1 issued by the Parent, which do not envisage in any case any obligation on the part of the issuer to reimburse the principal or interest to subscribers (without prejudice to cases of liquidation or the exercise of the right to early redemption by the issuer). These instruments are recognised at the issue value, net of issue expenses and the relative tax benefits. In line with this classification, coupon payments to subscribers are recognised, similar to what takes place for the payment of dividends, as a direct reduction from the equity reserves. Note that similar perpetual capital instruments issued by subsidiaries (if not held by the parent and therefore eliminated in the consolidation process) are recognised in item 1.2.1 Share capital and reserves attributable to non-controlling interests.
This item includes in particular the share premium reserve of the company that carries out the consolidation. It includes the direct costs of issuing equity instruments, net of tax, and any commission income, net of tax, received for the sale of option rights not exercised by shareholders.
In addition to the income-related and other equity reserves of the consolidating company, this item includes in particular gains or losses arising from the first-time application of IAS/IFRS (IFRS 1), gains or losses resulting from changes in accounting standards or accounting estimates (IAS 8), equalisation and catastrophe provisions eliminated

under IFRS 4, provisions arising from equity-settled share-based payment transactions (IFRS 2) and consolidation reserves.
This item includes the equity instruments of the undertaking that draws up the consolidated financial statements owned by the undertaking itself and the consolidated companies. The item was negative. The gains or losses resulting from their subsequent sale are recognised as changes in shareholders' equity.
The item includes the exchange rate differences to be charged to shareholders' equity pursuant to IAS 21, whether they arise from transactions in foreign currency or from conversion into the currency of presentation of the financial statements stated in foreign currency.
This item includes gains or losses on available-for-sale financial assets, net of tax and amounts pertaining to policyholders as a result of the application of shadow accounting.
This item includes, inter alia, gains or losses on cash flow hedges and the revaluation reserves of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets.
Provisions are made for risks and charges only when they are deemed necessary to meet an obligation arising from a past event and when it is likely that the amount of resources required can be reliably estimated.
According to IFRS 4 insurance contracts are contracts that transfer significant insurance risks. Such contracts may also transfer financial risks.
An insurance risk is significant if, and only if, there is a reasonable possibility that the occurrence of the insured event will cause a significant change in the current value of the insurer's net cash flows. Investment contracts are contracts that transfer financial risks but involve no significant insurance risks.
Some insurance and investment contracts may include discretionary participation features.
As for the Non-Life sector, all the policies in the portfolio are classified as insurance contracts.

• the presence of options or guarantees, such as the coefficient of conversion into a guaranteed rate annuity.
Some contracts provide for discretionary participation features (DPF) i.e. the policyholder's right to receive a benefit in addition to the guaranteed minimum. The benefit must fulfil specific contractual terms and represent a significant part of the total payments. In particular, contracts subject to revaluation and linked to segregated funds were classified as investment products with DPF and were therefore measured and recognised as insurance contracts.
A contract classified as an insurance contract continues to be an insurance contract until terminated, whereas under certain circumstances an investment contract may be subsequently classified as an insurance contract.
However, the following types of contract were classified as investment contracts with no DPFs. For this reason, according to paragraph 3 of IFRS 4, contracts of this type do not produce premiums but are measured and recognised in accordance with IAS 39:
In the case of unit-linked products the loading and the acquisition commissions for the asset management service are recognised and amortised separately over the life of the contract. In the case of index-linked policies, which are not managed over time but only administered, these deferments are not necessary.
The direct insurance premium provision is established analytically for each policy using the pro rata temporis method, as provided by paragraph 5 of Annex no. 15 to ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008 (former ISVAP Regulation no. 16 of 4 March 2008 as amended), on the basis of the gross premiums written less acquisition commissions and the other acquisition costs that are chargeable directly, with the exception of risks included in the Credit class for contracts stipulated or renewed on or before 31 December 1991, for which the calculation criteria provided in Annex 15-bis to the same Regulation no. 22, as amended, apply. In the case of long-term contracts the amount of amortisation for the year is deducted.
Under certain conditions the premium provision also includes the premium provision for unexpired risks, calculated in accordance with the simplified method laid down in paragraph 6 of Annex no. 15 to ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008, which is based on the expected loss ratio for the year, adjusted on a prospective basis.
The total amount allocated to this provision is sufficient to meet costs arising from the portion of risk pertaining to subsequent years.
The reinsurers' share of the premium provisions is calculated by applying to the premiums ceded the same criteria as those used for calculating the premium for direct insurance business provision.
The ageing provision, intended to cover the deterioration of the risk as the age of the policyholders rises, is calculated on the basis of the flat-rate method provided for by Art. 44, paragraph 3 of Annex no. 15 of ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008 as amended, to the extent of 10% of the gross premiums written of the year pertaining to contracts having the characteristics given under paragraph 43, paragraph 1 of the Annex.
The direct claims provision is ascertained analytically by estimating the presumed cost of all the claims outstanding at the end of the year and on the basis of prudent technical valuations carried out with reference to objective elements, in order to ensure that the total amount set aside is enough to meet the claims to be settled and the relative direct expenses and settlement expenses.
The figures ascertained in this way were analysed and checked by Head Office. Subsequently, in order to take account of all reasonably foreseeable future charges, actuarial-statistical methods are used to determine the final level of the claims provision.
The claims provision also includes the amounts set aside for claims incurred but not reported, based on past experience of IBNR for previous years.
The reinsurers' share of the claims provision reflects the sums recovered from them to meet the reserves, the amounts being laid down in the individual policies or in the contracts.
The Non-Life technical provisions have been subjected to the test provided for by IFRS 4 (Liability Adequacy Test - LAT).
In order to monitor the adequacy of the premium provision, the supplementary provision for Unexpired Risks is calculated for each individual company and class of business using the simplified method provided for in paragraph 6 of Annex no. 15 to ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008. As claims for the year are measured at final cost and not discounted, future payment flows can be deemed to have implicitly taken place (LAT on the claims provision).
The amount recognised is calculated in accordance with the provisions of Art. 36 of Italian Legislative Decree 209 of 7 September 2005 (Insurance Code) and Annex no. 16 of ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008 (former ISVAP Regulation no. 21 of 28 March 2008, as amended).
The mathematical provision for direct insurance is calculated analytically for each contract on the basis of pure premiums, with no deductions for policy acquisition costs, and by reference to the actuarial assumptions (technical interest rates, demographic models of death or disability) used to calculate the premiums on existing contracts. The mathematical provision includes the portion of pure premiums related to the premiums accrued during the year. It also includes all the revaluations made under the terms of the policy
and is never less than the surrender value. In accordance with the provisions of Art. 38 of Italian Legislative Decree 173/1997, technical provisions, which are set up to cover liabilities deriving from insurance policies where the yield is based on investments or indices for which the policyholder bears the risk, and provisions arising from pension fund management, are calculated by reference to commitments made under these policies and to the provisions of Art. 41 of Italian Legislative Decree 209 of 7 September 2005.
Under Art. 38, paragraph 3, of Italian Legislative Decree 173/1997, the mathematical provision includes provisions set up to hedge the risk of mortality in insurance contracts in Class III (as laid down in Art. 2, paragraph 1, of Italian Legislative Decree 209 of 7/9/2005), which provide a benefit should the insured party die during the term of the contract.
In the case of insurance contracts in Class III and VI the mathematical provision also includes the provisions set up to fund guaranteed benefits on maturity or when certain events occur (as laid down in Art. 2, paragraph 1, of Italian Legislative Decree 209 of 7/9/2005). The mathematical provision also includes an additional provision for demographic risk. To this regard, it was decided to add to the provisions to be set up to cover commitments undertaken with the policyholders, in compliance with Annex 14, paragraph 36 of ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008 after having verified a variance between the demographic bases used to calculate the principals forming the annuities and table A62 prepared by ANIA.

Furthermore, an additional provision was set up to cover the possible variance between the expected rates of return on the assets held as a hedge against the technical provisions and commitments by way of levels of financial guarantees and adjustments made to the benefits provided under the policies.
As laid down in Art. 36, paragraph 3, of Italian Legislative Decree 209 of 7 September 2005, the provision for amounts payable includes the total amount needed to cover payment of benefits that have fallen due but not so far been paid, surrendered policies and claims not yet paid.
Other technical provisions consist almost entirely of amounts set aside for operating expenses and are calculated on the basis of the provisions of paragraph 17 of Annex 14 of ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008.
The liability adequacy test required by IFRS 4 was also carried out to verify that the technical provisions are adequate to cover the present value of future cash flows related to insurance contracts.
The test was performed by projecting the cash flows and taking into account the following elements:
The shadow accounting technique set out in IFRS 4 enables the unrealised losses and/or gains on the underlying assets to be recognised as technical provisions for insurance or investment contracts that offer discretionary participation features as if they had been realised. This adjustment is recognised in the shareholders' equity or the income statement depending on whether the losses or gains in question are recognised in the shareholders' equity or the income statement.
Net losses are recognised in the provision for deferred financial liabilities to policyholders only after the guaranteed minimum has been reached, otherwise the company continues to bear them in full. Losses are quantified using a financial prospective method in line with Annex 14, paragraph 32 of ISVAP Regulation no. 22 of 4 April 2008, amended and supplemented by IVASS measure no. 53 of 6 December 2016.
Applying shadow accounting enables the value mismatch between technical provisions and related assets to be mitigated and is therefore deemed to be more representative of the economic substance of the transactions in question.
This item includes the financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss and the financial liabilities measured at amortised cost.
The financial liabilities in this category are subdivided into two further sub-items:
This item includes deposits received from reinsurers, debt securities issued, financial liabilities for future payments to lessors following the recognition of right of use on property, plant and equipment in application of IFRS 16, other loans obtained and liabilities on Life policies with a financial content where the insurance risk is not significant and there is no discretionary participation feature (some types of product matched by specific funding).
Payables includes Payables arising from direct insurance business, Payables arising from reinsurance business and Other payables, such as trade payables, payables for policyholders' tax due, payables for post-employment benefits, sundry tax payables and social security charges payable.
Payables are recognised at their nominal value.
Post-employment benefits accrued by 31 December 2006 that were not transferred to external bodies in accordance with the provisions of Italian Legislative Decree 252/05 on supplementary pension schemes come under the category of employee benefits classified as a defined benefit plan. The amount due to employees is therefore calculated using actuarial techniques and discounted at the reporting date, using the "Projected unit credit method" (a method based on benefits accrued in proportion to length of employment).
The same method is used to establish the effects of other defined benefits for employees for the post-employment period.
Actuarial gains and losses relating to obligations deriving from defined benefit plans are recorded under Other comprehensive income (expense).
Future cash flows are discounted on the basis of the market yield curve, recorded at the end of the year, for corporate bonds issued by issuers with high credit standing.
The service cost and net interest are recognised in the Income statement.
Net interest is calculated by applying to the net value of liabilities for defined benefits existing at the start of the year the one-year interest rate taken from the yield curve used to discount the liability at the end of the previous year.
Please see above for the corresponding asset item.
Deferred tax liabilities are recognised whenever there is a taxable temporary difference, except in the cases provided for in paragraph 15 of IAS 12.
Deferred tax liabilities must be measured using the tax rates that are expected to apply during the year in which the tax liability will be paid off, based on the ruling tax rates (and tax legislation) or those in force at the reporting date. If tax rates change, despite being prior year items, the deferred taxes recalculated in accordance with the new rates are recognised under Income tax in the income statement or under equity reserves to which the temporary variations in question apply.
With regard to the offsetting of deferred tax assets and liabilities, reference should be made to the previous paragraph "6.3 Deferred tax assets - IAS 12" in the section on Assets.

This item includes current tax payables.
This item includes, inter alia, accrued expense and deferred income, accruals for commissions on premiums under collection and deferred commission income related to investment contracts with no discretionary participation feature required in advance for the contract-administration service or for the investment-management service, amortised on a straight-line basis over the life of the contract or, in the case of whole-life contracts, over the "expected" life of the contract.
This item includes the premiums related to insurance contracts and financial instruments that include discretionary participation features, net of reinsurance.
Premiums are recognised at the time they are due. The total for the year is obtained by adding the premium provision.
This item includes commission income for financial services provided. It includes fees pertaining to the year related to Life assurance contracts classified as financial liabilities. In the case of unit-linked policies, in particular, acquisition fees for the asset management service provided have been recognised and deferred throughout the term of the contract.
This item includes realised gains and losses, interest, dividends, charges and positive and negative changes in value of financial assets and liabilities at fair value through profit or loss.
This item includes investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures recognised in the corresponding asset item.
This item includes gains on investments that do not come under the previous two categories. It mainly includes interest income on Loans and receivables and on securities classified as available-for-sale financial assets and held to maturity, other investment income, including dividends and rental income from investment property, and realised gains on the sale of financial assets or liabilities and investment property.

This item includes income arising from the sale of goods, the provision of services other than those of a financial nature and the use by third parties of the company's property, plant and equipment and other assets. It also includes other net technical income on insurance contracts, exchange rate differences allocated to the income statement as per IAS 21, realised gains and reversals of impairment losses on property, plant and equipment and other assets.
This item includes the amounts paid during the year for claims, matured policies and surrendered policies, as well as the amount of the changes in technical provisions related to contracts that fall within the scope of IFRS 4, net of amounts recovered and outwards reinsurance.
This item includes commission expense for financial services received. It includes commissions on Life assurance contracts classified as financial liabilities. In particular, acquisition commissions paid for the placement of unit-linked policies are amortised throughout the term of the contract to meet deferred acquisition loadings.
This item includes losses on investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures recognised in the corresponding asset item.
This item includes losses from investment property and financial instruments other than investments and financial instruments classified as "Assets at fair value through profit or loss". It mainly includes interest expense on financial liabilities, other investment expense, costs relating to investment property such as condominium expenses and maintenance expenses that do not increase the value of the investment property, losses realised as a result of the derecognition of financial assets or liabilities and investment property, depreciation and impairment losses.
This item includes commissions and other acquisition costs relating to insurance contracts, investment management expenses, other administrative expenses, and depreciation and amortisation (overheads and personnel expenses that are not allocated to losses relating to claims, insurance contract acquisition expenses or investment management expenses).
This item mainly includes other net technical charges relating to insurance contracts, additional amounts set aside during the year, exchange rate differences to be allocated to the income statement under IAS 21, realised losses and depreciation and amortisation relating to property, plant and equipment and intangible assets, not allocated to other cost items.

For the 2021-2023 three-year period, UnipolSai has opted for the Group tax regime regulated by Art. 117 et seq. of Italian Presidential Decree no. 917/86, under the tax consolidating company Unipol Gruppo, together with its own subsidiaries that meet the regulatory requirements.
An agreement was signed between the consolidating company and the respective consolidated companies, regulating the financial and procedural aspects governing the option in question.
Tax for the year is calculated according to current tax regulations and recognised among costs for the year. It represents:
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are calculated on the basis of the temporary differences (arisen or deducted during the year) between the profit (loss) for the year and the taxable income and on the consolidation adjustments. IRAP for the year is also recognised under Income tax.
Items expressed in foreign currencies are treated in accordance with the principles of multicurrency accounting. Monetary elements in foreign currency (units of currency owned and assets or liabilities that must be received or paid in a fixed or ascertainable number of units of currency) are translated using the exchange rate applicable at the end of the year.
Non-monetary elements measured at historical cost in foreign currency are translated using the exchange rate applicable on the date of the transaction.
Non-monetary elements measured at fair value in a foreign currency are translated using the exchange rates applicable on the date on which the fair value is determined.
Exchange rate differences arising from the settlement of monetary elements are recognised in the income statement. Exchange rate differences arising when non-monetary elements are measured are allocated to the profit (or loss) for the year or to other comprehensive income (expense) depending on whether the profit (or loss) to which they relate is recognised in the profit (loss) for the year or in other comprehensive income (expense), respectively.
The Group pays additional benefits to senior executives under a closed share-based compensation plan under which Unipol Ordinary shares and UnipolSai Ordinary shares are granted if specific targets are achieved (Performance shares). As laid down by IFRS 2 – Share-based payments, these plans form part of the beneficiaries' remuneration. The charge must be recognised through profit or loss, with a balancing item - for UnipolSai Ordinary shares only recognised directly in shareholders' equity (Reserve arising from equity-settled share-based payment), on the basis of the fair value of the instruments allocated on the grant date, the charge being spread over the period provided for in the scheme.
Basic earnings per share are calculated by dividing the profit allocated to holders of ordinary shares in UnipolSai by the weighted average number of ordinary shares outstanding during the year.
Diluted earnings per share are calculated by dividing the profit allocated to holders of ordinary shares in UnipolSai by the weighted average number of any additional ordinary shares that would be outstanding if all the potential ordinary shares with dilutive effect were converted. If the result is negative, the loss (basic and diluted) per share is calculated.
The application of certain accounting standards implies significant elements of judgment based on estimates and assumptions which are uncertain at the time they are formulated.
It is believed that the assumptions made are appropriate and, therefore, that the financial statements have been drafted clearly and give a true and fair view of the statement of financial position, income statement and statement of cash flows.
In order to formulate reliable estimates and assumptions, reference has been made to past experience, and to other factors considered reasonable for the case in question, based on all available information. However, we cannot exclude that changes in these estimates and assumptions may have a significant effect on the statement of financial position and income statement as well as on the potential assets and liabilities reported in the financial statements for disclosure purposes, if different elements emerge with respect to those considered originally.
The estimates mainly concern:
For information on the methods used to determine the items in question and the main risk factors, please refer to the sections containing a description of the measurement criteria.
IFRS 13 provides guidelines to the measurement at fair value of financial instruments and non-financial assets and liabilities already required or permitted by other accounting standards (IFRS). This standard:
The standard defines fair value as the sale price of an asset based on an ordinary transaction or the transfer price of a liability in an ordinary transaction on the main reference market at terms applicable at the measurement date (exit price).
Fair value measurement assumes that the transaction relating to the sale of assets or transfer of liabilities can take place:
When a market price is not observable, the measurement methods which maximise the use of observable parameters and minimise the use of non-observable parameters must mainly be used.
IFRS 13 also defines a fair value hierarchy based on the level of observability of the inputs contained in measurement techniques used to measure fair value.
IFRS 13 governs the fair value measurement and the associated disclosure also for assets and liabilities not measured at fair value on a recurring basis in the statement of financial position. For these assets and liabilities, fair value is calculated for financial statement disclosure purposes. It should also be noted that since said assets and liabilities are not generally exchanged, the calculation of their fair value is based primarily on the use of internal parameters not directly observable on the market, with the sole exception of listed securities classified as "Held-to-maturity investments".

The table below summarises the methods to calculate the fair value for the different macro categories of financial instruments, receivables and property.
| Mark to Market | Mark to Model and other | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Financial Instruments |
Bonds | CBBT contributor - Bloomberg | Mark to Model |
| Other contributor - Bloomberg | Counterparty valuation | ||
| Listed shares and investments, ETFs | Reference market | ||
| Unlisted shares and investments | DCF DDM Multiples |
||
| Listed derivatives | Reference market | ||
| OTC derivatives | Mark to Model | ||
| UCITS | Net Asset Value | ||
| Receivables | Trade receivables (Mark to Model) Other receivables (carrying amount) |
||
| Property | Appraisal value |
In compliance with IFRS 13, the market price is used to determine the fair value of financial instruments, in the case of instruments traded in liquid and active markets (Mark to Market).
"Liquid and active market" means:
In the absence of available prices on a liquid active market, valuation methods are used which maximise the use of observable parameters and minimise the use of non-observable parameters. These methods can be summarised in Mark to Model valuations, valuations by counterparty or valuations at the carrying amount in connection with some non-financial asset categories.
With reference to shares, listed investments, ETFs and listed derivatives, the Mark to Market valuation corresponds to the official valuation price of the market.
For bonds, the sources used for the Mark to Market valuation of financial assets and liabilities are as follows:
For UCITS the Net Asset Value is the source used.
The Group uses valuation methods (Mark to Model) in line with the methods generally used by the market.
The objective of the models used to calculate the fair value is to obtain a value for the financial instrument consistent with the assumptions that market participants would use to quote a price, assumptions that also concern the risk inherent in a particular valuation technique and/or in the inputs used. To ensure the correct Mark to Model valuation of each category of instrument, adequate and consistent valuation models must be defined beforehand as well as reference market parameters.
The list of the main models used within the UnipolSai Group for Mark to Model pricing of financial instruments is provided below:
Securities and interest rate derivatives
Securities and inflation derivatives
Securities and share, index and exchange rate derivatives
The main observable market parameters used to perform Mark to Model valuations are as follows:
The main non-observable market parameters used to perform Mark to Model valuations are as follows:
With reference to bonds in those cases when, even on the basis of the results of the Scoring Model, it is not possible to measure an instrument using the Mark to Market method, the fair value is obtained on the basis of Mark to Model type valuations. The different valuation models referred to above are chosen according to the instrument characteristics.
For OTC derivative contracts, the models used are consistent with the risk factor underlying the contract. The fair value of OTC interest rate derivatives and OTC inflation-linked derivatives is calculated on the basis of Mark to Model type valuations, acknowledging the rules set in IFRS 13.
As regards derivatives on which a collateralisation agreement is provided (Credit Support Annex) between the companies of the UnipolSai Group and the authorised market counterparties, the EONIA (Euro OverNight Index Average) discount curve is used.
As regards uncollateralised derivatives, CVA (Credit Valuation Adjustment) and DVA (Debit Valuation Adjustment) adjustments are made. It should be noted that, at 31 December 2022, almost all derivative positions represented collateralised contracts for which CSA agreements are in place with the counterparties involved in the trading.
As regards unlisted shares and investments for which a market price or an appraisal by an independent expert is not available, the valuations are performed mainly on the basis of (i) equity methods, (ii) methods based on the discounting of future profit or cash flows, i.e. Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) or Dividend Discount Model (DDM), (the socalled "excess capital" version) (iii) if applicable, methods based on market multiples.
As regards unlisted UCITS, Private Equity Funds and Hedge Funds, the fair value is calculated as the Net Asset Value (NAV) at the financial statement date provided directly by the fund managers. The NAV is constructed on the basis of stringent valuation policies defined by the fund and is based on valuation of the underlying assets using updated inputs and more appropriate measurement approaches. Based on these considerations and taking into account sector market practices, this value was used to express the instrument's fair value.
With reference to properties, the fair value is measured on the basis of the appraisal value provided by independent experts, in compliance with current legal provisions.
For financial assets and liabilities which do not fall into the categories of instruments valued on a Mark to Market basis and for which there are no consistent and validated valuation models available for the purposes of measuring fair value, the valuations provided by the counterparties that could be contacted to liquidate the position are used.
Bond issues that incorporate a derivative contract which modifies the cash flows generated by the host contract are considered structured bonds. The measurement of structured bonds requires the representation and separate valuation of the host contract and of embedded derivative contracts.
The measurement of structured bonds makes use of models consistent with the breakdown into elementary components (host contract and embedded derivatives) and with the risk factor underlying said contract.
For structured bonds, the valuation of elementary components follows the criteria defined above for the calculation of fair value, which makes provision for use of Mark to Market valuation if available, or of the Mark to Model approach or counterparty price in the case in which the Mark to Market-type price is not available.
Bonds issued by a Special Purpose Vehicle secured by collateral and whose flows paid are generated by an interest rate swap contract in place between the vehicle and the swap counterparty (usually the arranger of the transaction) are considered SPV structured bonds. The measurement of SPV structured bonds requires the representation and separate valuation of the following elements:
For SPV structured bonds the valuation of collateral follows the criteria defined previously for the calculation of the fair value, which makes provision for the use of the Mark to Market approach if available, or the Mark to Model approach or the counterparty price in the case in which the Mark to Market type price is not available.
The valuation of the interest rate swap agreement provides for the discounting of future cash flows on the basis of the different discount curves, based on the existence or not of a collateralisation agreement (Credit Support Annex) between the vehicle and swap counterparty. In particular, if the derivative contract is collateralised using available securities included in the SPV's assets, the future cash flows of the interest rate swap agreement are discounted

Assets and liabilities measured at fair value are classified on the basis of the hierarchy defined by IFRS 13. This classification establishes a fair value hierarchy based on the degree of discretionary power used, giving priority to the use of observable market parameters, as these are representative of the assumptions that market participants would use in the pricing of assets and liabilities.
Adjustment), DVA (Debit Valuation Adjustment) and FVA (Funding Valuation Adjustment), as appropriate.
Assets and liabilities are classified on the basis of the criterion used to determine fair value (Mark to Market, Mark to Model, Counterparty) and on the basis of the observability of the parameters used, in the case of the Mark to Model valuation.
The measurement of financial instruments is a preliminary activity for risk monitoring, integrated asset and liability management and the drafting of the financial statements for the year.
The fair value measurement of financial instruments on a recurring basis is structured into different stages and is carried out, in compliance with the principles of separateness, independence and responsibility of the departments, at the same time, and independently, by the Finance Department and the Risk Management Department of Unipol Gruppo, using the measurement criteria defined in the previous paragraph.
When the independent valuations of financial assets and liabilities have been carried out by the two Departments involved in the pricing process, a check is performed for significant deviations, which refer to deviations of more than 3% in terms of absolute value. In the event of deviations of more than 3%, the reasons for the differences identified are analysed and, when the outcomes of the comparison are known, the price to be used for financial statement valuation purposes is determined.
The classification of financial assets and liabilities at Level 3 adheres to a prudential approach; this category mainly includes the following types of financial instruments:

derivative instruments valued on a Mark to Model basis using non-observable parameters (correlations, volatility, dividend estimates);
bonds which do not meet the requirements defined in the scoring test (see the paragraph "Mark to Market valuations") and for which a Mark to Model valuation is not possible.
Consistent with the provisions of IFRS 13, fair value is measured also for assets and liabilities not measured at fair value on a recurring basis in the statement of financial position and when the disclosure on fair value has to be provided in the Notes to the financial statements in compliance with other international accounting standards. Since these assets and liabilities are usually not exchanged, the calculation of their fair value is based primarily on the use of internal parameters not directly observable on the market. This category mainly includes the following types of financial instruments:

Comments and further information on the items in the statement of financial position and the changes that took place compared to balances at 31 December of the previous year are given below (the numbering of the notes relates to the mandatory layout for the preparation of the statement of financial position).
In application of IFRS 5, assets and liabilities held for sale are shown respectively under items 6.1 in Assets and 6.1 under Liabilities. As regards Non-current assets or assets of a disposal group held for sale, please refer to Chapter 5 Other information, paragraph 5.5, for more information on their composition and measurement criteria.
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | var. in amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goodwill | 602.1 | 513.7 | 88.4 |
| resulting from business combinations | 601.9 | 513.5 | 88.4 |
| resulting from other | 0.2 | 0.2 | |
| Other intangible assets | 541.1 | 449.3 | 91.8 |
| portfolios acquired under business combinations | 24.1 | 38.2 | (14.1) |
| software and licenses | 482.3 | 391.3 | 90.9 |
| other intangible assets | 34.7 | 19.7 | 15.0 |
| Total intangible assets | 1,143.1 | 962.9 | 180.2 |
At 31 December 2022, the item amounted to €602.1m (of which €397.5m relating to the Non-Life business and €204.5m to the Life business): the change is attributable to the consolidation difference deriving from the acquisition of the subsidiaries I.Car Srl, Muriana Manuela Srl, Tantosvago Srl, Anton Maria Valsalva Srl, Unicasa Italia SpA, Gratia et Salus Srl and DaVinci Healthcare Srl. Reference should be made to the Basis of presentation, "Information about business combinations" section, of these Notes for further details of the accounting method for those acquisitions.
Goodwill with an indefinite useful life recorded in the financial statements was tested for impairment in accordance with the procedure specifically approved by UnipolSai's Board of Directors. For information on the criteria used for the tests, please refer to paragraph 5.13 of Chapter 5 of this document, "Other information".
This item amounted to €541.1m (€449.3m in 2021) and consisted of:

At 31 December 2022 Property, plant and equipment, net of accumulated depreciation, amounted to €2,784m (€2,431m in 2021), of which €1,492.9m for Properties for own use (€1,500.8m in 2021) and €1,291.2m for Other tangible assets (€930.2m in 2021).
| Amounts in €m | Gross carrying amount |
Accumulated depreciation |
Net carrying amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Balance at 31/12/2021 | 1,923.6 | (422.8) | 1,500.8 |
| Increases | 43.9 | 43.9 | |
| Decreases | (9.8) | (9.8) | |
| Depreciation for the year | (48.7) | (48.7) | |
| Other changes in provisions | 6.7 | 6.7 | |
| Balance at 31/12/2022 | 1,957.6 | (464.8) | 1,492.9 |
The increases refer to incremental expenses and to property leases recognised using the financial method pursuant to IFRS 16.
The decreases mainly refer to changes in intended use.
The current value of properties for own use, determined based on independent expert appraisals, was €1,713m.
| Amounts in €m | Office furniture and machines |
Movable assets entered in public registers |
Plant and equipment |
Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balance at 31/12/2021 | 417.5 | 1,178.5 | 401.4 | 21.0 | 2,018.4 |
| Increases | 30.0 | 557.3 | 42.2 | 18.1 | 647.6 |
| Decreases | (9.4) | (153.7) | (16.2) | (3.5) | (182.8) |
| Balance at 31/12/2022 | 438.1 | 1,582.1 | 427.5 | 35.6 | 2,483.2 |
| Accumulated depreciation at 31/12/2021 | 340.3 | 502.2 | 245.7 | 0.0 | 1,088.2 |
| Increases | 21.6 | 176.3 | 33.7 | 231.6 | |
| Decreases | (9.5) | (106.5) | (11.8) | (0.0) | (127.8) |
| Accumulated depreciation at 31/12/2022 | 352.5 | 572.0 | 267.5 | 0.0 | 1,192.1 |
| Net amount at 31/12/2021 | 77.2 | 676.3 | 155.7 | 20.9 | 930.2 |
| Net amount at 31/12/2022 | 85.6 | 1,010.1 | 159.9 | 35.5 | 1,291.2 |
The main increase in property, plant and equipment is due to the item Movable assets entered in public registers, in relation to UnipolRentalactivities during the year.
The balance of this item was €761.6m, down compared to 2021 (€831.3m). Details are set out in the appropriate appendix.
At 31 December 2022, total Investments (Investment property, Equity investments and Financial assets) amounted to €58,185.7m (€66,953.5m in 2021).
| #REF! | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
| Investment property | 2,359.1 | 4.1 | 2,155.8 | 3.2 | 9.4 |
| Investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | 162.3 | 0.3 | 176.5 | 0.3 | (8.0) |
| Financial assets (excluding those at fair value through profit or loss) | 46,878.8 | 80.6 | 56,276.7 | 84.1 | (16.7) |
| Held-to-maturity investments | 365.7 | 0.6 | 366.7 | 0.5 | (0.3) |
| Loans and receivables | 4,894.1 | 8.4 | 5,245.1 | 7.8 | (6.7) |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 41,283.0 | 71.0 | 50,435.0 | 75.3 | (18.1) |
| Held-for-trading financial assets | 335.9 | 0.6 | 229.8 | 0.3 | 46.2 |
| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 8,785.5 | 15.1 | 8,344.5 | 12.5 | 5.3 |
| Total Investments | 58,185.7 | 100.0 | 66,953.5 | 100.0 | (13.1) |
| Amounts in €m | Gross carrying amount |
Accumulated depreciation |
Net carrying amount | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balance at 31/12/2021 | 2,545.4 | (389.5) | 2,155.8 | |
| Increases | 275.5 | 275.5 | ||
| Decreases | (32.2) | (32.2) | ||
| Trasfers to other categories | 9.2 | 9.2 | ||
| Depreciation for the year | (53.8) | (53.8) | ||
| Other changes in provisions | 4.5 | 4.5 | ||
| Balance at 31/12/2022 | 2,797.9 | (438.8) | 2,359.1 | |
The increases refer primarily to purchases and incremental expenses. The decreases include write-downs for €22.7m.
The current value of Investment property, €2,748.6m, was based on independent expert appraisals.
At 31 December 2022, investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures amounted to €162.3m (€176.5m in 2021).

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Held-to-maturity investments | 365.7 | 0.8 | 366.7 | 0.7 | (0.3) |
| Listed debt securities | 365.7 | 366.7 | (0.3) | ||
| Loans and receivables | 4,894.1 | 10.4 | 5,245.1 | 9.3 | (6.7) |
| Unlisted debt securities | 3,947.6 | 4,018.9 | (1.8) | ||
| Deposits with ceding companies | 113.9 | 105.8 | 7.7 | ||
| Other loans and receivables | 832.6 | 1,120.4 | (25.7) | ||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 41,283.0 | 88.1 | 50,435.0 | 89.6 | (18.1) |
| Equity instruments at cost | 4.5 | 4.4 | 1.4 | ||
| Listed equity instruments at fair value | 1,887.1 | 1,484.9 | 27.1 | ||
| Unlisted equity instruments at fair value | 294.9 | 201.5 | 46.4 | ||
| Listed debt securities | 34,650.7 | 44,315.2 | (21.8) | ||
| Unlisted debt securities | 371.8 | 462.0 | (19.5) | ||
| UCITS units | 4,074.0 | 3,967.0 | 2.7 | ||
| Held-for-trading financial assets | 335.9 | 0.7 | 229.8 | 0.4 | 46.2 |
| Listed equity instruments at fair value | 2.9 | 0.9 | n.s. | ||
| Listed debt securities | 50.3 | 80.5 | (37.6) | ||
| Unlisted debt securities | 0.1 | 0.2 | (62.8) | ||
| UCITS units | 2.0 | 1.9 | 3.3 | ||
| Derivatives | 280.7 | 146.3 | 91.9 | ||
| Total financial assets | 46,878.8 | 100.0 | 56,276.7 | 100.0 | (16.7) |
Details of Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss by investment type:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 8,785.5 | 100.0 | 8,344.5 | 100.0 | 5.3 |
| Listed equity instruments at fair value | 131.7 | 1.5 | 155.0 | 1.9 | (15.0) |
| Listed debt securities | 4,060.6 | 46.2 | 3,206.1 | 38.4 | 26.7 |
| Unlisted debt securities | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.3 | 0.0 | (100.0) |
| UCITS units | 4,316.2 | 49.1 | 4,266.5 | 51.1 | 1.2 |
| Other financial assets | 277.0 | 3.2 | 716.6 | 8.6 | (61.3) |
For information on fair value, reference should be made to paragraph 5.7 of Section 5 "Other information" of these Notes to the financial statements.
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Receivables relating to direct insurance business | 1,416.2 | 40.8 | 1,398.0 | 40.8 | 1.3 |
| Receivables relating to reinsurance business | 191.7 | 5.5 | 204.5 | 6.0 | (6.3) |
| Other receivables | 1,863.7 | 53.7 | 1,822.4 | 53.2 | 2.3 |
| Total sundry receivables | 3,471.6 | 100.0 | 3,424.9 | 100.0 | 1.4 |
The item Other receivables included:
substitute tax receivables on the mathematical provisions totalling €384.5m (€350.6m at 31/12/2021);
trade receivables amounting to €254.6m (€224.7m at 31/12/2021);
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-current assets or assets of a disposal group held for sale | 532.6 | 17.5 | 132.6 | 13.7 | n.s. |
| Deferred acquisition costs | 102.1 | 3.4 | 100.1 | 10.3 | 2.0 |
| Deferred tax assets | 885.0 | 29.1 | 108.1 | 11.1 | n.s. |
| Current tax assets | 36.3 | 1.2 | 9.1 | 0.9 | n.s. |
| Other assets | 1,483.3 | 48.8 | 620.9 | 64.0 | 138.9 |
| Total other assets | 3,039.2 | 100.0 | 970.8 | 100.0 | n.s. |
Deferred tax assets are shown net of the offsetting carried out, pursuant to IAS 12, with the corresponding taxes (IRES or IRAP) recorded in Deferred tax liabilities, as described in Chapter 2 Main accounting standards.
The item Other assets includes €1,082.3m in "Ecobonus" and "Sismabonus" tax credits, purchased from direct beneficiaries or their assignees, which can be recovered by offsetting them against future payments. Other assets also include, inter alia, deferred commission expense on contracts not included in the scope of application of IFRS 4 and other accruals and deferrals.
For details of the sub-item Assets of a disposal group held for sale, please refer to paragraph 5.5 of these Notes.
At 31 December 2022, Cash and cash equivalents amounted to €825.8m (€884.8m at 31/12/2021).

.
Movements in shareholders' equity recognised during the year with respect to 31 December 2021 are set out in the attached Statement of changes in Shareholders' equity.
Shareholders' equity, excluding non-controlling interests, is composed as follows:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | var. in amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Share capital | 2,031.5 | 2,031.5 | |
| Other equity instruments | 496.2 | 496.2 | |
| Capital reserves | 346.8 | 346.8 | |
| Income-related and other equity reserves | 3,236.4 | 3,146.1 | 90.3 |
| (Treasury shares) | (2.8) | (0.7) | (2.1) |
| Reserve for foreign currency translation differences | 4.1 | 3.9 | 0.2 |
| Gains/losses on available-for-sale financial assets | (1,128.6) | 1,285.4 | (2,414.0) |
| Other gains and losses recognised directly in equity | (11.4) | (33.6) | 22.2 |
| Profit (loss) for the year | 596.5 | 688.5 | (91.9) |
| Total shareholders' equity attributable to the owners of the Parent | 5,568.6 | 7,964.0 | (2,395.4) |
At 31 December 2022, UnipolSai's share capital was €2,031.5m, fully paid-up, and was made up of 2,829,717,372 ordinary shares without nominal value, unchanged with respect to 31 December 2021.
The item Other equity instruments consists of the Restricted Tier 1 perpetual regulatory capital instrument with a nominal value of €500m issued in 2020.
The main changes in the year in the Group's shareholders' equity were as follows:
Shareholders' Equity attributable to non-controlling interests was €244m (€269.8m at 31/12/2021).
At 31 December 2022, UnipolSai held a total of 1,162,312 ordinary treasury shares (336,768 at 31/12/2021), of which 988,160 directly and 174,152 indirectly through the following subsidiaries:
During the year, in execution of the Compensation plans based on financial instruments, 1,800,000 UnipolSai ordinary shares were acquired and 974,456 were allocated to Executives of the UnipolSai Group.
The item "Provisions" totalled €595.9m at 31 December 2022 (€422m at 31/12/2021) and mainly consisted of provisions for litigation, various disputes, charges relating to the sales network, provisions for salary policies and employee leaving incentives..
With regard to the dispute deriving from the application of VAT to delegation fees for coinsurance operations with other companies in the insurance sector, after contact began in 2020 with the competent Regional Directorates of the Italian Tax Authorities for the closure of pending pre-litigation and litigation issues, all years up to and including 2017 were settled directly or through conciliation, with payment of only the tax and interest due. The dispute regarding 2018 is still pending.
With reference to the general audit carried out in 2017 by the Veneto Regional Directorate for the years 2012-2015, and related notices of assessment that were subsequently notified, the dispute is still pending for the tax periods 2013 and 2014.
By means of communications dated 19 April 2013, Consob commenced two separate sanction proceedings against Fondiaria-SAI and Milano Assicurazioni for charges relating to their respective 2010 consolidated financial statements.
Pursuant to Art. 187-septies, paragraph 1 of the Consolidated Law on Finance, Consob notified Ms. Jonella Ligresti and Mr. Emanuele Erbetta, for the offices held in Fondiaria-SAI at the time of the events, of the violation set forth in Art. 187-ter, paragraph 1, of the Consolidated Law on Finance. Fondiaria-SAI is also charged with this violation as a party bearing joint and several liability. It is also charged with the offence set forth in Art. 187-quinquies, paragraph 1, letter a), of the Consolidated Law on Finance for the aforementioned violation of Art. 187-ter, paragraph 1 of the Consolidated Law on Finance by Ms. Jonella Ligresti and Mr. Emanuele Erbetta, acting in the above mentioned capacities.
Consob also made the same charge against Milano Assicurazioni. In this regard, pursuant to Art. 187-septies, paragraph 1 of the Consolidated Law on Finance, the Commission charged Mr. Emanuele Erbetta, for the role he held in the subsidiary at the time of the events, with the violation established in Art. 187-ter, paragraph 1, of the Consolidated Law on Finance. Milano Assicurazioni is also charged with this violation as a party bearing joint and several liability. It is also charged with the offence set forth in Art. 187-quinquies, paragraph 1, letter a), of the Consolidated Law on Finance for the aforementioned violation of Art. 187-ter, paragraph 1 of the Consolidated Law on Finance by Mr. Emanuele Erbetta, acting in the above mentioned capacity.
Fondiaria-SAI and Milano Assicurazioni (currently UnipolSai), assisted by their lawyers, presented their conclusions, asking that the administrative penalties set out in Articles 187-ter, 187-quinquies and 187-septies of the Consolidated Law on Finance not be imposed on the companies. On 20 March 2014 the Consob issued a resolution whereby, not deeming that the parties' defences deserved to be accepted, it ordered:
UnipolSai provided for the payment of the fines, and also filed an appeal against Ms. Ligresti. Mr. Erbetta directly paid the penalty imposed on him. In any case, UnipolSai challenged the decision before the Court of Appeal of Bologna, which rejected the appeal on 6 March 2015. The Company, assisted by its lawyers, challenged the decision before the Court of Cassation which, on 6 December 2018, rejected the appeal and confirmed the Consob sanctions.
In March 2019, the Company challenged the decision before the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), asking for the cancellation of the sanction for the breach of the ne bis in idem principle, according to which a person should not be submitted to sanction or judicial proceedings several times for the same fact. The ECHR declared the appeal admissible but has not yet scheduled the hearing.
On 26 November 2020, the Antitrust Authority notified UnipolSai Assicurazioni of the initiation of preliminary proceedings concerning MV TPL claims settlement, characterised by an alleged hindrance of the right of consumers to access the relevant deeds and the failure to specify the criteria for the quantification of damages in the phase of formulating the compensation offer. On 16 April 2021, the Antitrust Authority then notified the objective extension of these proceedings, claiming failure to comply with the terms of Art. 148 of the Private Insurance Code for the settlement/challenge of MV TPL claims.
UnipolSai deems these charges to be completely unfounded and, to protect its rights, has appointed its lawyers to represent it in the proceedings, which closed with a decision received by UnipolSai on 8 August 2022, whereby the Antitrust Authority imposed a penalty of €5m. Since UnipolSai does not deem the conclusions of the Authority to be acceptable in any way, it appealed against this decision before the Regional Administrative Court (TAR). The hearing for public discussion is expected to be scheduled in 2023.
By decision notified on 20 May 2021, the Antitrust Authority approved the initiation of a preliminary investigation into Compagnia Assicuratrice Linear SpA in order to ascertain any breach of the prohibition on agreements restricting competition pursuant to Art. 101 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, in relation to an alleged agreement concerning and/or resulting in the alteration of competition trends in the MV TPL policy direct sales market, which allegedly affected certain companies active, including through their websites, in the market of comparing and marketing offers relating to various types of services, including insurance services, as well as a number of Italian insurance companies (and other intermediaries).
Although Linear considers the alleged assumptions in fact and in law by virtue of which the proceedings were lodged to be completely groundless, along with the other parties it submitted its commitments pursuant to Art. 14-ter of Law no. 287/90. On 3 January 2022, the Authority published the above-mentioned commitments on its website to allow the parties concerned to submit any observations and the Antitrust Authority to then decide on acceptance.
One party submitted observations in relation to the Market Test in favour of accepting the commitments.
On 13 May 2022, the Antitrust Authority resolved to make the commitments submitted by the parties binding, closing the proceedings without finding any infringement and without the imposition of financial penalties.
By notice served on the Company on 11 October 2021, IVASS ordered the initiation of inspections intended, in relation to MV TPL underwriting and settlement processes, to ascertain the adoption of recent regulatory provisions, respect for the CARD convention and the related governance and control aspects. After the inspections, which were completed on 21 January 2022, IVASS, with an inspection report notified on 22 June 2022, formulated some findings, to which UnipolSai replied with a note of 4 August 2022 containing its considerations in relation to the findings, also representing, against a "partially favourable" opinion on the results of the assessments conducted, the implementation of specific improvement actions to further refine and perfect certain processes. At present, the final decisions of IVASS have not yet been disclosed.
Writs of summons by shareholders of La Fondiaria Assicurazioni (takeover bid legal cases)
From 2003 onwards, a number of La Fondiaria Assicurazioni ("Fondiaria") shareholders have initiated a series of legal proceedings claiming, albeit on different legal grounds and justifications, compensation for damages allegedly suffered due to failure to launch the takeover bid on Fondiaria shares by SAI Società Assicuratrice Industriale ("SAI") in 2002.
On the whole, 16 proceedings were brought against the Company; 14 of these were settled at various degrees and stages of the proceeding, while one was extinguished when the first instance court's decision handed down in favour of the Company became definitive, as the opposing party failed to appeal it.
At 31 December 2022, only one case was still pending before the Court of Cassation, following the decision issued by the Milan Court of Appeal after resumption by the plaintiff. An appropriate provision has been allocated to cover this pending dispute.
UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA has for some time been a party in legal proceedings referring to events occurring during the previous management of Fondiaria-SAI and Milano Assicurazioni. As described in greater detail in the financial statements of previous years, the criminal proceedings were all settled with acquittal or dismissal. Two civil proceedings also ended with final judgments for the acquittal of UnipolSai with respect to all compensation claims.
At 31 December 2022, five civil proceedings were still pending, lodged by several investors which, in brief, claimed that they had purchased and subscribed Fondiaria-SAI shares as they were prompted by the information in the prospectuses published by Fondiaria-SAI on 24 June 2011 and 12 July 2012 in relation to the increases in share capital under option resolved by the company on 14 May 2011, 22 June 2011 and 19 March 2012 respectively, and in the financial statements of Fondiaria-SAI relating to the years 2007-2012. UnipolSai (former Fondiaria-SAI) appeared at all Civil Proceedings and disputed the plaintiffs' claims.
Specifically, on 18 May 2017 the Court of Milan partially upheld the compensation claims of one shareholder. The Company appealed against the sentence before the Milan Court of Appeal, which only partially accepted the appeal. The Company therefore appealed against the sentence before the Court of Cassation, which has not yet scheduled the hearing for the discussion of the case.
The Court of Rome, with a sentence published on 12 May 2020, vice versa fully rejected the compensation claims submitted by another investor with respect to the share capital increases noted above. The sentence was challenged before the Court of Appeal of Rome which, with a judgment dated 2 May 2022, rejected the investor's appeal in full, confirming the first instance judgment. The shareholder first served the Company with a summons for revocation of the judgment of the Rome Court of Appeal (hearing scheduled for 25 April 2024 for admission of the facts) and subsequently challenged the judgment before the Court of Cassation, for which a discussion hearing is still pending. On 15 February 2021, the Court of Milan partially upheld the compensation claims of other shareholders. The Company appealed against the sentence before the Milan Court of Appeal. At the hearing on 28 September 2022, the case was adjourned for judgment.
Another two cases pending on the same issues are still in the preliminary phase before the Court of Milan. Provisions deemed suitable were made in relation to the disputes with investors described above.

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life premium provisions | 3,149.7 | 21.7 | 3,375.5 | 22.9 | |
| Non-Life claims provisions | 11,358.8 | 78.1 | 11,312.6 | 76.9 | |
| Other Non-Life technical provisions | 29.1 | 0.2 | 26.9 | 0.2 | |
| Total Non-Life provisions | 14,537.5 | 100.0 | 14,714.9 | 100.0 | (1.2) |
| Life mathematical provisions | 36,827.7 | 98.9 | 35,787.4 | 84.4 | |
| Provisions for amounts payable (Life business) | 324.4 | 0.9 | 337.1 | 0.8 | |
| Technical provisions where the investment risk is borne by | |||||
| policyholders and arising from pension fund management | 2,116.9 | 5.7 | 2,445.8 | 5.8 | |
| Other Life technical provisions | (2,040.4) | (5.5) | 3,843.1 | 9.1 | |
| Total Life provisions | 37,228.7 | 100.0 | 42,413.4 | 100.0 | (12.2) |
| Total technical provisions | 51,766.2 | 57,128.3 | (9.4) |
The Other Life technical provisions recorded a significant change mainly due to the evolution of the shadow accounting provision, in turn linked to market value performance of the financial assets included in the segregated fund portfolios.
Financial liabilities amounted to €9,142m (€8,411.2m at 31/12/2021).
This item, which amounted to €6,839.1m (€6,356.4m at 31/12/2021), is broken down as follows:
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subordinated liabilities | 1,367.2 | 59.4 | 1,446.1 | 70.4 | (5.5) |
| Deposits received from reinsurers | 131.9 | 5.7 | 130.5 | 6.4 | 1.0 |
| Other loans obtained | 802.0 | 34.8 | 478.1 | 23.3 | 67.7 |
| Sundry financial liabilities | 1.2 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.0 | n.s. |
| Total other financial liabilities | 2,302.9 | 100.0 | 2,054.8 | 100.0 | 12.1 |
Details of Subordinated liabilities are shown in the table below:
| Issuer | Nominal amount outstanding |
Subordination level |
Year of maturity |
Call | Rate | L/NL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UnipolSai | €750.0m | tier I | in perpetuity | every 3 months from 2024/06/18 | fixed rate 5,75% (*) | L |
| UnipolSai | €500.0m | tier II | 2028 | fixed rate 3,875% | L | |
| UnipolSai | €80.0m (**) | tier I | 2023 | every 6 months | 6M Euribor + 180 b.p. (***) | NL |
(*) from June 2024 floating rate of 3M Euribor + 518 b.p.
(**) on 22 July 2022 the fourth tranche of 80.0 million euro was repaid as indicated in the planned amortisation plan contractually
(***) since September 2014, in application of the contractual clauses ("Additional Costs Clauses"), UnipolSai and Mediobanca signed an agreement to modify a Loan Agreement to cover the subordinated loan expiring in 2023. This agreement provides for the amendment of several economic terms, including payment by way of compromise, of an annual indemnity (additional spread) equal to 71.5 basis points, which increases the previous spread (thereby raising the total spread from 1.80 to 2.515 basis points) provided for in the Loan Agreement
Other loans obtained totalled €802m (€478.1m at 31/12/2021):
..
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Payables arising from direct insurance business | 198.1 | 13.2 | 187.6 | 15.7 | 5.6 |
| Payables arising from reinsurance business | 143.7 | 9.6 | 104.5 | 8.8 | 37.6 |
| Other payables | 1,155.7 | 77.2 | 899.5 | 75.5 | 28.5 |
| Policyholders' tax due | 161.3 | 10.8 | 159.9 | 13.4 | 0.9 |
| Sundry tax payables | 41.5 | 2.8 | 42.7 | 3.6 | (2.7) |
| Trade payables | 463.2 | 30.9 | 317.8 | 26.7 | 45.7 |
| Post-employment benefits | 46.1 | 3.1 | 52.4 | 4.4 | (12.1) |
| Social security charges payable | 43.8 | 2.9 | 38.1 | 3.2 | 15.0 |
| Sundry payables | 399.8 | 26.7 | 288.7 | 24.2 | 38.5 |
| Total payables | 1,497.6 | 100.0 | 1,191.5 | 100.0 | 25.7 |

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | % comp. | 31/12/2021 | % comp. | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current tax liabilities | 12.5 | 0.9 | 39.4 | 3.7 | (68.3) |
| Deferred tax liabilities | 0.8 | 0.1 | 107.6 | 10.0 | (99.3) |
| Liabilities associated with disposal groups held for sale | 388.0 | 27.8 | 3.1 | 0.3 | n.s. |
| Commissions on premiums under collection | 103.5 | 7.4 | 101.2 | 9.4 | 2.2 |
| Deferred commission income | 13.5 | 1.0 | 10.4 | 1.0 | 30.2 |
| Accrued expenses and deferred income | 63.0 | 4.5 | 85.2 | 7.9 | (26.1) |
| Other liabilities | 815.5 | 58.4 | 725.4 | 67.6 | 12.4 |
| Total other liabilities | 1,396.7 | 100.0 | 1,072.4 | 100.0 | 30.2 |
The item Deferred tax liabilities is shown net of the compensation carried out, pursuant to IAS 12, with the corresponding taxes (IRES or IRAP) recorded in Deferred tax assets, as described in Chapter 2 Main accounting standards.
For the details of the sub-item Liabilities associated with disposal groups, please refer to paragraph 5.5 of these Notes..
Comments and further information on the items in the income statement and the variations that took place compared with the previous year are given below (the numbering of the notes relates to the mandatory layout for the preparation of the income statement).
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life earned premiums | 8,396.9 | 8,235.0 | 2.0 |
| Non-Life written premiums | 8,502.3 | 8,214.3 | 3.5 |
| Changes in Non-Life premium provision | (105.4) | 20.6 | n.s. |
| Life written premiums | 3,510.0 | 4,114.1 | (14.7) |
| Non-Life and Life gross earned premiums | 11,906.9 | 12,349.1 | (3.6) |
| Non-Life earned premiums ceded to reinsurers | (522.2) | (454.6) | 14.9 |
| Non-Life premiums ceded to reinsurers | (524.2) | (463.2) | 13.2 |
| Changes in Non-Life premium provision - reinsurers' share | 2.0 | 8.6 | (76.7) |
| Life premiums ceded to reinsurers | (19.2) | (16.0) | 20.2 |
| Non-Life and Life earned premiums ceded to reinsurers | (541.3) | (470.6) | 15.0 |
| Total net premiums | 11,365.6 | 11,878.5 | (4.3) |
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commission income from investment contracts | 38.2 | 32.6 | 17.3 |
| Other commission income | 10.7 | 12.7 | (15.8) |
| Total commission income | 49.0 | 45.3 | 8.0 |
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| on held-for trading financial assets | 61.8 | 116.5 | n.s. |
| on held-for trading financial liabilities | 0.0 | 0.1 | (21.8) |
| on financial assets/liabilities at fair value through profit or loss | (374.7) | 72.2 | n.s. |
| Total net gains/losses | (312.9) | 188.8 | n.s. |

This item amounted to €22.7m (€13m in 2021).
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interests | 1,512.3 | 1,368.1 | 10.5 |
| on held-to-maturity investments | 15.9 | 17.3 | (8.1) |
| on loans and receivables | 176.3 | 132.3 | 33.3 |
| on available-for-sale financial assets | 1,292.3 | 1,213.6 | 6.5 |
| on sundry receivables | 23.1 | 4.0 | n.s. |
| on cash and cash equivalents | 4.7 | 0.9 | n.s. |
| Other income | 345.3 | 233.6 | 47.8 |
| from investment property | 84.2 | 71.2 | 18.2 |
| from available-for-sale financial assets | 261.1 | 162.4 | 60.8 |
| Realised gains | 466.7 | 238.5 | 95.7 |
| on investment property | 2.4 | 73.8 | (96.8) |
| on loans and receivables | 35.4 | 0.5 | n.s. |
| on available-for-sale financial assets | 428.9 | 164.2 | 161.2 |
| Unrealised gains and reversals of impairment losses | 0.7 | 19.9 | (96.5) |
| on available-for-sale financial assets | 0.1 | 19.3 | (99.3) |
| on other financial assets and liabilities | 0.6 | 0.6 | (0.2) |
| Total item 1.5 | 2,325.0 | 1,860.2 | 25.0 |
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | var.% |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sundry technical income | 64.5 | 78.6 | (17.9) |
| Exchange rate differences | 42.5 | 44.9 | (5.4) |
| Extraordinary gains | 15.7 | 33.3 | (52.9) |
| Other income | 1,031.7 | 778.3 | 32.8 |
| Total other revenue | 1,154.4 | 935.1 | 23.5 |
The significant increase of €253.4m (+32.8%) in the sub-item Other income was mainly due to the development of the long-term rental business of UnipolRentalas well as the inclusion in the scope of consolidation of I.Car.

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net charges relating to claims - direct and indirect business | 8,782.8 | 9,992.1 | (12.1) |
| Non-Life business | 5,204.2 | 5,269.6 | (1.2) |
| Non-Life amounts paid | 5,294.7 | 5,086.3 | |
| changes in Non-Life claims provision | 89.6 | 318.4 | |
| changes in Non-Life recoveries | (181.8) | (135.2) | |
| changes in other Non-Life technical provisions | 1.8 | 0.1 | |
| Life business | 3,578.6 | 4,722.5 | (24.2) |
| Life amounts paid | 2,993.5 | 3,177.5 | |
| changes in Life amounts payable | (13.2) | (244.4) | |
| changes in mathematical provisions | 1,015.0 | 1,748.6 | |
| changes in other Life technical provisions | (42.9) | 12.4 | |
| changes in provisions where the investment risk is borne by policyholders and arising from pension fund |
|||
| management Charges relating to claims - reinsurers' share |
(373.9) (182.7) |
28.6 (183.0) |
(0.2) |
| Non-Life business | (173.4) | (174.5) | (0.6) |
| Non-Life amounts paid | (174.0) | (188.4) | |
| changes in Non-Life claims provision | (28.2) | 5.1 | |
| changes in Non-Life recoveries | 28.7 | 8.9 | |
| Life business | (9.3) | (8.5) | 8.8 |
| Life amounts paid | (9.0) | (11.8) | |
| changes in Life amounts payable | (0.4) | 1.9 | |
| changes in mathematical provisions | 0.1 | 1.4 | |
| Total net charges relating to claims | 8,600.1 | 9,809.2 | (12.3) |
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commission expense from investment contracts | 33.5 | 30.2 | 11.0 |
| Other commission expense | 55.1 | 6.2 | n.s. |
| Total commission expense | 88.6 | 36.4 | 143.4 |
This item amounted to €8m (€1.6m in 2021).

| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interests: | 80.0 | 82.2 | (2.6) |
| on loans and receivables | 0.1 | 0.1 | 91.7 |
| on other financial liabilities | 78.8 | 80.7 | (2.4) |
| on payables | 1.1 | 1.4 | (22.0) |
| Other charges: | 31.6 | 27.8 | 13.6 |
| from investment property | 25.2 | 24.8 | 1.8 |
| from available-for-sale financial assets | 4.4 | 1.5 | 183.1 |
| from other financial liabilities | 1.8 | 1.3 | 37.8 |
| from sundry payables | 0.1 | 0.2 | (5.9) |
| Realised losses: | 412.6 | 115.8 | n.s. |
| on investment property | 6.4 | 0.6 | n.s. |
| on loans and receivables | 34.5 | 0.4 | n.s. |
| on available-for-sale financial assets | 371.6 | 114.8 | n.s. |
| Unrealised losses and impairment losses: | 346.7 | 266.8 | 30.0 |
| on investment property | 76.5 | 94.9 | (19.4) |
| on available-for-sale financial assets | 267.8 | 167.1 | 60.3 |
| on other financial liabilities | 2.5 | 4.8 | (47.6) |
| Total item 2.4 | 870.9 | 492.5 | 76.8 |
The Unrealised losses and impairment losses relating to investment property included depreciation that totalled €53.8m (€52.4m at 31/12/2021) and write-downs amounting to €22.7m (€42.5m at 31/12/2021), carried out on the basis of updated valuations performed by independent experts.
Unrealised losses and impairment losses relating to available-for-sale financial assets include impairment losses of €11.7m (€7.1m at 31/12/2021) and negative fair value changes on available-for-sale assets hedged with derivatives for €256.1m (€160m at 31/12/2021).
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance Sector | 2,572.5 | 2,476.5 | 3.9 |
| Other Businesses Sector | 171.7 | 111.0 | 54.6 |
| Real Estate Sector | 38.2 | 34.9 | 9.5 |
| Intersegment eliminations | (13.6) | (11.4) | 19.7 |
| Total operating expenses | 2,768.8 | 2,611.0 | 6.0 |
| Non-Life | Life | Total | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. | Dec-2022 | Dec-2021 | % var. |
| Acquisition commissions | 1,445.8 | 1,364.5 | 6.0 | 76.1 | 72.1 | 5.6 | 1,521.9 | 1,436.5 | 5.9 |
| Other acquisition costs | 341.9 | 362.7 | (5.7) | 42.7 | 42.7 | (0.1) | 384.6 | 405.5 | (5.2) |
| Change in deferred acquisition costs |
(1.0) | 1.2 | (185.1) | (2.5) | (2.7) | (8.9) | (3.5) | (1.5) | 133.0 |
| Collection commissions | 161.9 | 157.1 | 3.0 | 6.0 | 6.2 | (2.7) | 167.9 | 163.3 | 2.8 |
| Profit sharing and other commissions from reinsurers |
(179.9) | (144.8) | 24.3 | (4.2) | (2.3) | 82.2 | (184.1) | (147.1) | 25.2 |
| Investment management expenses |
49.4 | 51.7 | (4.4) | 46.6 | 47.7 | (2.3) | 96.1 | 99.4 | (3.4) |
| Other administrative expenses | 488.0 | 429.6 | 13.6 | 101.7 | 90.8 | 12.0 | 589.7 | 520.4 | 13.3 |
| Total operating expenses | 2,306.0 | 2,222.0 | 3.8 | 266.5 | 254.4 | 4.7 | 2,572.5 | 2,476.5 | 3.9 |
Below are details of Operating expenses in the Insurance sector:
.
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | % var. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Other technical charges | 248.4 | 272.7 | (8.9) |
| Impairment losses on receivables | 14.5 | 17.0 | (14.7) |
| Other charges | 1,084.5 | 785.8 | 38.0 |
| Total other costs | 1,347.4 | 1,075.5 | 25.3 |
The significant increase of €298.7m (+38%) in the sub-item Other charges was mainly due to the development of the long-term rental business of UnipolRental as well as the inclusion of I. Car in the scope of consolidation.
In accordance with the provisions of IAS 12 the following table shows, at consolidated level, the deferred taxes utilised and accrued.
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Ires | Irap | Total | Ires | Irap | Total | |
| Current taxes | 68.6 | 21.3 | 89.9 | 227.0 | 54.2 | 281.2 | |
| Deferred assets and liabilities: | 142.6 | 35.9 | 178.6 | (112.3) | 2.8 | (109.5) | |
| Use of deferred tax assets | 127.1 | 14.2 | 141.3 | 124.0 | 15.5 | 139.5 | |
| Use of deferred tax liabilities | (15.5) | (0.0) | (15.5) | (25.5) | (1.1) | (26.6) | |
| Provisions for deferred tax assets | (127.7) | (22.5) | (150.2) | (276.4) | (30.0) | (306.4) | |
| Provisions for deferred tax liabilities | 158.8 | 44.2 | 203.0 | 65.6 | 18.5 | 84.0 | |
| Total | 211.3 | 57.3 | 268.5 | 114.6 | 57.0 | 171.7 |
Against a pre-tax profit of €920m, taxes pertaining to the year of €268.5m were recorded, corresponding to a tax rate of 29.2% (19.2% at 31/12/2021, thanks to the €94.3m benefit deriving from the realignment of tax values pursuant to Decree Law 104/2020), 23% of which for IRES and 6.2% for IRAP. The total net tax expense benefitted from tax adjustments of previous years for €17.3m (€7.5m at 31/12/2021).
The following statement illustrates the breakdown of deferred tax assets and liabilities recognised, with separate indication of offsetting performed for adjusted financial statements presentation purposes:
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Total | Ires/Corp. tax |
Irap | Total | Ires/Cor p. tax |
Irap |
| DEFERRED TAX ASSETS | ||||||
| Intangible assets and property, plant and equipment | 291.1 | 248.3 | 42.9 | 321.4 | 274.6 | 46.8 |
| Technical provisions – Reinsurers' share | 120.3 | 120.3 | 140.5 | 140.4 | 0.1 | |
| Investment property | 73.2 | 63.3 | 9.8 | 63.2 | 53.4 | 9.8 |
| Financial instruments | 755.1 | 593.1 | 162.0 | 289.5 | 215.9 | 73.6 |
| Sundry receivables and other assets | 80.9 | 72.6 | 8.3 | 100.9 | 93.1 | 7.8 |
| Provisions | 256.6 | 225.9 | 30.6 | 198.7 | 183.3 | 15.4 |
| Technical provisions | 47.2 | 46.7 | 0.5 | 837.4 | 661.0 | 176.5 |
| Payables and other liabilities | 9.2 | 8.5 | 0.7 | 6.8 | 6.1 | 0.7 |
| Other deferred tax assets | 26.4 | 25.7 | 0.7 | 32.4 | 29.0 | 3.4 |
| Netting as required by IAS 12 | (781.7) | (618.5) | (163.2) | (1,882.7) | (1,551.5) | (331.2) |
| Total deferred tax assets | 885.0 | 790.2 | 94.7 | 108.1 | 105.2 | 2.8 |
| DEFERRED TAX LIABILITIES | ||||||
| Intangible assets and property, plant and equipment | 135.4 | 112.9 | 22.5 | 140.4 | 113.3 | 27.0 |
| Technical provisions – Reinsurers' share | ||||||
| Investment property | 8.5 | 5.2 | 3.3 | 17.7 | 15.0 | 2.7 |
| Financial instruments | 118.5 | 95.8 | 22.7 | 1,655.8 | 1,300.4 | 355.4 |
| Provisions | 17.6 | 13.7 | 3.9 | 12.3 | 9.6 | 2.7 |
| Technical provisions | 490.3 | 381.2 | 109.2 | 148.0 | 102.5 | 45.5 |
| Financial liabilities | 3.7 | 1.9 | 1.8 | 5.8 | 4.5 | 1.3 |
| Payables and other liabilities | 1.9 | 1.9 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 | 0.1 |
| Other deferred tax liabilities | 5.9 | 5.4 | 0.5 | 8.3 | 7.8 | 0.5 |
| Netting as required by IAS 12 | (781.7) | (618.5) | (163.2) | (1,882.7) | (1,551.5) | (331.2) |
| Total deferred tax liabilities | 0.8 | 0.0 | 0.8 | 107.6 | 3.6 | 104.0 |
Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognised in the financial statements net of the offsetting carried out pursuant to IAS 12.
Net tax assets are deemed to be recoverable on the basis of the provisional plans of Group companies.

Outstanding fair value hedges concern fixed rate bonds held by UnipolSai, for which the interest rate risk was hedged through Interest Rate Swaps.
Existing positions at 31 December 2022 related to IRS contracts for a nominal value of €1,143.2m, to hedge fixed rate bond assets recorded in Available-for-sale assets, with a hedged synthetic notional value equal to €1,123.3m. At 31 December 2022, the fair value change relating to the hedged bonds came to a negative €136.0m, while the fair value change in IRSs amounted to a positive €150.9m, with a positive net economic effect of €14.9m, including the tax effect of €4.6m.
In relation to the hedges entered into through Interest Rate Swaps, note that in the third quarter of 2022, some contracts in place at 31 December 2021 for a nominal value of €425m to hedge bond assets were terminated early, for a synthetic notional value of €415m, classified under Available-for-sale financial assets.
The fair value change in IRSs between 31 December 2021 and the closing date of the hedging instruments, was a positive €125.4m, offset by a negative change of €120m, booked through profit and loss based on the fair value change of the synthetic asset hedged during the same period.
The objective of the existing hedges is to transform the interest rate on financial assets from a floating rate to a fixed rate, stabilising the cash flows.
The positions outstanding at 31 December 2022 relate to hedges on bonds recognised in the AFS portfolio through IRSs for a notional value of €338.5m (€883.5m at 31/12/2021) and hedges on bonds recognised in the Loans and receivables portfolio through IRSs for a notional value of €250m (not present at 31/12/2021).
The cumulative negative effect on Shareholders' equity in the Hedging reserve for gains or losses on cash flow hedges was a negative €13.5m (negative effect for €37.7m at 31/12/2021): net of tax, the negative impact was €9.4m (negative effect for €26.1m at 31/12/2021).
For cash flow hedges on bond securities recorded in the Available-for-sale asset portfolio, in the second quarter of 2022 several hedging derivatives were closed in advance of their maturity, for a notional value of €545m, with a realised capital loss of €213.5m, offset by the capital gain of €242.5m realised through the sale of the hedged bond securities. .

In order to allow an evaluation of the actual or potential effects of netting agreements on the UnipolSai Group, the information relating to the financial instruments involved in master netting arrangements is reported below, which at 31 December 2021 consisted exclusively of derivative instruments.
With reference to derivatives, the ISDA Master agreements which regulate transactions in such instruments, make provision, in the cases of the insolvency of one of the contractual parties, for the offsetting between receivables and payables including any cash deposits or financial instruments pledged as guarantee.
| (Amounts in €m) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net total financial assets |
Related amounts not subject to offsetting in the financial statements |
|||||
| Type | Gross amount (A) |
Total financial liabilities offset in the financial statements (B) |
recognised in the financial statements (C)= (A) - (B) |
Financial instruments (D) |
Cash deposits received as guarantees (E) |
Net total (F)=(C )-(D)-(E) |
| Derivative transactions (1) | 336.0 | 336.0 | 147.2 | 174.6 | 14.2 | |
| Repurchase agreements (2) | ||||||
| Securities lending | ||||||
| Other | ||||||
| Total | 336.0 | 336.0 | 147.2 | 174.6 | 14.2 |
(1) The amounts indicated include the fair value in the financial statements of the derivatives involved in the netting agreements and any cash deposits given or received as guarantee.
(2) The amounts indicated include the financial assets/liabilities relating to the repurchase agreement and the amount of the financial transaction object of the forward purchase
(Amounts in €m)
| Net total | Related amounts not subject to offsetting in the financial statements |
|||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total financial assets offset in |
financial liabilities recognised in the financial |
Financial | ||||
| Type | Gross amount (A) |
the financial statements (B) |
statements (C)= (A) - (B) |
instruments (D) |
Cash deposits given as guarantees (E) |
Net total (F)=(C )-(D)-(E) |
| Derivative transactions (1) | 323.8 | 323.8 | 223.9 | 97.9 | 1.9 | |
| Repurchase agreements (2) | ||||||
| Securities lending | ||||||
| Other | ||||||
| Total | 323.8 | 323.8 | 223.9 | 97.9 | 1.9 |
(1) The amounts indicated include the fair value in the financial statements of the derivatives involved in the netting agreements and any cash deposits given or received as guarantee.
(2) The amounts indicated include the financial assets/liabilities relating to the repurchase agreement and the amount of the financial transaction object of the forward purchase
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
|---|---|---|
| Profit/loss allocated to ordinary shares (€m) | 572.0 | 663.9 |
| Weighted average of shares outstanding during the year (no./m) | 2,827.4 | 2,828.3 |
| Basic and diluted earnings (loss) per share (€ per share) | 0.20 | 0.23 |
In view of the profit for the year at 31 December 2021 (as shown in the financial statements drawn up in accordance with Italian GAAP), the Shareholders' Meeting of UnipolSai SpA, held on 27 April 2022, resolved on the distribution of dividends corresponding to €0.19 per share. The total amount set aside for dividends, including treasury shares held by UnipolSai, amounted to around €537m.
The Shareholders' Meeting also set the dividend payment date for 25 May 2022.
At 31 December 2022, reclassifications carried out in application of IFRS 5 to item 6.1 of Assets amounted to €532.6m, of which €432.8m relating to assets held by the subsidiary Incontra Assicurazioni and €99.7m relating to properties held for sale (€132.6m at 31/12/2021, of which €0.5m referred to assets held by the subsidiary Consorzio Castello and €132.1m to properties held for sale). The liabilities reclassified to item 6.1 Liabilities associated with disposal groups amounted to €388m relating to the subsidiary Incontra Assicurazioni (€3.1m at 31/12/2021 relating to the subsidiary Consorzio Castello).

| Amounts in €m | Incontra Assicurazioni |
Real Estate | Total reclassifications IFRS 5 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2022 | ||
| 1 | INTANGIBLE ASSETS | 4.2 | 4.2 | |
| 1.2 | Other intangible assets | 4.2 | 4.2 | |
| 3 | TECHNICAL PROVISIONS - REINSURERS' SHARE | 98.2 | 98.2 | |
| 4 | INVESTMENTS | 306.4 | 99.7 | 406.1 |
| 4.1 | Investment property | 99.7 | 99.7 | |
| 4.4 | Loans and receivables | 11.0 | 11.0 | |
| 4.5 | Available-for-sale financial assets | 295.4 | 295.4 | |
| 5 | SUNDRY RECEIVABLES | 15.6 | 15.6 | |
| 5.1 | Receivables relating to direct insurance business |
5.0 | 5.0 | |
| 5.2 | Receivables relating to reinsurance business | 4.1 | 4.1 | |
| 5.3 | Other receivables | 6.5 | 6.5 | |
| 6 | OTHER ASSETS | 4.0 | 4.0 | |
| 6.2 | Deferred acquisition costs | 1.2 | 1.2 | |
| 6.3 | Deferred tax assets | 2.7 | 2.7 | |
| 6.5 | Other assets | 0.0 | 0.0 | |
| 7 | CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS | 4.4 | 4.4 | |
| FOR SALE | TOTAL NON-CURRENT ASSETS OR ASSETS OF A DISPOSAL GROUP HELD | 432.8 | 99.7 | 532.6 |
| Amounts in €m | Incontra Assicurazioni |
Real Estate | Total reclassifications IFRS 5 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2022 | ||
| 3 | TECHNICAL PROVISIONS | 352.1 | 352.1 | |
| 4 | FINANCIAL LIABILITIES | 4.9 | 4.9 | |
| 4.2 | Other financial liabilities | 4.9 | 4.9 | |
| 5 | PAYABLES | 23.8 | 23.8 | |
| 5.1 | Payables arising from direct insurance operations | 11.5 | 11.5 | |
| 5.2 | Payables arising from reinsurance operations | 10.1 | 10.1 | |
| 5.3 | Other payables | 2.2 | 2.2 | |
| 6 | OTHER LIABILITIES | 7.2 | 7.2 | |
| 6.3 | Current tax liabilities | 5.7 | 5.7 | |
| 6.4 | Other liabilities | 1.5 | 1.5 | |
| LIABILITIES ASSOCIATED WITH DISPOSAL GROUPS HELD FOR SALE | 388.0 | 388.0 |
.
UnipolSai Assicurazioni provides the following services to the other companies of the Group:
.
UniSalute provides the following services:
The services provided by UniSalute to its subsidiary UniSalute Servizi mainly concerned the following areas:
IT services;
Digital marketing and Communications;
SIAT performs the following services in favour of UnipolSai:
UnipolService provides car repair services for certain Group companies, while UnipolGlass provides glass repair services.

UnipolSai Servizi Previdenziali performs administrative management of open pension funds on behalf of a number of Group companies.
UnipolRe carries out administrative and accounting services for inwards and outwards reinsurance with reference to treaties in run-off on behalf of UnipolSai.
UnipolSai Investimenti SGR administers on behalf of UnipolSai the units of real estate funds set up by third-party asset managers, owned by UnipolSai.
In 2022, UnipolReC, in its capacity as an agent, conducted credit collection, out-of-court recovery of receivables due from Customers, such as, by way of example, the analysis of the receivables assigned, the sending of dunning letters by post and/or credit collection by phone, monitoring the responses received, checking payments and reconciling the same, searching for individuals that are difficult to trace and any other activity required or related to said services on behalf of Gruppo UNA and Tenute del Cerro.
UnipolTech guarantees competitiveness to the Group insurance companies through continuous technological innovation and the evolution of ITC services:
The company has developed products offered through the UnipolSai agency network, such as:
Support was also provided to UnipolSai in the development of mobile payment solutions to offer customers an integrated model of distinctive services, complementary to the insurance business. The first services available on the UnipolSai App therefore include the opportunity to pay car parking fees, fines and road tax.
Leithà designs, develops and provides to Group companies services, applications, data-intensive components and innovative, high-tech tools based primarily on Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Process Automation and Computer Vision solutions. It also studies and analyses data in support of the development of new insurance solutions (both in actuarial and product application distribution terms), processes and business development. This includes the necessary preparatory and instrumental activities for the implementation of commissioned research projects and the development of operating system software, operating systems, applications and database management concerning and functional to such projects.
The main project areas covered include:
• scientific communication activities through collaboration with important European projects and research centres (e.g., ADA - ADaptation in Agriculture and development of the E3CI - European Extreme Events Climate Index, NRRP National Recovery and Resilience Plan).
UnipolAssistance provides the following services for the Companies of the Consortium (and to a minimal extent also to third parties):
• organisation, provision and 24/7 management of services provided by the Class 18 assistance insurance coverage, by taking the action requested and managing relations with professionals and independent suppliers to which the material execution of the action is assigned, also including settlement of the related remuneration. Analogous activities are also provided to Consortium members not in the insurance business.
As part of the Tourism claims management solely for consortium members carrying out insurance activities, in addition to the provision of normal Assistance services, at the request of an individual consortium member UnipolAssistance can advance medical expense payments on behalf of that member;
Arca Vita provides the following services to its subsidiaries:
An agreement with Arca Vita International is also in place regarding the licence for use of the "Arca Vita International" trademark owned by Arca Vita.
Arca Inlinea provides sales support services to Arca Assicurazioni, Arca Vita and Arca Vita International and, since 2022, call centre services in favour of UniSalute.
Arca Sistemi provides the following services primarily in favour of the Companies participating in the consortium:
Arca Direct Assicurazioni has insurance brokerage agreements in place with Arca Vita, Arca Assicurazioni and UnipolSai.
UnipolRentalprovides medium/long-term vehicle rental services to Group companies.
Cambiomarcia provides services and a digital platform dedicated to the sale of ex-rental vehicles of UnipolRental on the B2C channel (Business to Consumer) and provides electric bicycles to several Group companies.
UnipolHome provides repair services in the home (houses and condominiums) for UnipolSai.
Moreover, it is noted that the Group companies conduct the following regular transactions with each other:
There is also a partnership agreement between UnipolSai and UnipolTech with the aim of strengthening their reciprocal positions in the reference markets: in this sense, the agreement calls for advertising on the UnipolSai website and App, and in particular through the agency network as well, the services offered by UnipolTech.

No atypical or unusual transactions were carried out in the execution of these services.
Fees are mainly calculated on the basis of the external costs incurred, for example the costs of products and services acquired from suppliers, and the costs resulting from activities carried out directly, i.e. generated by their own staff, and taking account of:
The following elements are specifically taken into consideration:
• personnel costs;
As regards services rendered by Leithà, the consideration was determined to the extent equal to costs, as previously defined, to which a mark-up was applied, which is the operating margin for the service rendered.
The costs for financing activities are calculated by applying a fee on managed volumes. The services provided by UniSalute (except for operating services provided to Unisalute Servizi for which the costs are split), UnipolService, UnipolSai Investimenti SGR and UnipolRe involve fixed prices.
Unipol Gruppo, UnipolSai and its subsidiaries Arca Vita and Arca Assicurazioni, second their staff to other Group companies to optimise the synergies within the Group.
The Parent Unipol exercised the Group tax consolidation option governed by Title II, Chapter II, Section II of Italian Presidential Decree 917/86 (the Consolidated Income Tax Act, Articles 117 et seq.) as consolidating entity, jointly with the companies belonging to the Unipol Group meeting the established regulatory requirements over time. The option has a three-year duration and is renewed automatically unless cancelled.
Unipol Gruppo and the subsidiaries for which there are economic, financial and organisational restrictions established by regulations in force exercised the joint option of establishment of the Unipol VAT Group pursuant to Arts. 70-bis et seq. of Italian Presidential Decree no. 633/1972 and Ministerial Decree of 6 April 2018. Initially valid for the three-year period 2019-2021, the option renews each year until cancelled.

The following table shows transactions with related parties (holding company, associates and others) carried out during 2022, as laid down in IAS 24 and in Consob Communication DEM/6064293/2006. It should be noted that the application scope of the Procedure for related party transactions, adopted pursuant to Consob Regulation no. 17221 of 12 March 2010, as amended, also includes some counterparties that are included, on a voluntary basis, pursuant to Art. 4 thereof.
Transactions with subsidiaries have not been recognised since in drawing up the Consolidated Financial Statements transactions among Group companies consolidated using the line-by-line method have been eliminated as part of the normal consolidation process.
| Amounts in €m | Holding company |
Associates and others |
Total | % inc. (1) % inc. (2) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loans and receivables | 210.1 | 38.6 | 248.6 | 0.4 | 11.2 |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 37.3 | 37.3 | 0.1 | 1.7 | |
| Sundry receivables | 164.5 | 109.5 | 274.1 | 0.4 | 12.4 |
| Other assets | 0.1 | 9.5 | 9.5 | 0.0 | 0.4 |
| Cash and cash equivalents | 680.0 | 680.0 | 1.0 | 30.7 | |
| Total assets | 374.7 | 874.8 | 1,249.5 | 1.8 | 56.3 |
| Other financial liabilities | 13.2 | 9.0 | 22.3 | 0.0 | 1.0 |
| Sundry payables | 33.8 | 79.5 | 113.2 | 0.2 | 5.1 |
| Other liabilities | 13.9 | 3.6 | 17.5 | 0.0 | 0.8 |
| Total liabilities | 60.9 | 92.1 | 153.0 | 0.2 | 6.9 |
| Commission income | 3.6 | 3.6 | 0.0 | 0.2 | |
| Gains on other financial instruments and investment property | 2.5 | 12.7 | 15.2 | 0.0 | 0.7 |
| Other revenue | 4.6 | 6.7 | 11.3 | 0.0 | 0.5 |
| Total revenues and income | 7.1 | 22.9 | 30.0 | 3.4 | 1.4 |
| Net charges relating to claims | 2.2 | 2.2 | 0.2 | 0.1 | |
| Commission expense | 19.4 | 19.4 | 2.2 | 0.9 | |
| Losses on other financial instruments and investment property | 3.0 | 0.1 | 3.1 | 0.4 | 0.1 |
| Operating expenses | 21.0 | 289.8 | 310.8 | 34.7 | 14.0 |
| Other costs | 0.3 | 57.8 | 58.1 | 6.5 | 2.6 |
| Total costs and expenses | 24.3 | 369.3 | 393.6 | 44.0 | 17.7 |
The item Loans and receivables due from the holding company relates to the receivable due to some subsidiaries from the holding company Unipol as part of the centralised treasury contract (cash pooling), for the purpose of centralising at Unipol the management of the available funds of the non-insurance companies of the Unipol Group.
Note that on 1 March 2022, UnipolSai Assicurazioni received from Unipol Gruppo, in compliance with the relative contractual provisions, the full early repayment of the unsecured loan of €300m, linked to the 3-month Euribor plus a spread of 260 basis points, disbursed on 1 March 2019 as part of the assignment to Unipol of the shares held in the former Unipol Banca SpA and in UnipolReC SpA.
Loans and receivables with associates and others included €20.5m of time deposits above 15 days held by the companies of the Group with BPER Banca, €8.9m relating to receivables from insurance brokerage agencies for agents' reimbursements and €6m of interest-free loans disbursed by UnipolSai to the associate Borsetto.
Financial assets available for sale to associates and others relate to the subscription of listed debt securities issued by BPER Banca and subscribed by Group companies.
Sundry receivables from the holding company comprised amounts related to the tax consolidation and for services rendered.
The item Sundry receivables from associates and others included €48.8m in receivables due from insurance brokerage agencies for commissions and €48m in receivables due from Finitalia for premiums it had advanced for the service concerning the split payment of policies.

Other assets included current accounts, temporarily unavailable, that UnipolSai has opened with BPER Banca. Cash and cash equivalents included the balances of current accounts opened by Group companies with BPER Banca. The item Other financial liabilities to the holding company refers to the payable of the subsidiary Cambiomarcia to Unipol Gruppo as part of the above-mentioned centralised treasury agreement (cash pooling); on 11 November 2022, the subsidiary UnipolRental, in compliance with the relative contractual provisions, repaid in advance and in full the €150m loan disbursed by Unipol Gruppo on 8 November 2019. With regard to transactions with associates and others, this item refers to loans disbursed by BPER Banca to Group companies.
Sundry payables comprised: as for relations with the holding company, the payable for IRES of the companies participating in the tax consolidation and the payable for Unipol staff seconded to Group companies; as regards relations with associates and others, payables for commissions to be paid to BPER Banca for the placement of insurance products in addition to payables for other services rendered.
Other liabilities to the holding company essentially refer to the liabilities of the Incentive Plans for Unipol Executives seconded to UnipolSai; Other liabilities to associates refer to invoices to be received.
Commission income referred to commissions recognised by BPER Banca for the placement of banking products. Gains on other financial instruments and investment property included:
Other revenue primarily included income for the active secondment of personnel.
Commission expense referred to bank relations between the Group companies and BPER Banca.
Operating expenses included, as regards associates and others, costs for commissions paid to insurance brokerage agencies (€101.3m), commissions paid to BPER Banca for the placement of insurance policies issued by Group companies (€75.9m), costs to Finitalia for instalments of policies issued by the Group companies (€67.6m) and bank account management costs to BPER Banca (€32.4m).
The item Other costs primarily relates to retainer management fees paid to BPER Banca and to staff secondment.
Please also note that the contributions payable by the UnipolSai Group companies paid in the course of 2022 to Unipol Group employee and executive pension funds amounted to €20.7m.
Remuneration for 2022 due to the UnipolSai Directors, Statutory Auditors, General Manager and Key Managers for carrying out their duties within the Company and in other consolidated companies amounted to €16.6m, details of which are as follows (in €m):
| - | Directors and General Manager | 4.3 |
|---|---|---|
| - | Statutory Auditors | 0.3 |
| - | Other Key Managers | 12.0 (∗) |
The remuneration of the General Manager and the Key Managers relating to benefits granted under the share-based compensation plans (performance shares), is duly represented in the Remuneration Report, prepared according to Art. 123ter of the Consolidated Law on Finance and made available, pursuant to current regulations, on the Company website.
The provision for loyalty bonuses, to be paid to Managers on achieving the targets stated in the Group Remuneration Policies, recognised in the Liabilities item Provisions, amounted to €34m at 31 December 2022, including the relative social security contributions.
During 2022, the Group companies paid Unipol Gruppo and UnipolSai the sum of €773k as remuneration for the posts held in them by the General Manager and by the Key Managers.
IFRS 13:
c) enriches financial statement information.
The standard defines fair value as the sale price of an asset based on an ordinary transaction or the transfer price of a liability in an ordinary transaction on the main reference market at terms applicable at the measurement date (exit price).
Fair value measurement assumes that the transaction relating to the sale of assets or transfer of liabilities can take place:
When a market price is not observable, the measurement methods which maximise the use of observable parameters and minimise the use of non-observable parameters must mainly be used.
IFRS 13 also defines a fair value hierarchy based on the level of observability of the inputs contained in measurement techniques used to measure fair value.
Chapter 2, Main accounting standards, outlines the fair value measurement policies and criteria adopted by the UnipolSai Group.

The table below shows a comparison between the assets and liabilities measured at fair value at 31 December 2022 and 31 December 2021, broken down based on fair value hierarchy level.
| Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
| Assets and liabilities at fair value on a recurring basis |
|||||||||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 37,444.9 | 47,316.8 | 377.8 | 403.6 | 3,460.3 | 2,714.7 | 41,283.0 | 50,435.0 | |
| Financial assets at fair value |
Held for trading financial assets | 61.6 | 95.8 | 215.4 | 130.2 | 58.9 | 3.8 | 335.9 | 229.8 |
| through profit or loss |
Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss |
8,692.5 | 8,292.7 | 93.0 | 51.8 | 8,785.5 | 8,344.5 | ||
| Investment property | |||||||||
| Property, plant and equipment | |||||||||
| Intangible assets | |||||||||
| Total assets at fair value on a recurring basis |
46,199.0 | 55,705.3 | 593.2 | 533.8 | 3,612.2 | 2,770.2 | 50,404.5 | 59,009.3 | |
| Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
Held for trading financial liabilities |
7.1 | 13.0 | 142.3 | 401.6 | 5.1 | 30.9 | 154.5 | 445.4 |
| Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
6,684.6 | 5,911.0 | 6,684.6 | 5,911.0 | |||||
| Total liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis |
7.1 | 13.0 | 142.3 | 401.6 | 6,689.7 | 5,941.9 | 6,839.1 | 6,356.4 | |
| Assets and liabilities at fair value on a non recurring basis |
|||||||||
| Non-current assets or assets of disposal groups held for sale |
|||||||||
| Liabilities associated with disposal groups |
The amount of financial assets classified in Level 3 at 31 December 2022 stood at €3,612.2m.
Details of changes in Level 3 financial assets and liabilities in the same period are shown below.
| Available for-sale financial assets |
Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss |
Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Held for trading financial assets |
Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss |
Investment property |
Property, plant and equipment |
Intangible assets |
Held for trading financial liabilities |
Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
|
| Opening balance | 2,714.7 | 3.8 | 51.8 | 30.9 | 5,911.0 | |||
| Acquisitions/Issues | 766.8 | 0.0 | 55.7 | |||||
| Sales/Repurchases | (1.9) | (0.0) | (12.9) | |||||
| Repayments | (182.8) | (0.2) | (0.2) | (3.9) | ||||
| Gains or losses recognised through profit or loss |
0.3 | 2.1 | 1.7 | |||||
| - of which unrealised gains/losses | 0.3 | 2.1 | 1.7 | |||||
| Gains or losses recognised in the statement of other comprehensive income |
163.6 | |||||||
| Transfers to level 3 | ||||||||
| Transfers to other levels | ||||||||
| Other changes | (0.0) | 54.9 | (3.5) | (23.6) | 773.6 | |||
| Closing balance | 3,460.3 | 58.9 | 93.0 | 5.1 | 6,684.6 |
Please note that the transfers from Level 1 to Level 2, which occurred during the reference period, were irrelevant.
The table below shows, for Level 3 financial assets and liabilities measured at fair value, the effects of the change in the non-observable parameters used in the fair value measurement.
As regards "assets at fair value on a recurring basis" and belonging to Level 3, the stress test of non-observable parameters is performed with reference to financial instruments valued on a Mark to Model basis and on which the measurement is carried out through one or more non-observable parameters.
The portion of securities subject to analysis has a market value of €18.3m at 31 December 2022.
The non-observable parameters subject to a shock are benchmark spread curves constructed to assess bonds of issuers for which the prices of the bonds issued or Credit Default Swap curves are unavailable.

The following table shows the results of the shocks:
| Amounts in €m | Curve Spread | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fair value | ||||||
| Shock | +10 bps | -10 bps | +50 bps | -50 bps | ||
| Fair Value delta | (0.10) | 0.10 | (0.49) | 0.50 | ||
| Fair Value delta % | (0.55) | 0.56 | (2.67) | 2.74 |
IFRS 13 governs the fair value measurement and the associated disclosure also for assets and liabilities not measured at fair value on a recurring basis.
For these assets and liabilities, fair value is calculated only for the purpose of market disclosure requirements. Furthermore, since these assets and liabilities are not typically traded, their fair value is largely based on the use of internal parameters that cannot be directly observed in the market, with the sole exception of listed securities classified as Held-to-maturity investments.
| Carrying amount | Fair value | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| Assets | ||||||||||
| Held-to-maturity investments | 365.7 | 366.7 | 344.2 | 343.8 | 21.6 | 22.9 | 365.7 | 366.7 | ||
| Loans and receivables | 4,894.1 | 5,245.1 | 2,897.3 | 3,336.8 | 1,463.9 | 1,908.4 | 4,361.2 | 5,245.1 | ||
| Investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures |
162.3 | 176.5 | 162.3 | 176.5 | 162.3 | 176.5 | ||||
| Investment property | 2,359.1 | 2,155.8 | 2,748.6 | 2,475.5 | 2,748.6 | 2,475.5 | ||||
| Property, plant and equipment | 2,784.0 | 2,431.0 | 3,004.2 | 2,580.1 | 3,004.2 | 2,580.1 | ||||
| Total assets | 10,565.3 | 10,375.2 | 344.2 | 343.8 | 2,918.9 | 3,359.7 | 7,378.9 | 7,140.4 | 10,642.0 | 10,843.9 |
| Liabilities | ||||||||||
| Other financial liabilities | 2,302.9 | 2,054.8 | 1,779.3 | 2,087.8 | 161.2 | 163.4 | 1,940.4 | 2,251.2 |
The UnipolSai Group pays variable benefits (long-term incentives) to senior executives under closed share-based compensation plans by which Unipol and UnipolSai shares (performance shares) are granted if specific targets of of profitability, solvency, creation of value for shareholders and ESG sustainability are achieved.
The 2019-2021 Compensation plan based on financial instruments (performance share type), if the prerequisites are met, envisaged for short-term incentives the assignment of UnipolSai and Unipol shares in the year following the year of accrual. With regard to long-term incentives, if the prerequisites are met, it envisaged the assignment of UnipolSai and Unipol shares in at least three annual tranches starting from 2023. The 2022-2024 Compensation plan based on

financial instruments (performance share type), if the prerequisites are met, envisages the assignment of the same shares in at least three annual tranches with effect from 2026.
In addition, on 27 April 2022, 986,672 UnipolSai shares and 551,180 Unipol shares were delivered to eligible executives as short-term incentives for the 2021 financial year.
The Information Documents, prepared pursuant to Art. 114-bis of the Consolidated Law on Finance and Art. 84-bis of Consob Issuer's Regulation no. 11971/1999, are available on the relevant websites, in the Governance/Shareholders meetings section. ..
As part of the 2022-2024 Strategic Plan implementation activities, in October 2022 UnipolSai and the other Italian subsidiary insurance companies signed trade union agreements on voluntary early retirement arrangements for the employees of those companies that meet pension requirements by 2027, divided into three types:
In this regard, it should be noted that the mutually agreed terminations of the employment relationships of the above-mentioned employees will take place with access to the extraordinary benefits of the Solidarity Fund as of:
The trade union agreements in question call for a total of up to 800 early retirements, reserving the right to consider accepting a greater number up to a maximum of 10% more than the numerical limit specified above.
The start of the new year saw the continuation of remote training initiatives. The new MyUnica home page was released, for a better user experience, with the expansion of the offer of online courses with self-enrolment for the development of personal skills, stimulating constructive dialogue between Managers and employees. The maintenance of the ISO 9001:2015 certification of Unica's Quality Management System was confirmed.
Employee training activities focused on implementing courses with mandatory and regulatory, technical, commercial, managerial and behavioural content. Part of the projects were also enacted with the support of funds from the Banks and Insurance Companies Fund. Training also focused on internal reorganisations, modifications to certain business applications and the optimisation of regulatory expertise linked to the management of specific topics.
The training intended for the Sales Network referred to building courses useful in increasing skills, in compliance with training obligations envisaged in the IVASS Regulation. The range of courses runs from the usual updating on regulations and new or revised products, to training on processes.

With reference to the regulation on the transparency of public funds introduced by Art. 1, paragraphs 125 and 125-bis of Italian Law 124/2017 and subsequent amendments and supplements, note that the Group collected the following contributions and subsidies subject to the mandatory disclosure in the notes to the financial statements pursuant to the above-cited regulation:
| Recipient | Name of disbursing party | Amount collected (€) |
Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | ARTEA | 145,599.69 | Contributions to the Tuscany Region vineyard restructuring |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | AGEA | 2,379.92 | Contributions to the Umbria Region vineyard restructuring |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | ARTEA | 78,618.55 | Contributions to Tuscany Region Rural Development Plan |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | AGEA | 15,506.44 | Contributions to Tuscany Region Rural Development Plan |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | AGEA | 39,744.03 | Contributions to Umbria Region Rural Development Plan |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | INVITALIA | 3,605,804.80 | Contributions to Agro-industrial Development Contracts |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | ARTEA | 332,292.46 | Contributions to Community Agricultural Policy 2021/2022 |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | AGEA | 1,475.53 | Individual Insurance Plan Contribution 2021/2022 |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | AGEA | 26,093.43 | Contributions to storage of quality wines |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | AGEA | 94,108.62 | Contribution to promotional expenses incurred in foreign countries - Tuscany Region |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | ARTEA | 12,338.22 | Contributions to allowances for the Tuscany Region mountain areas |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA | AGEA | 34,498.08 | Contributions to allowances for the Umbria Region mountain areas |
For the sake of comprehensiveness, although such grants are excluded from the transparency obligations established in the regulations cited, any Aid measures and the relative individual Aid granted and recorded in the system by the Granting Authorities directly or indirectly benefitting each of the Group companies are published in the National Register of State Aid, open to the public for consultation on the relative website in the transparency section.
There are no significant non-recurring events or transactions to be reported during the year aside from those reported among the main events of the period.
In 2022 there were no atypical and/or unusual transactions that, because of their significance, importance, nature of the counterparties involved in the transaction, transfer pricing procedures, or occurrence close to the end of the year, could give rise to doubts relating to: the accuracy and completeness of the information in these Consolidated Financial Statements, a conflict of interest, the safeguarding of the company's assets or the protection of noncontrolling shareholders.
As explained in the paragraph Application of IFRS 9 by the UnipolSai Group in these Consolidated Financial Statements, except for some entities consolidated at equity and for which the application of IFRS 9 is mandatory on an individual basis (UnipolSai Sgr and UnipolReC SpA), all entities consolidated on a line-by-line basis or at equity continued to apply IAS 39 in drawing up their Consolidated Financial Statements.
Below are tables containing the information necessary for comparison with the insurance companies that do apply IFRS 9.
| Amounts in €m | Consolidated Statement value at 31/12/2022 |
Fair value at 31/12/2022 | Change in Fair value for the period |
|---|---|---|---|
| Financial investments passing the SPPI test, other than financial assets at fair value through profit or loss (a) |
37,679.8 | 37,195.1 | (9,460.3) |
| Other financial investments (b) | 18,290.8 | 18,241.3 | (333.3) |
| Total (a) + (b) | 55,970.7 | 55,436.4 | (9,793.6) |
F
| Amounts in €m | ||
|---|---|---|
| Counterpart | Consolidated Statement value at 31/12/2022 | |
| Italian Treasury | 17,389.8 | |
| Spanish Treasury | 3,042.2 | |
| French Treasury | 1,515.2 | |
| Intesa SanPaolo SpA | 729.3 | |
| European Union | 553.3 | |
| Deutsche Bank AG | 457.7 | |
| Germanian Treasury | 425.0 | |
| Portuguese Treasury | 375.8 | |
| Barclays PLC | 375.4 | |
| BNP Paribas SA | 326.0 | |
| Other counterparts | 12,490.1 | |
| Financial investments passing the SPPI test, other than financial assets at fair value through profit or loss |
37,679.8 |

| Amounts in €m | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Rating class | Consolidated Statement value at 31/12/2022 |
IAS 39 carrying amount at 31/12/2022 before any impairment adjustment |
Fair value at 31/12/2022 |
| AAA | 932.2 | 1,172.3 | 932.2 |
| AA | 2,701.9 | 3,573.3 | 2,643.6 |
| A | 7,165.3 | 8,076.5 | 6,952.1 |
| BBB | 24,203.6 | 26,071.3 | 24,028.9 |
| Total financial investments with low credit risk (1) | 35,003.0 | 38,893.4 | 34,556.8 |
| BB | 1,910.0 | 2,038.8 | 1,907.5 |
| B | 350.3 | 378.3 | 350.3 |
| Lower rating | 85.4 | 97.7 | 85.4 |
| With no rating | 331.2 | 354.8 | 295.2 |
| Total financial investments other than those with low credit risk (2) |
2,676.9 | 2,869.6 | 2,638.3 |
| Financial investments passing the SPPI test, other than financial assets at fair value through profit or loss (1) + (2) |
37,679.8 | 41,763.0 | 37,195.1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------- | ---------- | ---------- |

In accordance with IAS 36.10, the impairment test was carried out on the goodwill recognised in the Consolidated Financial Statements of UnipolSai Assicurazioni.
In determining the parameters used for the assessments, the criteria adopted were aligned with market practice, taking as a reference, for these and for the economic/financial projections, expected developments in the reference economic scenario and the influence of the effect of climate change, albeit with the uncertainty characterising developments and considering that the effects will likely be appreciable, especially in the long term. In particular, the following should be noted: (i) the significant increase in the discount rate compared to the previous year, following the trends recorded in 2022 in the various components that lead to its determination and (ii) maintenance of the same grate as last year, taking into account updated macroeconomic scenario estimates, as well as the estimated impact of climate factors, as specified below.
With respect to this scenario, appropriate Sensitivity Analyses were also developed to test the stability of the recoverable amount of goodwill if there was a variation in the main parameters used in the tests.
During the year, various acquisitions were completed, resulting in the recognition of goodwill: please refer to the "Information about business combinations" section for a description of the individual acquisitions.
The structure did not change compared to the previous year. Consequently, the CGUs to which the residual goodwill was allocated, impairment tested at 31 December 2022, were:
In relation to the measurement methods and benchmarks adopted to estimate the recoverable amount of goodwill, note that, as specified below, the same measurement criteria were adopted as for the previous year for the Non-Life and Life segments, with benchmark updating arranged at the end of 2022.
The impairment testing of the Non-Life CGUs was performed as follows: with regard to UnipolSai Assicurazioni - Non-Life the recoverable amount of goodwill was determined by using an excess capital version of the Dividend Discount Model (DDM); to determine the above-mentioned value, the actual economic-financial situation at 31 December 2022 and, for the years 2023-2027 economic-financial projections, functional to the definition of the profit forecasts for these years, were considered, as developed by the company and approved by its Board of Directors.
The impairment testing of the Life CGU was performed as follows: in relation to UnipolSai Assicurazioni - Life, the recoverable amount of goodwill was calculated using the "Appraisal Value" method, by considering (i) the Embedded Value and (ii) the value of the portfolio of new products based on the discounting of related future cash flows (Value of New Business).
The results obtained from application of the impairment procedure show that there is no need to make any value adjustments to the goodwill of the Non-Life CGU and the Life CGU recorded in the consolidated financial statements at 31 December 2022.

| Non-Life CGU | |
|---|---|
| Valuation method used |
The method used, similar to that carried out last year, was an "excess capital" type of DDM (Dividend Discount Model) and focused on the future cash flows theoretically available for shareholders, without drawing on the assets needed to support the expected growth and in accordance with the capital requirements imposed by the Supervisory Authority on capital requirements. According to this method the value of the economic capital is the sum of the current value of potential future cash flows and the current terminal value. |
| Net profits used | The above net profits were considered. |
| Projection period | Five prospective flows were considered. |
| Rate of discounting |
A discounting rate of 8.43% was used, broken down as follows: - risk-free rate: 4.15% - beta coefficient: 0.81 - risk premium: 5.28% The average figure for the 10-year Long-Term Treasury Bond of December 2022 was used for the risk-free rate. As in the previous year, a 2-year adjusted Beta coefficient for a sample of companies listed on the European market and deemed to be comparable was used. The risk Premium was defined taking into account that the estimates of this parameter made by primary contributors. |
| Long term growth rate (g factor) |
As in the previous year, the g-rate was 1.2%, taking into account the updated macroeconomic scenario predictive indicators which show an average CAGR for the period 2023-2027 relating to changes in GDP equal to 0.7% (net of the estimated impact of climatic factors) and an expected inflation rate of 1.7% by 2027. |
| Life CGU | |
| Goodwill recoverable amount |
With regard to UnipolSai Assicurazioni - Life, the recoverable value of goodwill was determined using the "Appraisal Value" method. |
Below are the results of the impairment tests along with the relevant sensitivity analyses.
. .
| Amounts in €m | Allocation of goodwill | Recoverable amount (a) |
Excess |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Life CGU | 398 | 4,213 | 3,815 |
| Life CGU | 204 | 2,719 | 2,515 |
| Total | 602 | 6,932 | 6,330 |
(a) Recoverable value obtained as the difference between CGU Value and Adjusted Shareholders' Equity (net of goodwill therein included)
| Parameters used | Non-Life |
|---|---|
| Risk Free | 4.15% |
| Beta | 0.81 |
| Risk premium | 5.28% |
| Discounting rate | 8.43% |
| Range | 7.93% - 8.93% |
| Pass | 0.5% |
| g factor | 1.2% |
| Range | 0.95% - 1.45% |
| Pass | 0.25% |
| Amounts in €m | Sensitivity (Value range) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Min | Max | |||||
| CGU | Recoverable Amount - Goodwill Delta |
Amount | g | ke | Amount | g | ke |
| UnipolSai - Non-Life | 3,815 | 3,323 | 0.95% | 8.93% | 4,414 | 1.45% | 7.93% |
| Amounts in €m | Sensitivity Recoverable Amount - Goodwill Delta |
||
|---|---|---|---|
| CGU | Recoverable Amount - Goodwill Delta |
Min | Max |
| UnipolSai - Life | 2,515 | 2,512 | 2,521 |

The process that leads to making the assumptions is carried out in such a way as to make a valuation of the liabilities with the intention of coming up with an estimate that is as realistic as possible.
The source of the figures is internal and the trends are based on annual statistics and monitored monthly throughout the year.
As far as possible assumptions are checked against market statistics.
If any information is missing, incomplete or unreliable the estimate of the final cost is based on the adoption of prudent assumptions.
The very nature of insurance business makes it highly complex to estimate the cost of settling a claim with any certainty, and the elements of complexity vary according to the class involved. The provision for each claim reported is set by an adjuster and is based on the information in his possession and on experience gained in similar cases. The forecasts fed into the system are periodically updated on the basis of new information about the claim. The final cost may vary as the claim proceeds (for example deterioration in the condition in the event of injury) or in the event of catastrophes.
As the Group's work is concentrated in Italy the major exposure to catastrophe risks is represented by natural disasters such as Earthquake, Flood and Hail.
Reinsurance cover is taken out to cover this type of risk, at levels differentiated with respect to the individual portfolios of the companies in the Group. The identified thresholds, with particular reference to Earthquake risk, have been judged on the basis of calculations made using statistical models that simulate the company's exposures in detail. The calculations were made as part of the process of determining the Risk Appetite.
The provisions for claims reported are estimated using the inventory method and the adjusters' estimates are also combined, where application conditions are satisfied, with the results of statistical methods such as the Chain Ladder, the Bornhuetter Ferguson and the ACPC (Average Cost Per Claim) and with valuations based on the average costs for the year (for similar groups covering a sufficiently large number of claims). These methods were applied after consistency of the underlying data had been verified using the model assumptions.
The Chain Ladder method is applied to the "paid" and "loading" factors. The method is based on historical analysis of the factors that affect the trend in claims. The selection of these factors is based on the figures for the accumulated amounts paid out, giving an estimate of the final cost per year of occurrence if the claims for that year have not been paid in full.
The Chain Ladder method is suitable for sectors in which the figures are stable and is therefore not suitable in cases in which there are no significantly stable previous periods and in cases of significant changes in the settlement rate.
The Bornhuetter Ferguson method uses a combination of a benchmark (or estimates of the ratio of losses to 'a priori' premium) and an estimate based on claims incurred (Chain Ladder).
The two estimates are combined using a formula that gives greater weight to experience. This technique is used in situations in which the figures are not suitable for making projections (recent years and new classes of risk).
The ACPC method is based on a projection of the number of claims to be paid and the respective average costs. This method is based on three fundamental assumptions: settlement rate, basic average costs and exogenous and endogenous inflation.
These methods extrapolate the final cost according to the year in which the claim is incurred and according to similar groups of risk on the basis of the trends in claims recognised in the past. Should there be a reason for deeming the trends recognised to be invalid some of the factors are modified and the projection adapted to fit the available information. Some examples of what affects the trends could be:

As allowed by IFRS 4, the provisions were not discounted.
The UnipolSai Group Companies operating in the Non-Life market (direct business) are: UnipolSai, Siat, Incontra, Linear, UniSalute, Arca Assicurazioni and Ddor.
The scope considered in this document makes reference to the companies mentioned above, excluding only DDOR. The incidence of the amount of provisions of the excluded company stands at 0.4%.
The tables below, which illustrate the trend in claims, show the estimated first-year costs for each year in which claims were incurred from 2013 until 2022 and the adjustments made in subsequent years as a result of the claim being settled or the budget being adjusted as a result of more information about the claim being received.
The line showing the variation compared with the first-year provision must be considered separately since subsequent adjustments may already have been incorporated into the provisions figures for later years.
Maximum caution must be exercised when extrapolating opinions on the adequacy or inadequacy of provisions from the results found in the following table.
The Group considers the provisions for claims reported or yet to be reported incurred by 31 December 2022 to be adequate in light of available information. Of course, as they are estimates there is no absolute certainty that the provisions are in fact adequate.
| Year of Event | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate of claims accumulated | |||||||||||
| at the end of the year of event | 6,515 | 6,222 | 5,236 | 5,299 | 5,412 | 5,461 | 5,557 | 4,706 | 5,144 | 5,583 | 55,136 |
| one year later | 6,414 | 6,189 | 5,189 | 5,225 | 5,410 | 5,462 | 5,604 | 4,694 | 5,038 | ||
| two years later | 6,362 | 6,113 | 5,119 | 5,191 | 5,356 | 5,416 | 5,579 | 4,591 | |||
| three years later | 6,318 | 6,034 | 5,055 | 5,166 | 5,307 | 5,401 | 5,538 | ||||
| four years later | 6,278 | 5,955 | 5,018 | 5,122 | 5,281 | 5,389 | |||||
| five years later | 6,225 | 5,906 | 4,991 | 5,103 | 5,260 | ||||||
| six years later | 6,187 | 5,868 | 4,979 | 5,067 | |||||||
| seven years later | 6,127 | 5,849 | 4,941 | ||||||||
| eight years later | 6,109 | 5,782 | |||||||||
| nine years later | 6,042 | ||||||||||
| Estimate of claims accumulated | 6,042 | 5,782 | 4,941 | 5,067 | 5,260 | 5,389 | 5,538 | 4,591 | 5,038 | 5,583 | 53,230 |
| Accumulated payments | 5,697 | 5,354 | 4,533 | 4,628 | 4,820 | 4,824 | 4,827 | 3,669 | 3,613 | 2,252 | 44,217 |
| Change compared to assessment at year 1 | (474) | (441) | (295) | (231) | (152) | (72) | (19) | (115) | (107) | ||
| Outstanding at 31/12/2022 - Carrying amount | 344 | 428 | 408 | 439 | 440 | 565 | 711 | 922 | 1,425 | 3,331 | 9,013 |
The data contained in the trend in claims table as inputs for actuarial models like the Chain-Ladder model must be used with extreme care.
Future replication of changes in cost recorded in the past, in the case of provision strengthening, could lead to the paradoxical situation whereby the higher the strengthening the greater the insufficiency which may be inaccurately forecast by these methods.
Amounts in €m

The estimated IBNR run-off at 31 December 2021 showed an overall sufficiency in 2022 of €264.9m or 22.4% of the estimate.
The estimated cost for 2013-2021 at 31 December 2022 was €47,647m, a decrease from the valuation carried out at 31 December 2021 for the same years (€48,139m).
The new figure takes account of the savings recognised on claims that have been settled and of the revaluations required on claims that are still outstanding.
The risks arising from insurance policies are complex and subject to numerous variables that make the task of quantifying the sensitivity of the model complex.
The incidence of the amount of the 2,282 major claims net of claims handled by others (above €800k in the case of MV TPL, above €400k in the case of General TPL and €350k in the case of Fire) on the total provisions of the three classes was 29.4%. A 10% increase in the number of major claims would have led to a fall in provisions of €208.8m. The incidence on total provisions of claims handled by others was 2.6%. If reinsurers had revalued these claims by 5.0%, costs would have risen by €11.6m.
The year 2022 was characterised by very different inflationary dynamics compared to the past, marking discontinuity with respect to the trend of the last decade. The rise in inflation was driven by the increase in energy costs due to the onset of the war between Russia and Ukraine and accentuated by its continuation, by supply chain slowdowns and the scarcity of raw materials and electronic components, sectors already in crisis after the blocks imposed during the pandemic period were lifted.
This moment of discontinuity requires adjusting the projection models which currently implicitly project the inflation contained in the claims cost development triangle.
The sensitivity analysis of the models directed at determining two scenarios, one favourable and one unfavourable, was conducted on the MV TPL (Non-Card and Handler Card separately) and General TPL classes of UnipolSai Assicurazioni (UnipolSai provisions represent 91.1% of the companies considered in this analysis; the provisions of the MV TPL and General TPL business of UnipolSai totalled 69.3%).
The models were adapted so as to explicitly project the growth in the cost of claims due to inflation.
Through discussions with the research department and the projections made by external institutions, the inflation curve that will affect the insurance market was defined. The curve envisages higher rates in 2023, which gradually decrease until 2026, the year in which a stable rate is expected to be reached for subsequent years of around 2%.
The two scenarios for both classes were obtained with the following assumptions:
The same change recorded on subsequent years in the scenarios described above was applied to the pre-2011 years (excluded from the model).
The following table shows the overall group provisions and the scenarios selected as shown previously::
| Amounts in €m | Pre 2011 | 2011 - 2022 | Total | Delta % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Provision requirements | 1,017 | 8,351 | 9,368 | ||
| Unfavourable assumption | 1,058 | 8,612 | 9,670 | 3.22 | |
| Favourable assumption | 983 | 8,157 | 9,140 | (2.43) |
In assessing the results of these variations, note that these analyses are of the deterministic type and no account is taken of any correlations. Overall, financial statements provisions (€10,519m relating to the consolidation scope examined) are higher than the top end, i.e. the unfavourable scenario assumption.
Consolidated Life premiums for 2022 totalled €5,340.7m (insurance and investment products), with a decline of -0.8% compared to the previous year.
The Life direct premiums of the Group came from both the traditional companies (UnipolSai Assicurazioni and DDOR) and bancassurance companies (Arca Group and Bim Vita).
The consolidated Life premiums of the UnipolSai Group at 31 December 2022 are broken down as follows:
| Amounts in €m | UnipolSai Assicurazioni |
Arca Vita & Arca Vita Int. |
Bim Vita | Ddor Novi Sad |
Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Insurance premiums (IFRS4) | 2,171.6 | 1,298.6 | 20.9 | 18.7 | 3,509.8 |
| var. % | (10.1) | (20.3) | (58.8) | 2.1 | (14.7) |
| Investment Products (IAS39) | 1,220.9 | 595.8 | 14.2 | 1,830.9 | |
| var. % | 169.0 | (24.9) | (41.2) | 44.0 | |
| Total Life business premium income | 3,392.5 | 1,894.4 | 35.1 | 18.7 | 5,340.7 |
| var. % | 18.2 | (21.8) | (53.1) | 2.1 | (0.8) |
| Breakdown: | |||||
| Insurance premiums (IFRS4) | 64.0% | 68.5% | 59.5% | 100.0% | 65.7% |
| Investment Products (IAS39) | 36.0% | 31.5% | 40.5% | 0.0% | 34.3% |
The Life direct premiums for the Group originate for €3,392.5m from UnipolSai (+18.2%), €1,894.4m from Arca Vita and its subsidiary Arca Vita International (-21.8%), €35.1m from BIM Vita (-53.1%) and €18.7m from DDOR (+2.1%).
Insurance premiums totalling €3,509.8m (-14.7%) accounted for 65.7% of total premiums, down compared to the figure for the previous year (76.4%). Non-insurance premiums amounted to €1,830.9m (+44%) and related to unitlinked and pension funds. It should be noted that starting from 2022, the funding relating to new mandates for the management of closed pension funds with financial guarantees was qualified as financial, considering the lower importance of the guarantee, also taking into account the changed market context.
income type
..
| Amounts in €m | UnipolSai Assicurazioni |
Arca Vita e Arca Vita Int. |
Bim Vita | Ddor Novi Sad |
Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional premiums | 1,831.8 | 1,229.8 | 10.8 | 18.7 | 3,091.0 |
| Financial premiums | 0.4 | 68.8 | 10.1 | 79.3 | |
| Pension funds | 339.4 | 339.4 | |||
| Insurance premiums (IFRS4) | 2,171.6 | 1,298.6 | 20.9 | 18.7 | 3,509.8 |
| of which investments with DPF | 1,339.3 | 1,144.4 | 10.1 | 2,493.8 | |
| % investment with DPF | 61.7% | 88.1% | 48.3% | 0.0% | 71.1% |
The insurance premiums of the UnipolSai Group continued to be composed primarily of traditional policies, which account for 88.1% of total consolidated premiums (down from the 89.5% recorded in 2021), compared to 9.7% represented by pension fund premiums (unchanged compared to 2021) and, finally, only 2.2% by financial premiums (0.8% in 2021).

The Risk Report aims to provide an overview of the risk management system, the internal risk assessment and solvency assessment process and the UnipolSai Group risk profile, in compliance with the principles of the European Solvency II regulations.
Activities by the competent corporate structures of the Group were carried out in 2022 in compliance with Solvency II regulations and the supervisory provisions issued by IVASS.
The Unipol Group and the UnipolSai Group's Risk Management structure and process are part of the wider internal control and risk management system which operates according to several levels:
The departments responsible for these controls are separate from the operating functions; they help define the risk governance policies and the risk management policy;
• internal review (so-called "third-level controls"), verification of the completeness, functionality and adequacy of the Internal Control and Risk Management System (including the first- and second-level controls) and that business operations comply with the System.
By way of a non-exhaustive example, the Risk and Control Governance model adopted in the Unipol Group is shown below.

Within UnipolSai:
5 The key Risk Management Function of UnipolSai is known as the Chief Risk Officer.

• The Chief Risk Officer supports the Board of Directors, the General Manager and Top Management in the evaluation of the adequacy and effectiveness of the Risk Management System and reports its conclusions to said bodies, highlighting any deficiencies and suggesting ways of resolving them. The Chief Risk Officer carries out this work as part of the process of "Own Risk and Solvency Assessment" (ORSA), ensuring that the work carried out by the various company departments dealing with risk management is coordinated. This does not exempt the individual operating departments from their specific responsibilities for managing the risks relating to their own work since the departments themselves must have the necessary tools and expertise.
Within the Risk management system, the Chief Risk Officer is in charge of continuously identifying, measuring, assessing and monitoring the current and prospective risks at the individual and aggregated level that the Company is or may be exposed to and their correlations.
In this respect, the Chief Risk Officer also contributes to the dissemination of a risk culture extended to the entire Group.
Some internal company committees have been set up within UnipolSai to support the Chief Executive Officer in implementing and monitoring the policies on guidelines, coordination and operating strategy laid down by the Board of Directors.
The Internal control and risk management system (hereinafter, the "System") is defined in the Group Directives on the corporate governance system ("Directives") - adopted by the UnipolSai Board of Directors most recently on 11 November 2021 - which define, inter alia, the role and responsibilities of the parties involved in the internal control and risk management system. The Directives are complemented by the Key Function Policies - approved at the same board meeting.
The principles and processes of the System as a whole are governed by the following Group policies: "Risk Management Policy", "Current and Forward-looking Internal Risk and Solvency Assessment Policy", "Operational Risk Management Policy" and "Group-level Risk Concentration Policy".
The policies setting the principles and guidelines below are an integral part of this System: (i) management of specific risk factors (e.g. Investment Policy with regard to market and liquidity risks, and the "Credit Policy"), (ii) risk management as part of a specific process, (iii) risk mitigation and (iv) risk measurement model management.
A risk management process is defined within the Risk management system to allow for risk identification, measurement, monitoring and mitigation.
The risk identification, assessment and monitoring processes are performed on an ongoing basis, to take into account any changes in their nature, business volumes and market context, and any insurgence of new risks or changes in existing risks.
These processes are carried out using methods that guarantee an integrated approach at Group level. The Parent ensures that the risk management policy is implemented consistently and continuously within the entire Group, taking into account the risks of each company included in the scope of supervision of the Group and their mutual interdependencies.
The Risk Management System is inspired by an enterprise risk management logic. This means that is based on the consideration, with an integrated approach, of all the current and prospective risks the Group is exposed to, assessing the impact these risks may have on the achievement of the strategic objectives and replies on a fundamental element: the Risk Appetite.
In quantitative terms, Risk Appetite is generally determined on the basis of the following elements:
Furthermore, quality objectives are defined in reference to compliance, emerging, strategic, reputational, ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) and operational risks.
The Risk Appetite is formalised in the Risk Appetite Statement, which indicates the risks that the Company intends to assume or avoid, sets their quantitative limits and the qualitative criteria to be taken into account for the management of unquantified risks.
The Risk Appetite forms part of a reference framework - the Risk Appetite Framework (RAF).
The RAF is defined in strict compliance and prompt reconciliation with the business model, the Strategic Plan, the Own Risk and Solvency Assessment (ORSA) process, the budget, company organisation and the internal control system.
The RAF defines the Risk Appetite and other components ensuring its management, both in normal and stress conditions. These components are:
The activity to set the RAF components is dynamic over time, and reflects the risk management objectives associated with the objectives of the Strategic Plan. Verification is performed annually as part of the process of assigning Budget objectives. Further analyses for preventive control of the Risk Appetite, and capital adequacy in particular, are performed when studying extraordinary transactions (such as mergers, acquisitions, disposals).
The RAF is broken down into several analysis macro areas with the aim of guaranteeing continuous monitoring of risk trends and capital adequacy.
The main analysis macro areas are:
Under its own risk management systems, the Group uses the ORSA process to assess the effectiveness of the risk management system and its capital adequacy as well as liquidity governance and management.
The internal ORSA assessment process allows the analysis of the current and forward-looking risk profile of the Group, based on strategy, market scenarios and business development; in addition, the ORSA is an assessment element to support operational and strategic decisions.
The risk management process involves the following steps:
The process is performed in compliance with the Risk Appetite Framework.

Risk identification consists in identifying the risks considered significant, i.e. those with consequences capable of compromising the solvency or reputation of the Group and of the Company, or constitute a serious obstacle to achieving strategic objectives. These risks are classified according to a methodology that takes into consideration the Group structure, the specific nature of the types of business managed by the various operating Companies and the classifications proposed by Italian and European supervisory regulations.
The categories of risk identified are as follows:
This identification and its constant updating are the result of meticulous and continuous activity performed through:
An assessment is performed at least annually to verify that the risks identified actually represent the risk profile of the Group and its companies.
At least annually and in any event every time circumstances arise that could significantly alter the risk profile, the Group assesses the risks to which the Group and the individual Companies are exposed, at present and prospectively, documenting the methods used and the related results. In the internal Current and Forward-looking Risk and Solvency Assessment Policy, the process for the current and forward-looking assessment of risks is also defined, including risks deriving from companies included in the scope of Group supervision and taking into account the risk interdependencies.
The current and forward-looking assessment also includes stress testing to verify the company's vulnerability to extreme but plausible events.
The current assessment of risks identified is performed through methods envisaged in regulations and best practices as regards risks for which measurement is not regulated or defined by high-level principles.
The Own Risk Solvency Assessment (ORSA) is used to support operational and strategic decisions.
The Group defines and implements procedures that are commensurate with the nature, scope and complexity of the business activities and enable it to identify and assess accurately the risks to which the Group or individual Company is or could be exposed in the short and long term.

The Group and each subsidiary Company conduct stress test, reverse stress test and sensitivity analyses at least annually, in compliance with requirements of the national Supervisory Authority regulations. To this end, the Group has adopted:
With reference to the stress scenarios, it should be noted that the Chief Risk Officer:
In order to ensure prompt and constant monitoring of the evolution of the Risk Profile and compliance at the different levels of company responsibility with the defined Risk Appetite, a reporting system was implemented based on the principles of completeness, promptness and disclosure efficiency.
This system guarantees that the quality and quantity of information provided is commensurate with the needs of the various recipients and with the complexity of the business managed, in order for it to be used as a strategic and operating tool in assessing the potential impact of decisions on the company's risk profile and solvency.
In relation to the recipients, reporting is divided into "internal" and "external". "Internal" reporting is addressed to the bodies and internal structures of the Group and its companies, with the aim of steering strategic and business decisions and verifying sustainability over time. "External" reporting is directed to Supervisory Authorities and the market and meets the disclosure and transparency requirements of regulations in force.
With regard to internal reporting, in consideration of the recipients of the various requirements and uses, two types of reporting are provided:
Strategic reporting on risk management, containing information important in supporting strategic decisions;
Operational reporting on risk management with an adequate granularity in supporting business operations.
As part of the strategic reporting, the following are provided to the Board of Directors, the Control and Risk Committee and Top Management:
As part of the quarterly monitoring of indicators defined in the Risk Appetite Statement, performed by the Chief Risk Officer for the Board of Directors, any failure to comply with one of the defined thresholds triggers the escalation process described below:
With reference to the Risk Appetite:
In the event of failure to comply with the Risk Tolerance or Risk Capacity, the escalation process requires the Chief Risk Officer to involve:
In the event of a Risk Tolerance violation, the Boards of Directors of the Parent, of UnipolSai and of the Company involved in the threshold violation assess the need to deal with the situation through contingency measures, i.e. actions to restore the values of indicators of the threshold exceeded within a reasonable period of time based on the nature of the indicator concerned.
In the event of a Risk Capacity violation, the Boards of Directors of the Parent, of UnipolSai and of the Company involved in the threshold violation assess activation of the remediation measures identified.
If the Risk Appetite and/or Risk Tolerance and/or Risk Capacity of individual Companies are exceeded, the Boards of Directors of Unipol Gruppo SpA and of UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA are informed, indicating any corrective action taken.
In order to mitigate existing or prospective levels of risk not in line with the defined risk objectives, the following measures can be adopted:
6 In reference to the Parent, at consolidated level and at individual company level.
7 Activities carried out for the other companies subject to pre-emptive or ordinary governance.
8 The CSA requires the delivery of a collateral asset when the value of the contract exceeds the set threshold.
Model for measuring risks includes mitigation techniques, their compatibility and constant updating in line with performance must be guaranteed;
The Unipol Group, UnipolSai Assicurazioni and Arca Vita are authorised by IVASS to use the Partial Internal Model to calculate the Group and individual solvency capital requirement.
The Partial Internal Model is used to assess the following risk factors, as well as in the aggregation process:
There is a plan for the extension of the Partial Internal Model to include all measurable risk modules and reach a Full Internal Model type configuration.
Non-Life and Health technical insurance risk is represented by the following sub-modules: tariff-setting risk, provisions risk, catastrophe risk and surrender risk. A Partial Internal Model that integrates Internal Model components (Earthquake catastrophe risk), Specific Company Parameters and the Standard Formula is used to calculate the solvency capital requirement.
In particular, the use of the Specific Parameters concerns the tariff-setting and provisions risks of the company UnipolSai in the segments of Non-Life insurance and reinsurance obligations under Annex II to Delegated Regulation (EU) 2015/35 of 10 October 2014, as specified below:
In addition, except with regard to Earthquake risk, the catastrophe risks and surrender risk are assessed using the Standard Formula.
Life underwriting risk (mortality/longevity risk, surrender risk and expense risk) is measured using the Partial Internal Model based on the Least Square Monte Carlo approach, consistent with the principles indicated in Solvency II regulations, which allow calculation of the Probability Distribution Forecast in relation to Life risk factors. Catastrophe risk, in addition to the Life underwriting risks relating to Unit-Linked and Pension Fund products, are assessed using the Standard Formula.
The market risk of the securities portfolio, for which the investment risk is not borne by the policyholders, is measured using the Partial Internal Model that adopts a Monte Carlo VaR approach. As part of the Internal Market Model, Life liabilities are replicated through cash flows with a maturity equivalent to Life provisions run-off for the guaranteed component and polynomial functions (the Least Square Monte Carlo approach) to represent the Future

Discretionary Benefits component. Market risk of the securities portfolio for which investment risk is borne by policyholders and concentration risk are measured using the Market Wide Standard Formula.
The table in the following paragraph analyses the main sensitivities to market risk factors.
Credit risk is measured using the Partial Internal Model that adopts a CreditRisk+ approach. This model makes it possible to measure the risk of default relating to bank counterparties, concerning exposures deriving from cash available at banks and financial risk mitigation operations through derivative contracts, and to the insurance and reinsurance exposures. Furthermore, the model allows the risk of default deriving from exposures to intermediaries and policyholders to be measured.
The risk aggregation process, adopted by the Group according to the methods defined in the Partial Internal Model, calls for a bottom-up approach and may be broken down into two phases:
The aggregation of the sub-modules involves three distinct approaches:
Below is additional information on the measurement methods and the main results for each risk at 31 December 2022.
The Investment Policy establishes guidelines for investment activities, the type of assets considered suitable for investment and the breakdown of the medium/long-term investment portfolio, taking into account the risk profile of liabilities held to ensure integrated asset and liability management. It also defines the limits for underwriting and related monitoring methods in such a way as to ensure that total exposure is in line with the risk appetite expressed in the Group's strategic objectives, thus guaranteeing adequate portfolio diversification.
Market risk refers to all risks which have the effect of diminishing investments of a financial or real estate nature as a result of adverse trends in the relevant market variables. The market risk modules are:
In the Partial Internal Model, the Value at Risk method is used to measure the market risk, calculated over a 1-year time period and with a confidence interval of 99.5%. In addition, sensitivity and stress test measurements are determined for each risk factor.
Interest rate risk for ALM purposes is quantified in terms of duration mismatch and Net Asset Value sensitivity to parallel changes in the forward interest rate curve. The assets falling under the calculation of the duration mismatch and Net Asset Value sensitivity include securities, cash, receivables and properties; the liabilities include the financial liabilities and technical provisions. The market value is used for financial assets and liabilities, whilst best estimates are used for the technical provisions. The duration mismatch is calculated as the difference between the duration of assets and the duration of liabilities weighted for the assets value, considering the adjusting effect of the derivatives.

For the UnipolSai Group, at 31 December 2022 the duration mismatch for Life business stood at -0.50, while it was +1.33 for Non-Life business.
With reference to Net Asset Value sensitivity to a parallel change in the forward interest rate curve, for the Life business the sensitivity +100 basis points equals +€183m, whilst for the Non-Life business the sensitivity +100 basis points equals -€236m.
Equity risk is the risk connected with a potential variation in the value of share assets, as a result of market volatility of the reference indexes.
Real estate risk is the risk connected with the occurrence of losses as a result of unfavourable changes in the market value of real estate assets.
The assets falling under the calculation of real estate risk include real estate funds, directly-owned properties and direct and indirect investments in real estate projects.
In particular, with reference to directly-owned properties, the value used to calculate the risk (fair value) is that deriving from the estimate made by independent experts.
Exchange rate risk for ALM purposes is defined as the risk of a possible variation in the value of financial statement assets and liabilities and the Net Asset Value as a result of unfavourable changes in exchange rates. Based on the Investment Policy, the total exposure to non-Euro currencies, net of currency hedging, must be limited to 3% of total investments.
The UnipolSai Group's exposure to currency risk was not significant at 31 December 2022.
Spread risk is the risk connected with a variation in the value of bond assets following a change in spreads representing the credit rating of individual issuers. In light of the policies and processes adopted to monitor and manage liquidity risk and the objective difficulty in quantifying the default risk of government bonds issued by European Union Member States, spread risk on government bonds has been excluded from the measurement of the market SCR based on the Partial Internal Model. It is not included because of:
The assessment of spread risk on government bonds is included within Pillar II risks and the relative measurement is carried out based on a stress testing type approach.
The level of sensitivity of the UnipolSai Group's portfolios of financial assets to the main market risk factors is shown below.
Sensitivity is calculated as a variation in the market value of the assets at 31 December 2022, following shocks resulting from a:
• +10 bps change in the credit spread.
| 31/12/2022 | INSURANCE BUSINESS |
REAL ESTATE AND OTHER BUSINESSES |
TOTAL | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Impact on Income Statement |
Impact on Statement of financial position |
Impact on Impact on Statement of Income financial Statement position |
Impact on Income Statement |
Impact on Statement of financial position |
||
| UnipolSai Group | |||||||
| Interest rate sensitivity (+10 bps) | 13.53 | (230.53) | (0.00) | 13.53 | (230.54) | ||
| Credit spread sensitivity (+10 bps) | 0.51 | (237.44) | (0.00) | 0.51 | (237.44) | ||
| Equity sensitivity (-20%) | (19.20) | (1,167.65) | (5.63) | (19.20) | (1,173.28) |
The values include the hedging derivatives and are gross of tax effects.

Liquidity risk is the risk of not having the liquid resources necessary to meet the assumed obligations, in the financial statements and off-balance sheet, pertaining to their business, without undergoing economic losses deriving from forced sales of assets in case of adverse scenarios.
The liquid resources functional for the core business deriving from cash and cash equivalents, from the sale of securities that can be swiftly turned into cash and from any financing activities.
The main principles on which the liquidity risk management model within the UnipolSai Group is based may be summarised as follows:

Credit risk (or Counterparty Default Risk) identifies the risk that a debtor or guarantor under an enforcement order may wholly or partially fail to honour its accrued monetary commitment to the Parent or one of the Group companies. Credit risk therefore reflects the potential losses from an unexpected default by counterparties and debtors of the insurance and reinsurance companies in the next twelve months. Counterparty default risk includes the risk mitigation contracts, e.g. reinsurance agreements, securitisations and derivatives, and likewise every other credit exposure not included among the financial risks (credit spread risk).
Credit risk management is defined in the Credit Policy which describes the roles and responsibilities of the parties involved, the risk assessment and mitigation principles and the operating limits monitored.
In relation to credit risk, the Risk Management Department monitors compliance with the limits defined in the Group Credit Policy and prepares reports to the administrative body, Top Management and the operating structures on developments in this risk.
Within the scope of the UnipolSai Group, the credit risk is mainly in the exposures to banks, in the insurance and outwards reinsurance areas.
Existing exposure to banks refers to deposited liquidity and exposures in OTC hedging derivatives. In particular, the derivatives exposure considered for risk management and monitoring purposes is equal to the sum of market values, if positive, of the current individual contracts and takes into account any risk mitigation arrangements (collateralisation) covered in the CSAs signed with individual counterparties. The following table shows the distribution of UnipolSai exposures to banks, broken down by rating class, recognised at 31 December 2022.

This risk is calculated within the technical insurance risks (see relevant section) and monitored by the Bond and Credit Assignment Committee.
In this area, the existing exposure to credit risk is divided into:


Provided below is the table showing the distribution of UnipolSai Group exposure to reinsurers, broken down by rating class, recognised at 31 December 2022 net of intragroup reinsurance.
Debt security Issuer Risk
The credit risk of debt securities is monitored within market risk based on credit spread volatility. The following table shows the distribution of the UnipolSai Group's bonds portfolio, Insurance business and Real Estate and Other Businesses, broken down by rating class (figures at 31/12/2022).


In accordance with Consob Communication DEM/11070007 of 5 August 2011 and ESMA document 2011/397 of 25 November 2011, relating to information to be provided in annual and interim financial reports on listed companies' exposures to Sovereign debt securities and current trends in international markets, details are provided of Sovereign exposures (i.e. bonds issued by central and local governments and by government organisations and loans granted to them) held by the UnipolSai Group at 31 December 2022, broken down by type of portfolio, nominal value, carrying amount and fair value.

| Balance at 31 December 2022 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Nominal value | Carrying amount | Market value | |||
| Italy | 20,118.5 | 17,177.1 | 17,123.0 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 19,098.8 | 16,102.6 | 16,102.6 | |||
| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 2.0 | 1.6 | 1.6 | |||
| Held-to-maturity investments | 312.7 | 301.7 | 303.8 | |||
| Loans and receivables | 705.0 | 771.2 | 715.1 | |||
| Spain | 3,485.6 | 3,060.8 | 3,061.7 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 3,206.1 | 2,773.2 | 2,773.2 | |||
| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 20.0 | 21.7 | 21.7 | |||
| Loans and receivables | 259.5 | 265.9 | 266.9 | |||
| France | 2,249.4 | 1,488.4 | 1,488.4 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 2,249.4 | 1,488.4 | 1,488.4 | |||
| Germany | 565.7 | 372.3 | 322.9 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 465.7 | 272.3 | 272.3 | |||
| Loans and receivables | 100.0 | 100.0 | 50.6 | |||
| Portugal | 392.9 | 373.5 | 373.9 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 375.5 | 363.2 | 363.2 | |||
| Loans and receivables | 17.4 | 10.3 | 10.8 | |||
| Belgium | 304.4 | 196.3 | 196.3 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 304.4 | 196.3 | 196.3 | |||
| Ireland | 295.9 | 254.9 | 254.9 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 295.9 | 254.9 | 254.9 | |||
| Slovenia | 203.6 | 173.8 | 173.8 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 203.6 | 173.8 | 173.8 | |||
| Great Britain | 190.0 | 175.5 | 175.5 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 190.0 | 175.5 | 175.5 | |||
| Romania | 108.0 | 79.9 | 79.9 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 108.0 | 79.9 | 79.9 | |||
| Mexico | 103.0 | 72.8 | 72.8 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 103.0 | 72.8 | 72.8 | |||
| Serbia | 98.2 | 94.7 | 91.2 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 36.9 | 30.7 | 30.7 | |||
| Held-to-maturity investments | 61.3 | 64.0 | 60.5 | |||
| Slovakia | 98.1 | 78.1 | 78.1 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 98.1 | 78.1 | 78.1 | |||
| Israel | 89.7 | 84.8 | 84.8 | |||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 89.7 | 84.8 | 84.8 |
174

| Balance at 31 December 2022 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Nominal value | Carrying amount | Market value | |
| Cyprus | 87.5 | 72.4 | 72.4 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 87.5 | 72.4 | 72.4 | |
| China | 84.0 | 67.5 | 67.5 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 84.0 | 67.5 | 67.5 | |
| Latvia | 75.8 | 63.4 | 63.4 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 75.8 | 63.4 | 63.4 | |
| Chile | 75.5 | 62.7 | 62.7 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 75.5 | 62.7 | 62.7 | |
| Netherlands | 67.3 | 63.4 | 63.4 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 67.3 | 63.4 | 63.4 | |
| Turkey | 51.7 | 38.9 | 38.9 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 51.7 | 38.9 | 38.9 | |
| Hong Kong | 50.0 | 30.3 | 30.3 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 50.0 | 30.3 | 30.3 | |
| Austria | 38.5 | 33.6 | 33.6 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 38.5 | 33.6 | 33.6 | |
| Peru | 31.0 | 21.6 | 21.6 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 31.0 | 21.6 | 21.6 | |
| USA | 25.5 | 24.1 | 24.1 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 25.5 | 24.1 | 24.1 | |
| Poland | 25.2 | 23.9 | 23.9 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 25.2 | 23.9 | 23.9 | |
| Croatia | 21.0 | 19.3 | 19.3 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 21.0 | 19.3 | 19.3 | |
| South Korea | 20.0 | 16.3 | 16.3 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 20.0 | 16.3 | 16.3 | |
| Lithuania | 15.5 | 14.4 | 14.4 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 15.5 | 14.4 | 14.4 | |
| Canada | 10.0 | 10.0 | 10.0 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 10.0 | 10.0 | 10.0 | |
| Greece | 10.0 | 8.0 | 8.0 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 10.0 | 8.0 | 8.0 | |
| Iceland | 1.5 | 1.2 | 1.2 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 1.5 | 1.2 | 1.2 | |
| Swiss | 1.5 | 1.3 | 1.3 | |
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 1.5 | 1.3 | 1.3 | |
| TOTAL | 28,994.2 | 24,255.4 | 24,149.7 |
The carrying amount of the sovereign exposures represented by debt securities at 31 December 2022 totalled €24,255.4m, 71% of which (73% in 2021) was concentrated on securities issued by the Italian State. Moreover, the bonds issued by the Italian State account for 33% of total investments of the UnipolSai Group.

The guidelines of the underwriting and provisions activities of the Life business are defined in the "Underwriting Policy - Life Business" and in the "Provisions Policy - Life Business".
The Underwriting Policy defines the guidelines addressing underwriting activities and the related risk management, governing the assumption principles and logic of UnipolSai Group insurance companies based in Italy and operating in the Life business.
The Provisions Policy defines the guidelines addressing provisioning activities for direct business and the related risk management, governing the provisioning principles and logic of UnipolSai Group insurance companies based in Italy and operating in the Life business, in compliance with national and international accounting standards and the Solvency II prudential supervisory system.
Technical-insurance risks relating to Life business underwriting are divided into:
The options included in the tariffs that can affect the assessment of risks present in the portfolio are monitored. The most significant of these are illustrated below.
This option allows the customer to surrender the contract and receive the surrender value (does not apply to the purerisk tariffs and annuities currently being distributed). Depending on the contract type, more or less significant penalties can be applied, often based on claim seniority.
In individual products where the benefit is expressed in the form of capital, there is often the option to accept disbursement as an annuity.
Among the individual products portfolio there are products for which the conversion ratios are determined at the time of issue of the contract and others, the majority of which (generally those issued after 2000) with the amount of the annuity determined only at the time of the option. In this case the demographic risk is considerably mitigated. In the supplementary pensions segment, especially collective, the ratios are often associated with each sum paid in,
but the risk is mitigated by the frequency at which the offer conditions can be reviewed.
Maturity deferment
The portfolio includes individual term life products (not "whole-life") that often provided the option to extend the validity of the contract after its original maturity date. During maturity deferment the payment of further premiums is not normally allowed.
The conditions applied during deferment vary according to the contractual terms, and continuation of the contract's financial guarantees or the application of those used at the time of the option can be granted.
Depending on the conditions, even the duration of the maturity deferment can be determined or extended year by year.
The impact on the portfolio of exercising the maturity deferment option is not particularly significant at present.

With regard to risk assessment relating to the Non-Life portfolio, the reference guidelines are contained in the "Policy for the governance and amendment of the Undertaking Specific Parameters to calculate the SCR of the Non-Life and Health Technical-Insurance risks", the "Underwriting Policy - Non-Life Business", the "Provisions Policy - Non-Life Business" and the "Reinsurance and Other Risk Mitigation Techniques Policy".
The Policy for the governance and amendment of the Undertaking Specific Parameters to calculate the SCR of the Non-Life and Health Technical-Insurance risks defines the guidelines on governance and amendment of the USP methodology by defining the roles and responsibilities of the corporate bodies and functions involved.
The Underwriting Policy defines the guidelines addressing underwriting activities and the related risk management, governing the assumption principles and logic of UnipolSai Group insurance companies based in Italy and operating in the Non-Life business.
The Provisions Policy defines the guidelines addressing provisioning activities and the related risk management, governing the provisioning principles and logic of UnipolSai Group insurance companies based in Italy and operating in the Non-Life business, in compliance with national and international accounting standards and the new Solvency II prudential supervisory system.
The Reinsurance and Other Risk Mitigation Techniques Policy aims to define the guidelines on outwards reinsurance and other techniques for mitigating risk.
During 2022 the Non-Life technical-insurance risks were calculated using the Non-Life Partial Internal Model, consistent with the standards of Solvency II.
With regard to the assessment of Non-Life and Health underwriting and provisions risks, in the initial transition phase it was decided to adopt the use of parameters calculated by Undertaking Specific Parameter methods (USP) for the high-volume lines of business, in place of market parameters. These methods allow a more accurate representation of the Group's risk characteristics, which have specific features in terms of dimension, business type and reference market, that cannot be captured by average estimates performed on the European market.
Action continued in 2022 for the development of the Non-Life Internal Model project, which envisages the gradual development of models based on phased extension of the scope of application (insurance companies, risks, lines of business). Specifically, the new model uses a level of granularity based on uniform risk groups consistent with:
With reference to Earthquake risk, the Group adopts one of the main global models for the analytical evaluation of such risk. This tool consists of three modules:
In 2022, in addition to help in calculating risk capital, this tool also provided support to the Group in the Underwriting and Tariff-setting processes and in defining the reinsurance strategy.
With reference to other Catastrophe Risks, the assessments were performed using the standardised scenario approach proposed by EIOPA, in which the following events are taken into consideration:
Consistent with the internal model expansion plan relating to catastrophe risks, in the course of the last two years, the licences of the Italy Flooding and Italy Severe Convective Storm (SCS) models were acquired from a leading software house specialised in catastrophe modelling.
In order to ensure a complete analysis of company risks, the UnipolSai Group has an "Operational Risk Management Policy", updated annually, and has drafted a framework to identify, measure, monitor and manage Operational Risk. This term means "the risk of losses deriving from the inadequacy or malfunctioning of processes, human resources or systems, or from external events". Based on the Operational Risk Management framework, relations and reciprocal impacts between operational and other risks are also considered, with the objective of understanding the direct and indirect effects of events linked to operational risk. In particular, the analysis schemes adopted are aimed at understanding, based on a causal approach, the risk factors, events and effects, both financial and non-financial, and the impacts these can have on the Group's solvency and on the achievement of the objectives set.
Within the Group governance structure, the monitoring of Operational Risks is entrusted to the Operational Risks function of the Risk Management Department. The objectives assigned to this unit, within the internal control system, are aimed at ensuring the Group's assets are safeguarded and at adequate risk control.
Operational risk identification consists in gathering as much information as possible about the risk event, its possible causes and effects with a view to increasing awareness of the specific exposure of the various company areas. In addition, this activity also aims to assess the adequacy of controls and identify the best management solutions for any critical situations.
The operational risk identification essentially involves carrying out two separate processes.
The organisational model for operational risk governance and control envisages a network of analysts in a number of UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA Divisions and the main Group companies which, after following a specific training course on operational risk management, provide support to the Risk Management Department in identifying operational risk and monitoring this risk within their own areas of operations.
Operational risk assessment is performed annually by the main Group Companies.
2022 saw the continuation of development activities on the internal model for operational risk assessment and measurement, to determine the distribution of operating losses on a scenario-based approach, taking into account the risk events identified and quantitative information gathered through risk self-assessment.
With regard to Standard compliance risk, the Group's compliance risk management process is transversal and comprises organisational and operating monitoring activities carried out by resources from the various company functions. The Compliance Function is tasked with assessing whether the organisation and the internal corporate procedures are suitable to reach the objective of preventing this risk, according to a risk-based approach.
With regard to emerging risks, strategic risk and reputational risk, within the dedicated structure present within the Risk Management Department, a dedicated Observatory was created at Group level, called "Reputational & Emerging Risk Observatory", whose key elements are the involvement of an interfunctional Technical Panel and of all the main Business Departments, the use of a consolidated predictive model and methodologies based on futures studies to ensure a forward-looking view of the medium/long-term in order to anticipate the risks and future opportunities, and a holistic approach aimed at grasping and governing the interconnections, both in reading the external context for an integrated vision of the different emerging macro trends (social, technological, political and environmental), and in the internal response for a unified view of the different corporate areas and of the different steps of the value chain. The purpose of the Observatory is to assure effective monitoring of emerging risks, strategic risk and reputational risk, verifying the constant alignment between stakeholders' expectations and the Group's responses and anticipating the most significant phenomena to catch new business opportunities and prepare for emerging risks.
At Group level, a structured process was developed within the Observatory for the assessment and prioritisation of the main emerging risk areas, identified on the basis of the systemic analysis of macrotrends regarding changes in the external context, currently present in the Observatory's Radar. The process calls for the involvement of a composite panel of external experts to assess emerging risks, on the basis of an "outside-in" perspective, in terms of probability, impact, reference time horizon and level of interconnection with other risks, and the assessment, on the basis of an "inside-out" perspective, of the Group's degree of readiness with respect to emerging risks identified as priorities.
Strategic risk is controlled at Group level through the monitoring of Strategic Plan drivers to verify any deviation from the defined scenarios, also using long-term scenario analyses carried out within the Observatory using methodologies based on futures studies and on anticipation, with the aim of strengthening the resilience of Group strategy in an external context characterised by accelerating change, with growing levels of complexity and uncertainty.
With specific reference to the reputational risk, within the frame of the Observatory, a Reputation Management framework was developed at the Group level, which operates in the dual mode of construction and protection of the reputational capital, through two work sites that rely on dedicated corporate competencies and structures in a path of constant mutual alignment, under the joint leadership of the "Corporate Communication and Media Relations" and "Risk Management" functions, with the goal of stably integrating these assets in the strategic planning processes. In the light of the "Opening New Ways" 2022-2024 Strategic Plan, the reputational scorecard and the reputational risk scenario map of the Group were updated on the basis of external and internal sources and in particular a cycle of interviews with the Group's Top Management.
The level of awareness reached within the Group on the growing importance of reputation as leverage for business and distinctive market positioning in 2019 led to the definition of an integrated governance model for Reputation, operational from 2020, which envisages the set-up of corporate bodies dedicated to the proactive management of the Group's reputation in terms of both building and protection, such as the Operational Reputation Management Team and the Reputation Network, and the launch of a widespread system for reporting reputational warnings involving all the Group managers.
As part of the ERM Framework, the Group identifies and monitors the ESG risk factors at the level of impact on underwriting risks, in association with investment-related risks, with a view to focusing on risks emerging on environmental, social and governance aspects and in terms of potential impact at reputational risk level.
ESG risk monitoring is outlined in the individual risk categories, in such a way as to ensure management at all stages of the value creation process and mitigating any reputational risks associated with ESG risks as they arise. These controls, also designed to prevent exposure concentration to areas and/or sectors significantly exposed to ESG risks, are defined in the management policies for each risk category, where material.
Within the scope of ESG risks, a particular focus is dedicated to climate risks, specifically with regard to underwriting and investment activities.

The Group has mapped the risks and opportunities linked to the climate, prepared in accordance with the taxonomy defined by the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosure. This map includes both physical and transition risks. As regards the impact of climate change on physical and transition risks, specific stress test analyses have been implemented and integrated into the Group's stress test framework.
As regards the ESG risks generated, at Group level, a dedicated KRI dashboard has been developed, making it possible to monitor the risk level of each area - environmental, social and governance - while integrating oversight and listening indicators in order to combine the "inside-out" with the "outside-in" view.
The Group's capital management strategies and objectives are outlined in the "Capital management and dividend distribution policy", which describes the reference context and the process for managing capital and distributing dividends also in terms of the roles and responsibilities of the players involved. The document also identifies the principles of capital management and the distribution of dividends or other elements of own funds, in line with the return on capital objectives and the risk appetite defined by the Board of Directors.
The general aims pursued by the "Capital management and dividend distribution policy" are:
The capital management and dividend distribution process is divided into five steps, in close relation with other corporate processes:
Bologna, 23 March 2023
The Board of Directors




bianco

| Name | Country of registered office |
Registered office |
Country of operations (5) |
Method (1) | Business activity (2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UnipolSai Assicurazioni SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 1 | |
| UnipolSai Finance SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 9 | |
| UniSalute SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 1 | |
| Compagnia Assicuratrice Linear SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 1 | |
| Unisalute Servizi Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| Centri Medici Dyadea Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| Midi Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 10 | |
| Arca Vita SpA | 086 Italy |
Verona | G | 1 | |
| Arca Assicurazioni SpA | 086 Italy |
Verona | G | 1 | |
| Arca Vita International Dac | 040 Ireland |
Dublin | G | 2 | |
| Arca Direct Assicurazioni Srl | 086 Italy |
Verona | G | 11 | |
| Arca Inlinea Scarl | 086 Italy |
Verona | G | 11 | |
| Arca Inlinea Scarl Arca Sistemi Scarl |
086 Italy 086 Italy |
Verona Verona |
G G |
11 11 |
|
| Arca Sistemi Scarl | 086 Italy |
Verona | G | 11 | |
| Arca Sistemi Scarl | 086 Italy |
Verona | G | 11 | |
| Arca Sistemi Scarl | 086 Italy |
Verona | G | 11 | |
| BIM Vita SpA | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 1 | |
| Incontra Assicurazioni SpA | 086 Italy |
Milan | G | 1 | |
| Siat-Societa' Italiana Assicurazioni e Riassicurazioni - per Azioni | 086 Italy |
Genoa | G | 1 | |
| Ddor Novi Sad | 289 Serbia |
Novi Sad (Serbia) | G | 3 | |
| Ddor Re | 289 Serbia |
Novi Sad (Serbia) | G | 6 | |
| Ddor Re UnipolRe Dac |
289 Serbia 040 Ireland |
Novi Sad (Serbia) Dublin (Ireland) |
G G |
6 5 |
|
| UnipolSai Nederland Bv in Liquidatie | 050 Netherland |
Amsterdam (NL) | G | 11 | |
| Finsai International Sa | 092 Luxembourg |
Luxembourg | G | 11 | |
| Finsai International Sa | 092 Luxembourg |
Luxembourg | G | 11 | |
| UnipolGlass Srl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| UnipolService SpA | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| Casa di Cura Villa Donatello - SpA | 086 Italy |
Florence | G | 11 | |
| Centro Oncologico Fiorentino Casa di Cura Villanova Srl in Liquidazione | 086 Italy |
Sesto Fiorentino (FI) | G | 11 | |
| Florence Centro di Chirurgia Ambulatoriale Srl | 086 Italy |
Florence | G | 11 | |
| Tenute del Cerro SpA - Societa' Agricola | 086 Italy |
Montepulciano (SI) | G | 11 | |
| UnipolSai Servizi Previdenziali Srl | 086 Italy |
Florence | G | 11 | |
| Sogeint Societa' a Responsabilita' Limitata | 086 Italy |
San Donato Milanese | G | 11 | |
| UnipolAssistance Scrl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| UnipolAssistance Scrl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| UnipolAssistance Scrl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| UnipolAssistance Scrl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| UnipolAssistance Scrl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 |

| % Direct holding | % Indirect holding | % Total participating interest (3) |
% Votes available at ordinary General Meetings (4) |
% Consolidation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 98.99% | 98.99% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% UniSalute SpA |
98.99% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 63.39% | 63.39% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 98.12% Arca Vita SpA |
62.20% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% Arca Vita SpA |
63.39% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% Arca Vita SpA |
63.39% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 60.22% Arca Vita SpA |
62.92% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 39.78% Arca Assicurazioni SpA |
62.92% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 77.03% Arca Vita SpA |
63.19% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 16.97% Arca Assicurazioni SpA |
63.19% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 5.00% Arca Vita International Dac |
63.19% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 1.00% Arca Inlinea Scarl |
63.19% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 50.00% | 50.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 51.00% | 51.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 94.69% | 94.69% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 0.00% Ddor Novi Sad |
100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% UnipolRe Dac |
100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% UnipolSai Nederland Bv in Liquidatie |
100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 63.85% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 36.15% UnipolSai Finance SpA |
100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 70.00% UnipolService SpA |
70.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% Casa di Cura Villa Donatello - SpA |
100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 95.90% | 99.89% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 0.25% UniSalute SpA |
99.89% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 3.00% Compagnia Assicuratrice Linear SpA |
99.89% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 0.10% Unisalute Servizi Srl |
99.89% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 0.10% Arca Assicurazioni SpA |
99.89% | 0.00% | 100.00% |

| Name | Country of registered office |
Registered office |
Country of operations (5) |
Method (1) | Business activity (2) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UnipolAssistance Scrl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| UnipolAssistance Scrl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 11 | |
| Gruppo UNA SpA | 086 Italy |
Milan | G | 11 | |
| Consorzio Castello | 086 Italy |
Florence | G | 10 | |
| Ital H&R Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| Marina di Loano SpA | 086 Italy |
Loano (SV) | G | 10 | |
| Meridiano Secondo Srl | 086 Italy |
Turin | G | 10 | |
| Nuove Iniziative Toscane - Societa' a Responsabilita' Limitata | 086 Italy |
Florence | G | 10 | |
| Tikal R.E. Fund | 086 Italy |
# | G | 10 | |
| Athens R.E. Fund | 086 Italy |
# | G | 10 | |
| UnipolTech SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| Leithà Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| UniAssiTeam Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| Fondo Emporion | 086 Italy |
# | G | 10 | |
| Fondo Landev | 086 Italy |
# | G | 10 | |
| UnipolRental SpA | 086 Italy |
Reggio Emilia | G | 11 | |
| Immobiliare C.S. Srl | 086 Italy |
Reggio Emilia | G | 10 | |
| Fondo Oikos | 086 Italy |
# | G | 10 | |
| Cambiomarcia Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| UnipolPay SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| BeRebel SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| Nuove Terme Petriolo Srl | 086 Italy |
Rome | G | 11 | |
| I.Car Srl | 086 Italy |
Zola Pedrosa (BO) | G | 11 | |
| Muriana Manuela Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| UnipolHome SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| WelBee SpA | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| Tantosvago Srl | 086 Italy |
Milan | G | 11 | |
| Anton Maria Valsalva Srl | 086 Italy |
Imola (BO) | G | 11 | |
| Unicasa Italia SpA | 086 Italy |
Milan | G | 11 | |
| Gratia et Salus Srl | 086 Italy |
Bologna | G | 11 | |
| DaVinci Healthcare Srl | 086 Italy |
Milan | G | 11 |
(1) Consolidation method: G=on a line-by-line basis; P=proportional=P; U=on a line-by-line basis as per unitary management.
(2) 1=Italyn insurers; 2=EU insurers; 3=non-EU insurers; 4=insurance holdings; 4.1=mixed financial holding companies; 5=EU reinsurers; 6=non-EU reinsurers; 7=banks; 8=asset management companies; 9=other holdings; 10=real estate companies; 11=other.
(3) The product of investment relations concerning all companies which, positioned in an investment chain, may be between the company responsible for the consolidated financial statements and the company in question. If the latter is a direct investee of multiple subsidiaries, add together the individual products first.
(4) Total % availability of votes at ordinary general meetings if different from the direct or indirect investment.
(5) This disclosure is required only if the country of operations is different from the country of the registered office.

| % Direct holding | % Indirect holding | % Total participating interest (3) |
% Votes available at ordinary General Meetings (4) |
% Consolidation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.15% Incontra Assicurazioni SpA |
99.89% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 0.50% UnipolRental SpA |
99.89% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 99.57% Nuove Iniziative Toscane - Societa' a Responsabilita' Limitata |
99.57% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 89.59% | 89.59% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 65.00% UnipolSai Finance SpA |
65.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% Athens R.E. Fund |
89.59% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 75.00% | 75.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% Centri Medici Dyadea Srl |
100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 70.00% UnipolHome SpA |
70.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 100.00% Centri Medici Dyadea Srl |
100.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% | |
| 66.00% | 66.00% | 0.00% | 100.00% |

Amounts in €m
| Name | Country of registered office |
Registered office |
Country of operations (5) |
Business activity (1) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assicoop Toscana SpA | 086 | Italy | Siena | 11 | |
| Pegaso Finanziaria SpA | 086 | Italy | Bologna | 9 | |
| Fondazione Unipolis | 086 | Italy | Bologna | 11 | |
| Uci - Ufficio Centrale Italiano | 086 | Italy | Milan | 11 | |
| Uci - Ufficio Centrale Italyno | 086 | Italy | Milan | 11 | |
| Uci - Ufficio Centrale Italyno | 086 | Italy | Milan | 11 | |
| Uci - Ufficio Centrale Italyno | 086 | Italy | Milan | 11 | |
| Uci - Ufficio Centrale Italyno | 086 | Italy | Milan | 11 | |
| SCS Azioninnova SpA | 086 | Italy | Bologna | 11 | |
| Garibaldi Sca | 092 | Luxembourg | Luxembourg | 11 | |
| Isola Sca | 092 | Luxembourg | Luxembourg | 11 | |
| Fin.Priv. Srl | 086 | Italy | Milan | 11 | |
| UnipolSai Investimenti Sgr SpA | 086 | Italy | Turin | 8 | |
| Ddor Auto - Limited Liability Company | 289 | Serbia | Novi Sad (Serbia) | 3 | |
| Funivie del Piccolo San Bernardo SpA | 086 | Italy | La Thuile (AO) | 11 | |
| Ddor Garant | 289 | Serbia | Belgrad (Serbia) | 11 | |
| Ddor Garant | 289 | Serbia | Belgrad (Serbia) | 11 | |
| Borsetto Srl | 086 | Italy | Turin | 10 | |
| Golf Club Poggio dei Medici Spa Societa' Dilettantistica Sportiva | 086 | Italy | San Piero (FI) | 11 | |
| UnipolReC SpA | 086 | Italy | Bologna | 11 | |
| Consorzio tra Proprietari Centro Commerciale Porta Marcolfa | 086 | Italy | S. Giovanni in Persiceto (BO) | 11 | |
| Assicoop Bologna Metropolitana SpA | 086 | Italy | Bologna | 11 | |
| Hotel Villaggio Citta' del Mare SpA in Liquidazione | 086 | Italy | Modena | 11 | |
| Assicoop Modena & Ferrara SpA | 086 | Italy | Modena | 11 | |
| Assicoop Romagna Futura SpA | 086 | Italy | Ravenna | 11 | |
| Assicoop Emilia Nord Srl | 086 | Italy | Parma | 11 | |
| Promorest Srl | 086 | Italy | Castenaso (BO) | 11 |
(1) 1=Italyn insurers; 2=EU insurers; 3=non-EU insurers; 4=insurance holdings; 4.1=mixed financial holding companies; 5=EU reinsurers; 6=non-EU reinsurers; 7=banks; 8=asset management companies; 9=other holdings; 10=real estate companies; 11=other
(2) a=subsidiaries (IFRS10); b= associates (IAS28); c=joint ventures (IFRS11)
(3) the product of investment relations concerning all companies which, positioned in an investment chain, may be between the company responsible for the consolidated financial statements and the company in question. If the latter is a direct investee of multiple subsidiaries, add together the individual products first
(4) total % availability of votes at ordinary general meetings if different from the direct or indirect investment
(5) this disclosure is required only if the country of operations is different from the country of the registered office
. .

| Summary income and financial position data | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dividends | |||||||
| Shareholders' | Profit (loss) for the | distributed to non | Gross premiums | ||||
| Total assets | Investments Technical provisions | Financial liabilities | equity | year | controlling interests | written | |
| 12,482.0 | 12,132.4 | 9,758.6 | 2,240.6 | 380.4 | 259.8 | 18.4 | 1,229.8 |
| Type (2) |
% Direct holding | % Indirect holding | % Total participating interest (3) |
% Votes available at ordinary General Meetings (4) |
Carrying amount (€m) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| b | 49.77% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 49.77% | 2.9 | ||
| b | 45.00% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 45.00% | 5.5 | ||
| a | 100.00% | 100.00% | 0.3 | |||
| b | 38.03% | 38.12% | 0.2 | |||
| b | 0.00% | Compagnia Assicuratrice Linear SpA | 38.12% | 0.2 | ||
| b | 0.01% | Arca Assicurazioni SpA | 38.12% | 0.2 | ||
| b | 0.002% | Incontra Assicurazioni SpA | 38.12% | 0.2 | ||
| b | 0.092% | Siat-Societa' Italiana Assicurazioni e Riassicurazioni - per Azioni | 38.12% | 0.2 | ||
| b | 42.85% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 42.85% | 3.1 | ||
| b | 32.00% | 32.00% | ||||
| b | 29.56% | 29.56% | ||||
| b | 28.57% | 28.57% | 36.9 | |||
| b | 49.00% | 49.00% | 13.3 | |||
| a | 100.00% | Ddor Novi Sad | 100.00% | 0.0 | ||
| b | 23.55% | 23.55% | 2.7 | |||
| b | 32.46% | Ddor Novi Sad | 40.00% | 0.6 | ||
| b | 7.54% | Ddor Re | 40.00% | 0.6 | ||
| b | 44.93% | 44.93% | 0.4 | |||
| b | 40.32% | Athens R.E. Fund | 36.13% | 0.9 | ||
| b | 14.76% | 14.76% | 57.4 | |||
| b | 68.46% | Fondo Emporion | 68.46% | 0.0 | ||
| b | 49.19% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 49.19% | 9.6 | ||
| b | 49.00% | 49.00% | ||||
| b | 43.75% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 43.75% | 8.7 | ||
| b | 50.00% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 50.00% | 7.6 | ||
| b | 50.00% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 50.00% | 7.0 | ||
| b | 49.92% | UnipolSai Finance SpA | 49.92% | 5.0 |

| Non-Life business | Life business | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | ||
| 1 | INTANGIBLE ASSETS | 858.1 | 681.4 | 261.6 | 264.3 | |
| 2 | PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT | 1,916.6 | 1,565.6 | 73.7 | 73.8 | |
| 3 | TECHNICAL PROVISIONS - REINSURERS' SHARE | 738.5 | 808.1 | 23.1 | 23.2 | |
| 4 | INVESTMENTS | 13,447.2 | 15,417.2 | 42,685.8 | 49,673.2 | |
| 4.1 | Investment property | 472.3 | 480.7 | 4.0 | 4.1 | |
| 4.2 | Investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | 87.3 | 97.4 | 24.6 | 29.9 | |
| 4.3 | Held-to-maturity investments | 46.3 | 47.5 | 319.4 | 319.2 | |
| 4.4 | Loans and receivables | 2,240.4 | 2,449.6 | 2,563.7 | 2,735.8 | |
| 4.5 | Available-for-sale financial assets | 10,313.0 | 12,181.0 | 30,940.7 | 38,170.8 | |
| 4.6 | Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 288.0 | 161.0 | 8,833.4 | 8,413.3 | |
| 5 | SUNDRY RECEIVABLES | 2,559.0 | 2,545.5 | 834.2 | 835.8 | |
| 6 | OTHER ASSETS | 1,812.5 | 818.7 | 1,075.8 | 95.0 | |
| 6.1 | Deferred acquisition costs | 36.6 | 37.1 | 65.5 | 63.1 | |
| 6.2 | Other assets | 1,775.9 | 781.6 | 1,010.2 | 32.0 | |
| 7 | CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS | 401.9 | 240.3 | 304.7 | 567.9 | |
| TOTAL ASSETS | 21,733.8 | 22,076.8 | 45,258.9 | 51,533.3 | ||
| 1 | SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY | 2,656.0 | 3,787.4 | 216.2 | 1,657.1 | |
| 2 | PROVISIONS | 544.6 | 396.4 | 27.8 | 6.9 | |
| 3 | TECHNICAL PROVISIONS | 14,537.5 | 14,714.9 | 37,228.7 | 42,413.4 | |
| 4 | FINANCIAL LIABILITIES | 1,590.5 | 1,428.9 | 7,461.6 | 6,943.2 | |
| 4.1 | Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss | 16.9 | 80.3 | 6,822.2 | 6,276.1 | |
| 4.2 | Other financial liabilities | 1,573.6 | 1,348.6 | 639.5 | 667.1 | |
| 5 | PAYABLES | 1,169.4 | 922.1 | 187.9 | 171.6 | |
| 6 | OTHER LIABILITIES | 1,235.7 | 827.1 | 136.7 | 341.2 | |
| TOTAL LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY | 21,733.8 | 22,076.8 | 45,258.9 | 51,533.3 |

| Other businesses | Real Estate Inter-segment eliminations |
Total | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | ||
| 23.4 | 17.2 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1,143.1 | 962.9 | ||||
| 242.2 | 217.3 | 551.5 | 574.3 | 2,784.0 | 2,431.0 | ||||
| 761.6 | 831.3 | ||||||||
| 314.9 | 309.3 | 1,926.1 | 1,753.5 | (188.3) | (199.7) | 58,185.7 | 66,953.5 | ||
| 0.7 | 23.1 | 1,882.1 | 1,647.9 | 2,359.1 | 2,155.8 | ||||
| 49.5 | 48.2 | 0.9 | 0.9 | 162.3 | 176.5 | ||||
| 365.7 | 366.7 | ||||||||
| 236.2 | 208.5 | 42.2 | 50.9 | (188.3) | (199.7) | 4,894.1 | 5,245.1 | ||
| 28.5 | 29.4 | 0.8 | 53.8 | 41,283.0 | 50,435.0 | ||||
| 0.0 | 0.1 | 9,121.4 | 8,574.3 | ||||||
| 81.0 | 60.6 | 36.6 | 31.4 | (39.2) | (48.5) | 3,471.6 | 3,424.9 | ||
| 16.5 | 11.0 | 143.7 | 177.4 | (9.2) | (131.4) | 3,039.2 | 970.8 | ||
| 102.1 | 100.1 | ||||||||
| 16.5 | 11.0 | 143.7 | 177.4 | (9.2) | (131.4) | 2,937.1 | 870.7 | ||
| 42.7 | 54.3 | 76.5 | 22.3 | 825.8 | 884.8 | ||||
| 720.6 | 669.7 | 2,734.5 | 2,559.0 | (236.7) | (379.6) | 70,211.0 | 76,459.3 | ||
| 521.6 | 519.4 | 2,418.8 | 2,270.0 | 5,812.6 | 8,233.8 | ||||
| 14.9 | 13.6 | 8.6 | 5.1 | 595.9 | 422.0 | ||||
| 51,766.2 | 57,128.3 | ||||||||
| 56.4 | 37.0 | 221.6 | 201.7 | (188.1) | (199.5) | 9,142.0 | 8,411.2 | ||
| 6,839.1 | 6,356.4 | ||||||||
| 56.4 | 37.0 | 221.6 | 201.7 | (188.1) | (199.5) | 2,302.9 | 2,054.8 | ||
| 100.5 | 73.2 | 74.8 | 68.5 | (35.1) | (43.8) | 1,497.6 | 1,191.5 | ||
| 27.2 | 26.6 | 10.6 | 13.7 | (13.5) | (136.2) | 1,396.7 | 1,072.4 | ||
| 720.6 | 669.7 | 2,734.5 | 2,559.0 | (236.7) | (379.6) | 70,211.0 | 76,459.3 |

| Non-life business | Life business | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
| 1.1 | Net premiums | 7,874.7 | 7,780.4 | 3,490.8 | 4,098.2 |
| 1.1.1 | Gross premiums earned | 8,396.9 | 8,235.0 | 3,510.0 | 4,114.1 |
| 1.1.2 | Earned premiums ceded to reinsurers | (522.2) | (454.6) | (19.2) | (16.0) |
| 1.2 | Commission income | 3.8 | 4.4 | 45.2 | 41.1 |
| 1.3 | Gains and losses on financial instruments at fair value through profit or loss | 314.6 | 165.1 | (627.5) | 23.6 |
| 1.4 | Gains on investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | 4.2 | 2.8 | 13.5 | 4.4 |
| 1.5 | Gains on other financial instruments and investment property | 693.6 | 625.5 | 1,565.2 | 1,180.0 |
| 1.6 | Other revenue | 866.9 | 739.8 | 55.4 | 62.9 |
| TOTAL REVENUE AND INCOME | 9,757.8 | 9,318.0 | 4,542.6 | 5,410.2 | |
| 2.1 | Net charges relating to claims | (5,030.8) | (5,095.1) | (3,569.3) | (4,714.0) |
| 2.1.1 | Amounts paid and changes in technical provisions | (5,204.2) | (5,269.6) | (3,578.6) | (4,722.5) |
| 2.1.2 | Reinsurers' share | 173.4 | 174.5 | 9.3 | 8.5 |
| 2.2 | Commission expenses | (54.6) | (5.8) | (33.9) | (30.5) |
| 2.3 | Losses on investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures | (6.3) | (1.1) | (1.6) | (0.3) |
| 2.4 | Losses on other financial instruments and investment property | (554.1) | (334.0) | (222.5) | (63.9) |
| 2.5 | Operating expenses | (2,306.0) | (2,222.0) | (266.5) | (254.4) |
| 2.6 | Other costs | (1,095.1) | (907.6) | (174.4) | (129.5) |
| 2 | TOTAL COSTS AND EXPENSES | (9,047.0) | (8,565.7) | (4,268.1) | (5,192.7) |
| PRE-TAX PROFIT (LOSS) FOR THE YEAR | 710.8 | 752.3 | 274.5 | 217.5 |

| Other businesses | Real Estate | Intersegment eliminations | Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| 11,365.6 | 11,878.5 | ||||||
| 11,906.9 | 12,349.1 | ||||||
| (541.3) | (470.6) | ||||||
| 0.0 | (0.0) | (0.1) | 49.0 | 45.3 | |||
| 0.0 | 0.1 | (312.9) | 188.8 | ||||
| 5.0 | 5.8 | 22.7 | 13.0 | ||||
| 4.5 | 3.8 | 79.8 | 68.3 | (18.2) | (17.4) | 2,325.0 | 1,860.2 |
| 262.1 | 154.8 | 41.1 | 36.9 | (71.1) | (59.4) | 1,154.4 | 935.1 |
| 271.6 | 164.5 | 121.0 | 105.2 | (89.2) | (76.9) | 14,603.8 | 14,921.0 |
| (8,600.1) | (9,809.2) | ||||||
| (8,782.8) | (9,992.1) | ||||||
| 182.7 | 183.0 | ||||||
| (0.0) | (0.0) | (0.0) | (0.0) | (88.6) | (36.4) | ||
| (0.1) | (0.1) | (8.0) | (1.6) | ||||
| (11.1) | (1.1) | (86.5) | (96.8) | 3.3 | 3.3 | (870.9) | (492.5) |
| (171.7) | (111.0) | (38.2) | (34.9) | 13.6 | 11.4 | (2,768.8) | (2,611.0) |
| (106.9) | (63.5) | (43.3) | (37.1) | 72.4 | 62.2 | (1,347.4) | (1,075.5) |
| (289.8) | (175.8) | (168.1) | (168.8) | 89.2 | 76.9 | (13,683.8) | (14,026.1) |
| (18.3) | (11.3) | (47.1) | (63.6) | 920.0 | 894.9 |

| Amounts in €m | At cost | At restated value or at fair value | Total carrying amount | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Investment property | 2,359.1 | 2,359.1 | ||
| Other property | 1,492.9 | 1,492.9 | ||
| Other tangible assets | 1,291.2 | 1,291.2 | ||
| Other intangible assets | 541.1 | 541.1 |
. .
| Investments held to maturity | Loans and receivables | Available-for-sale financial assets |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| Equity instruments and derivatives at cost | 4.5 | 4.4 | ||||
| Equity instruments at fair value | 2,182.0 | 1,686.4 | ||||
| listed securities | 1,887.1 | 1,484.9 | ||||
| Debt securities | 365.7 | 366.7 | 3,947.6 | 4,018.9 | 35,022.4 | 44,777.2 |
| listed securities | 365.7 | 366.7 | 34,650.7 | 44,315.2 | ||
| UCITS units | 4,074.0 | 3,967.0 | ||||
| Loans and receivables from bank customers | ||||||
| Interbank loans and receivables | ||||||
| Deposits with ceding companies | 113.9 | 105.8 | ||||
| Financial receivables on insurance contracts | ||||||
| Other loans and receivables | 832.6 | 1,120.4 | ||||
| Non-hedging derivatives | ||||||
| Hedging derivatives | ||||||
| Other financial investments | ||||||
| Total | 365.7 | 366.7 | 4,894.1 | 5,245.1 | 41,283.0 | 50,435.0 |

| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Held-for-trading financial assets | Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | Total carrying amount |
||||
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
| 4.5 | 4.4 | |||||
| 2.9 | 0.9 | 131.7 | 155.0 | 2,316.7 | 1,842.2 | |
| 2.9 | 0.9 | 131.7 | 155.0 | 2,021.7 | 1,640.8 | |
| 50.3 | 80.7 | 4,060.6 | 3,206.4 | 43,446.7 | 52,450.0 | |
| 50.3 | 80.5 | 4,060.6 | 3,206.1 | 39,127.3 | 47,968.6 | |
| 2.0 | 1.9 | 4,316.2 | 4,266.5 | 8,392.2 | 8,235.5 | |
| 113.9 | 105.8 | |||||
| 277.0 | 716.6 | 277.0 | 716.6 | |||
| 832.6 | 1,120.4 | |||||
| 98.8 | 66.3 | 98.8 | 66.3 | |||
| 181.9 | 80.0 | 181.9 | 80.0 | |||
| 335.9 | 229.8 | 8,785.5 | 8,344.5 | 55,664.3 | 64,621.2 |
. .

| Benefits linked to investment funds and market indices |
Benefits linked to pension fund management |
Total | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| Recognised assets | 4,093.5 | 3,992.6 | 4,692.0 | 4,351.9 | 8,785.5 | 8,344.5 |
| Intragroup assets * | ||||||
| Total assets | 4,093.5 | 3,992.6 | 4,692.0 | 4,351.9 | 8,785.5 | 8,344.5 |
| Recognised financial liabilities | 3,782.9 | 3,681.9 | 2,886.3 | 2,217.2 | 6,669.1 | 5,899.2 |
| Recognised technical provisions | 310.9 | 310.7 | 1,806.0 | 2,135.1 | 2,116.9 | 2,445.8 |
| Intragroup liabilities * | ||||||
| Total liabilities | 4,093.8 | 3,992.6 | 4,692.2 | 4,352.3 | 8,786.1 | 8,344.9 |
* Assets and liabilities eliminated on consolidation.

| Direct business | Non Direct business | Total carrying amount | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| Non-Life provisions | 705.6 | 760.5 | 32.9 | 47.6 | 738.5 | 808.1 |
| Premium provisions | 132.8 | 220.8 | 1.3 | 3.3 | 134.1 | 224.1 |
| Claims provision | 572.8 | 539.7 | 31.6 | 44.4 | 604.4 | 584.0 |
| Other provisions | ||||||
| Life provisions | 21.9 | 21.7 | 1.2 | 1.5 | 23.1 | 23.2 |
| Provision for amounts payable | 6.4 | 6.0 | 0.0 | 0.1 | 6.4 | 6.0 |
| Mathematical provisions | 15.5 | 15.7 | 1.2 | 1.4 | 16.7 | 17.1 |
| Technical provisions where the investment risk is borne by policyholders and provisions arising from pension fund management |
||||||
| Other provisions | ||||||
| Total technical provisions - reinsurers' share | 727.5 | 782.2 | 34.1 | 49.1 | 761.6 | 831.3 |
| Direct business | Non Direct business | Total carrying amount | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| Non-Life provisions | 13,674.9 | 13,886.7 | 862.6 | 828.2 | 14,537.5 | 14,714.9 |
| Premium provision | 3,060.8 | 3,282.8 | 88.9 | 92.6 | 3,149.7 | 3,375.5 |
| Claims provision | 10,585.1 | 10,577.1 | 773.7 | 735.5 | 11,358.8 | 11,312.6 |
| Other provisions | 29.0 | 26.8 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 29.1 | 26.9 |
| including provisions allocated as a result of the liabilityadequacy test |
||||||
| Life provisions | 37,225.4 | 42,409.9 | 3.2 | 3.5 | 37,228.7 | 42,413.4 |
| Provision for amounts payable | 323.0 | 335.5 | 1.5 | 1.6 | 324.4 | 337.1 |
| Mathematical provisions | 36,825.9 | 35,785.5 | 1.8 | 1.9 | 36,827.7 | 35,787.4 |
| Technical provisions where the investment risk is borne by policyholders and provisions arising from pension fund management |
2,116.9 | 2,445.8 | 2,116.9 | 2,445.8 | ||
| Other provisions | (2,040.4) | 3,843.1 | (2,040.4) | 3,843.1 | ||
| including provisions allocated as a result of the liability adequacy test |
||||||
| including deferred liabilities to policyholders | (2,195.1) | 3,694.8 | (2,195.1) | 3,694.8 | ||
| Total technical provisions | 50,900.4 | 56,296.6 | 865.8 | 831.7 | 51,766.2 | 57,128.3 |

| Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Held -for-trading financial liabilities |
Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
Other financial liabilities | Total carrying amount |
|||||
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| Equity instruments | ||||||||
| Subordinated liabilities | 1,367.2 | 1,446.1 | 1,367.2 | 1,446.1 | ||||
| Liabilities from financial contracts issued by insurance companies |
6,684.6 | 5,911.0 | 6,684.6 | 5,911.0 | ||||
| Arising from contracts where the investment risk is borne by policyholders |
3,794.9 | 3,693.8 | 3,794.9 | 3,693.8 | ||||
| Arising from pension fund management | 2,889.7 | 2,217.2 | 2,889.7 | 2,217.2 | ||||
| Arising from other contracts | ||||||||
| Deposits received from reinsurers | 131.9 | 130.5 | 131.9 | 130.5 | ||||
| Financial items payable on insurance contracts |
||||||||
| Debt securities issued | ||||||||
| Payables to bank customers | 0.7 | 0.7 | ||||||
| Interbank payables | ||||||||
| Other loans obtained | 802.0 | 478.1 | 802.0 | 478.1 | ||||
| Non-hedging derivatives | 2.7 | 38.5 | 2.7 | 38.5 | ||||
| Hedging derivatives | 151.8 | 406.9 | 151.8 | 406.9 | ||||
| Sundry financial liabilities | 1.2 | 0.1 | 1.2 | 0.1 | ||||
| Total | 154.5 | 445.4 | 6,684.6 | 5,911.0 | 2,302.9 | 2,054.8 | 9,142.0 | 8,411.2 |
. .

.
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Gross amount | Reinsurers' share | Net amount | Gross amount | Reinsurers' share | Net amount |
| Non-Life business | ||||||
| NET PREMIUMS | 8,396.9 | (522.2) | 7,874.7 | 8,235.0 | (454.6) | 7,780.4 |
| a Written premiums | 8,502.3 | (524.2) | 7,978.2 | 8,214.3 | (463.2) | 7,751.1 |
| b Change in premium provision | (105.4) | 2.0 | (103.4) | 20.6 | 8.6 | 29.3 |
| NET CHARGES RELATING TO CLAIMS | (5,204.2) | 173.4 | (5,030.8) | (5,269.6) | 174.5 | (5,095.1) |
| a Amounts paid | (5,294.7) | 174.0 | (5,120.7) | (5,086.3) | 188.4 | (4,897.9) |
| b Change in claims provision | (89.6) | 28.2 | (61.4) | (318.4) | (5.1) | (323.5) |
| c Change in recoveries | 181.8 | (28.7) | 153.1 | 135.2 | (8.9) | 126.4 |
| d Change in other technical provisions | (1.8) | (1.8) | (0.1) | (0.1) | ||
| Life business | ||||||
| NET PREMIUMS | 3,510.0 | (19.2) | 3,490.8 | 4,114.1 | (16.0) | 4,098.2 |
| NET CHARGES RELATING TO CLAIMS | (3,578.6) | 9.3 | (3,569.3) | (4,722.5) | 8.5 | (4,714.0) |
| a Amounts paid | (2,993.5) | 9.0 | (2,984.5) | (3,177.5) | 11.8 | (3,165.7) |
| Change in provision for amounts b payable |
13.2 | 0.4 | 13.6 | 244.4 | (1.9) | 242.5 |
| c Change in mathematical provisions | (1,015.0) | (0.1) | (1,015.1) | (1,748.6) | (1.4) | (1,749.9) |
| Change in technical provisions where the investment risk is borne by d policyholders and arising from pension fund management |
373.9 | 373.9 | (28.6) | (28.6) | ||
| e Change in other technical provisions | 42.9 | (0.0) | 42.8 | (12.4) | 0.0 | (12.4) |

| Amounts in €m | Interest | Other income | Other charges | Realised gains | Realised losses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balance on investments | 1,566.4 | 512.4 | (226.2) | 640.9 | (795.8) |
| a Arising from investment property |
84.2 | (25.2) | 2.4 | (6.4) | |
| b Arising from investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures |
22.7 | (8.0) | |||
| c Arising from held to maturity investments |
15.9 | (0.0) | |||
| d Arising from loans and receivables |
176.2 | (0.0) | 35.4 | (34.5) | |
| e Arising from available-for-sale financial assets |
1,292.3 | 261.1 | (4.4) | 428.9 | (371.6) |
| f Arising from held-for-trading financial assets |
2.9 | 49.9 | (113.5) | 162.0 | (214.1) |
| g Arising from financial assets at fair value through profit or loss |
79.1 | 94.5 | (75.2) | 12.2 | (169.1) |
| Balance on sundry receivables | 23.1 | ||||
| Balance on cash and cash equivalents | 4.7 | (0.0) | |||
| Balance on financial liabilities | (78.8) | 373.9 | (1.9) | 0.0 | |
| a Arising from held-for-trading financial liabilities |
0.0 | ||||
| b Arising from financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
373.9 | (0.0) | |||
| c Arising from financial liabilities |
(78.8) | (1.8) | |||
| Balance on payables | (1.1) | (0.1) | |||
| Total | 1,514.3 | 886.3 | (228.2) | 641.0 | (795.8) |

| Total Unrealised gains Unrealised losses |
unrealised | Total gains and losses |
Total gains and losses |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total realised gains and losses |
Unrealised capital gains |
Write-backs | Unrealised capital losses |
Impairment | gains and losses |
31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| 1,697.7 | 232.4 | (1,234.6) | (34.3) | (1,036.5) | 661.2 | 1,943.3 | |
| 54.9 | (53.8) | (22.7) | (76.5) | (21.5) | 24.8 | ||
| 14.7 | 14.7 | 11.4 | |||||
| 15.9 | 15.9 | 17.3 | |||||
| 177.0 | 177.0 | 132.4 | |||||
| 1,606.4 | 0.1 | (256.1) | (11.7) | (267.6) | 1,338.7 | 1,276.2 | |
| (112.7) | 205.4 | (31.0) | 174.5 | 61.8 | 116.5 | ||
| (58.6) | 26.9 | (893.7) | (866.8) | (925.4) | 364.7 | ||
| 23.1 | 23.1 | 4.0 | |||||
| 4.7 | 4.7 | 0.8 | |||||
| 293.3 | 177.4 | (2.5) | 174.9 | 468.2 | (378.7) | ||
| 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.1 | |||||
| 373.8 | 176.8 | 176.8 | 550.7 | (292.5) | |||
| (80.6) | 0.6 | (2.5) | (1.9) | (82.6) | (86.2) | ||
| (1.2) | (1.2) | (1.5) | |||||
| 2,017.5 | 409.8 | (1,237.1) | (34.3) | (861.6) | 1,155.9 | 1,567.9 |
. .
. .
| Valori in milioni di euro | Non-Life business | Life business | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
| Gross commissions and other acquisition costs | (1,948.5) | (1,885.5) | (122.4) | (118.2) | |
| a Acquisition commissions | (1,445.8) | (1,364.5) | (76.1) | (72.1) | |
| b Other acquisition costs | (341.9) | (362.7) | (42.7) | (42.7) | |
| c Change in deferred acquisition costs | 1.0 | (1.2) | 2.5 | 2.7 | |
| d Collection commissions | (161.9) | (157.1) | (6.0) | (6.2) | |
| Commissions and profit-sharing received from reinsurers | 179.9 | 144.8 | 4.2 | 2.3 | |
| Investment management expenses | (49.4) | (51.7) | (46.6) | (47.7) | |
| Other administrative expenses | (488.0) | (429.6) | (101.7) | (90.8) | |
| Total | (2,306.0) | (2,222.0) | (266.5) | (254.4) |

| Amounts allocated | Adjustments from reclassification to the Income Statement adjustments |
||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | |
| Other income items not reclassified to profit or loss | 11.0 | (0.8) | |||
| Reserve deriving from changes in the shareholders' equity of the investees | 0.0 | (0.0) | |||
| Revaluation reserve for intangible assets | 0.1 | ||||
| Revaluation reserve for property, plant and equipment | |||||
| Gains or losses on non-current assets or disposal groups held for sale | |||||
| Actuarial gains and losses and adjustments relating to defined benefit plans | 10.9 | 0.4 | |||
| Other items | (1.3) | ||||
| Other income items reclassified to profit or loss | (1,934.0) | (195.9) | (522.8) | 151.7 | |
| Reserve for foreign currency translation differences | 0.2 | (0.1) | |||
| Gains or losses on available-for-sale financial assets | (1,945.5) | (163.8) | (522.8) | 151.7 | |
| Gains or losses on cash flow hedges | 16.7 | (42.1) | |||
| Gains or losses on hedges of a net investment in foreign operations | |||||
| Reserve deriving from changes in the shareholders' equity of investees | (5.4) | 10.1 | |||
| Gains or losses on non-current assets or disposal groups held for sale | |||||
| Other items | |||||
| TOTAL OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (EXPENSE) | (1,922.9) | (196.7) | (522.8) | 151.7 | |

| Other changes | Total changes | Income tax | Balance | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| 11.0 | (0.8) | (4.6) | (0.5) | (19.2) | (30.2) | ||
| 0.0 | (0.0) | (0.0) | 0.0 | 0.7 | 0.7 | ||
| 0.1 | 0.1 | ||||||
| 10.9 | 0.4 | (4.6) | (0.5) | (19.9) | (30.9) | ||
| (1.3) | |||||||
| (2,456.7) | (44.2) | 1,058.9 | 17.9 | (1,152.5) | 1,304.2 | ||
| 0.2 | (0.1) | 4.1 | 3.9 | ||||
| (2,468.2) | (12.1) | 1,066.3 | (0.5) | (1,164.1) | 1,304.1 | ||
| 16.7 | (42.1) | (7.5) | 18.8 | (9.4) | (26.1) | ||
| (5.4) | 10.1 | (0.4) | 16.9 | 22.3 | |||
| (2,445.7) | (45.0) | 1,054.3 | 16.9 | (1,171.7) | 1,274.0 |

| Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 31/12/2021 31/12/2022 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 31/12/2021 | 31/12/202 | 31/12/2021 | |||||
| Assets and liabilities at fair value on a recurring basis | 2 | ||||||||
| Available-for-sale financial assets | 37,444.9 | 47,316.8 | 377.8 | 403.6 | 3,460.3 | 2,714.7 | 41,283.0 | 50,435.0 | |
| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss |
Held for trading financial assets | 61.6 | 95.8 | 215.4 | 130.2 | 58.9 | 3.8 | 335.9 | 229.8 |
| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss | 8,692.5 | 8,292.7 | 93.0 | 51.8 | 8,785.5 | 8,344.5 | |||
| Investment property | |||||||||
| Property, plant and equipment | |||||||||
| Intangible assets | |||||||||
| Total assets at fair value on a recurring basis | 46,199.0 | 55,705.3 | 593.2 | 533.8 | 3,612.2 | 2,770.2 | 50,404.5 | 59,009.3 | |
| Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
Held for trading financial liabilities | 7.1 | 13.0 | 142.3 | 401.6 | 5.1 | 30.9 | 154.5 | 445.4 |
| Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss | 6,684.6 | 5,911.0 | 6,684.6 | 5,911.0 | |||||
| Total liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis | 7.1 | 13.0 | 142.3 | 401.6 | 6,689.7 | 5,941.9 | 6,839.1 | 6,356.4 | |
| Assets and liabilities at fair value on a non-recurring basis | |||||||||
| Non-current assets or assets of disposal groups held for sale | |||||||||
| Liabilities associated with disposal groups |

| Financial assets at fair value through profit or loss |
Financial liabilities at fair value through profit or loss |
||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amounts in €m | Available-for sale financial assets |
held for trading financial assets |
at fair value through profit or loss |
Investment property |
Property, plant and equipment |
Intangible assets |
held for trading financial liabilities |
at fair value through profit or loss |
|
| Opening balance | 2,714.7 | 3.8 | 51.8 | 30.9 | 5,911.0 | ||||
| Acquisitions/Issues | 766.8 | 0.0 | 55.7 | ||||||
| Sales/Repurchases | (1.9) | (0.0) | (12.9) | ||||||
| Repayments | (182.8) | (0.2) | (0.2) | (3.9) | |||||
| Gains or losses recognised through profit or loss |
0.3 | 2.1 | 1.7 | ||||||
| - of which unrealised gains/losses | 0.3 | 2.1 | 1.7 | ||||||
| Gains or losses recognised in the statement of other comprehensive income |
163.6 | ||||||||
| Transfers to level 3 | |||||||||
| Transfers to other levels | |||||||||
| Other changes | (0.0) | 54.9 | (3.5) | (23.6) | 773.6 | ||||
| Closing balance | 3,460.3 | 58.9 | 93.0 | 5.1 | 6,684.6 |

| Carrying amount | Fair value | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||
| Amounts in €m | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 | 31/12/2022 | 31/12/2021 |
| Assets | ||||||||||
| Held-to-maturity investments | 365.7 | 366.7 | 344.2 | 343.8 | 21.6 | 22.9 | 365.7 | 366.7 | ||
| Loans and receivables | 4,894.1 | 5,245.1 | 2,897.3 | 3,336.8 | 1,463.9 | 1,908.4 | 4,361.2 | 5,245.1 | ||
| Investments in subsidiaries, associates and interests in joint ventures |
162.3 | 176.5 | 162.3 | 176.5 | 162.3 | 176.5 | ||||
| Investment property | 2,359.1 | 2,155.8 | 2,748.6 | 2,475.5 | 2,748.6 | 2,475.5 | ||||
| Property, plant and equipment | 2,784.0 | 2,431.0 | 3,004.2 | 2,580.1 | 3,004.2 | 2,580.1 | ||||
| Total assets | 10,565.3 | 10,375.2 | 344.2 | 343.8 | 2,918.9 | 3,359.7 | 7,378.9 | 7,140.4 | 10,642.0 | 10,843.9 |
| Liabilities | ||||||||||
| Other financial liabilities | 2,302.9 | 2,054.8 | 1,779.3 | 2,087.8 | 161.2 | 163.4 | 1,940.4 | 2,251.2 |
.




BIANOC bianco


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6.Summary of fees for the
bianco


| Amounts in €k | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Type of services | Provider of the service | Recipient | Fees (*) |
| Legally-required audit | EY SpA | UnipolSai SpA | 1,391 |
| Attestation services | EY SpA | UnipolSai SpA | 431 |
| Other professional services | EY SpA | UnipolSai SpA | 250 |
| Other professional services | EY Advisory SpA | UnipolSai SpA | 125 |
| Total UnipolSai | 2,197 | ||
| Legally-required audit | EY SpA | Subsidiaries | 749 |
| Legally-required audit | Ernst & Young Ireland Unlimited Company - Ireland | Subsidiaries | 230 |
| Legally-required audit | Ernst & Young DOO - Serbia | Subsidiaries | 85 |
| Legally-required audit | Ernst & Young Société Anonyme - Luxembourg | Subsidiaries | 9 |
| Legally-required audit | Ernst & Young Accountants LLP - Netherlands | Subsidiaries | 25 |
| Attestation services | EY SpA | Subsidiaries | 98 |
| Other professional services | EY SpA | Subsidiaries | 34 |
| Other professional services | Ernst & Young Ireland Unlimited Company - Ireland | Subsidiaries | 33 |
| Total subsidiaries | 1,264 | ||
| Grand total | 3,461 |
(*) fees do not include any non-deductible VAT nor charged back expenses
.


















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