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Aviva PLC Interim / Quarterly Report 2014

Aug 7, 2014

4708_ir_2014-08-07_0a46a773-7044-4673-9b6f-041ae2a2792d.html

Interim / Quarterly Report

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RNS Number : 4779O
Aviva PLC
07 August 2014

Part 3 of 5

Page 37

IFRS financial statements

In this section

  • Condensed consolidated financial statements
    • Condensed consolidated income statement (Page 38)
    • Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income (Page 39)
    • Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity (Page 40)
    • Condensed consolidated statement of financial position (Page 41)
    • Condensed consolidated statement of cash flows (Page 42)
  • Notes to the condensed consolidated financial statements
    • B1 Basis of preparation (Page 43)
    • B2 New standards, interpretations and amendments to published standards that have been adopted by the Group (Page 44)
    • B3 Exchange rates (Page 44)
    • B4 Subsidiaries (Page 45)
    • B5 Segmental information (Page 48)
    • B6 Tax (Page 60)
    • B7 Earnings per share (Page 62)
    • B8 Dividends and appropriations (Page 64)
    • B9 Insurance liabilities (Page 65)
    • B10 Liability for investment contracts (Page 67)
    • B11 Reinsurance assets (Page 68)
    • B12 Effect of changes in assumptions and estimates during the period (Page 68)
    • B13 Unallocated divisible surplus (Page 69)
    • B14 Borrowings (Page 69)
    • B15 Pension obligations and other provisions (Page 70)
    • B16 Related party transactions (Page 71)
    • B17 Fair value (Page 71)
    • B18 Risk management (Page 76)
    • B19 Cash and cash equivalents (Page 78)
    • B20 Contingent liabilities and other risk factors (Page 78)
  • Directors' responsibility statement (Page 79)
  • Independent review report to Aviva plc (Page 80)

Page 38

IFRS condensed consolidated financial statements

Condensed consolidated income statement

For the six month period ended 30 June 2014

Reviewed 6 months 2014 £m Reviewed 6 months 2013 £m Audited Full Year 2013 £m
Continuing operations Discontinued operations¹ Continuing operations
Income
Gross written premiums 11,366 11,451 1,103
Premiums ceded to reinsurers (805) (814) (66)
Premiums written net of reinsurance 10,561 10,637 1,037
Net change in provision for unearned premiums (158) (89) -
Net earned premiums 10,403 10,548 1,037
Fee and commission income 639 667 5
Net investment income 9,857 3,960 1,493
Share of profit/(loss) after tax of joint ventures and associates 80 (14) -
Profit on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates B4 51 180 91
Total Income 21,030 15,341 2,626
Expenses
Claims and benefits paid, net of recoveries from reinsurers (9,976) (11,458) (1,434)
Change in insurance liabilities, net of reinsurance B9aii (1,533) 1,909 (140)
Change in investment contract provisions (2,821) (1,961) (28)
Change in unallocated divisible surplus (2,576) 585 -
Fee and commission expense (1,739) (2,309) (335)
Other expenses (887) (1,207) (192)
Finance costs (264) (295) (10)
Total Expenses (19,796) (14,736) (2,139)
Profit before tax 1,234 605 487
Tax attributable to policyholders' returns B6 (93) 18 -
Profit before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 1,141 623 487
Tax expense B6 (371) (199) (117)
Less: tax attributable to policyholders' returns B6 93 (18) -
Tax attributable to shareholders' profits (278) (217) (117)
Profit after tax 863 406 370
Profit from discontinued operations¹ - 370 -
Profit for the period 863 776 2,151
Attributable to:
Equity shareholders of Aviva plc 755 693 2,008
Non-controlling interests 108 83 143
Profit for the period 863 776 2,151
Earnings per share B7
Basic (pence per share) 25.0p 22.8p 65.3p
Diluted (pence per share) 24.6p 22.5p 64.5p
Continuing operations - Basic (pence per share) 25.0p 10.2p 22.0p
Continuing operations - Diluted (pence per share) 24.6p 10.1p 21.8p

¹ Discontinued operations represents the results of the US life and related internal asset management businesses (US Life) up until the date of disposal (2 October 2013).

Page 39

Condensed consolidated statement of comprehensive income

For the six month period ended 30 June 2014

Reviewed 6 months 2014 £m Reviewed 6 months 2013 £m Audited Full year 2013 £m
Profit for the period from continuing operations 863 406 878
Profit for the period from discontinued operations¹ - 370 1,273
Total profit for the period 863 776 2,151
Other comprehensive income from continuing operations:
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to income statement
Investments classified as available for sale
Fair value gains/(losses) 32 (7) 19
Fair value gains/(losses) transferred to profit on disposals 2 (1) 1
Share of other comprehensive income of joint ventures and associates 8 (31) (37)
Foreign exchange rate movements (280) 358 (35)
Aggregate tax effect - shareholder tax on items that may be reclassified subsequently to the income statement (6) (17) (14)
Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to income statement
Owner occupied properties - fair value losses (1) - (2)
Remeasurements of pension schemes 387 (294) (674)
Aggregate tax effect - shareholder tax on items that will not be reclassified subsequently to income statement (67) 65 125
Other comprehensive income, net of tax from continuing operations 75 73 (617)
Other comprehensive income, net of tax from discontinued operations¹ - (206) (319)
Total other comprehensive income, net of tax 75 (133) (936)
Total comprehensive income for the period from continuing operations 938 479 261
Total comprehensive income for the period from discontinued operations¹ - 164 954
Total comprehensive income for the period 938 643 1,215
Attributable to:
Equity shareholders of Aviva plc 876 489 1,038
Non-controlling interests 62 154 177
938 643 1,215

¹ Discontinued operations represents the results of the US life and related internal asset management businesses (US Life) up until the date of disposal (2 October 2013).

Page 40

Condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity

For the six month period ended 30 June 2014

Reviewed 6 months 2014 £m Reviewed 6 months 2013 £m Audited Full year 2013 £m
Balance at 1 January 11,017 11,360 11,360
Profit for the period 863 776 2,151
Other comprehensive income 75 (133) (936)
Total comprehensive income for the period 938 643 1,215
Dividends and appropriations (302) (290) (538)
Capital contributions from non-controlling interests - - 1
Non-controlling interests share of dividends declared in the period (96) (75) (134)
Transfer to profit on disposal of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates (10) (157) (802)
Changes in non-controlling interests in subsidiaries (20) (147) (147)
Shares acquired by employee trusts - - (32)
Shares distributed by employee trusts 1 3 5
Reserves credit for equity compensation plans 21 23 37
Aggregate tax effect - shareholder tax 4 4 52
Balance at 30 June/31 December 11,553 11,364 11,017

Page 41

Condensed consolidated statement of financial position

As at 30 June 2014

Note Reviewed 30 June 2014 £m Restated¹ 30 June 2013 £m Restated¹ Audited 31 December 2013 £m
Assets
Goodwill 1,364 1,504 1,476
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets 965 1,095 1,068
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures 1,226 1,237 1,200
Interests in, and loans to, associates 362 265 267
Property and equipment 286 395 313
Investment property 8,647 9,832 9,451
Loans 22,967 24,225 23,879
Financial investments 197,607 193,470 194,027
Reinsurance assets B11 7,551 6,907 7,220
Deferred tax assets 112 234 244
Current tax assets 117 89 76
Receivables 7,526 8,477 7,476
Deferred acquisition costs and other assets 3,677 3,417 3,051
Prepayments and accrued income 2,721 2,826 2,635
Cash and cash equivalents 23,584 27,662 26,131
Assets of operations classified as held for sale B4 149 41,712 3,113
Total assets 278,861 323,347 281,627
Equity
Capital
Ordinary share capital 736 736 736
Preference share capital 200 200 200
936 936 936
Capital reserves
Share premium 1,165 1,165 1,165
Merger reserve 3,271 3,271 3,271
4,436 4,436 4,436
Shares held by employee trusts (11) (9) (31)
Other reserves 258 1,532 475
Retained earnings 3,138 1,581 2,348
Equity attributable to shareholders of Aviva plc 8,757 8,476 8,164
Direct capital instruments and fixed rate tier 1 notes 1,382 1,382 1,382
Non-controlling interests 1,414 1,506 1,471
Total equity 11,553 11,364 11,017
Liabilities
Gross insurance liabilities B9 110,980 113,060 110,555
Gross liabilities for investment contracts B10 115,563 113,285 116,058
Unallocated divisible surplus B13 8,923 6,569 6,713
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 9,463 12,340 10,362
Provisions B15 871 1,079 984
Deferred tax liabilities 624 551 563
Current tax liabilities 54 130 116
Borrowings 6,944 8,254 7,819
Payables and other financial liabilities 11,418 13,769 11,945
Other liabilities 2,329 1,826 2,472
Liabilities of operations classified as held for sale B4 139 41,120 3,023
Total liabilities 267,308 311,983 270,610
Total equity and liabilities 278,861 323,347 281,627

¹ The statement of financial position has been restated following the adoption of amendments to 'IAS 32: Financial Instruments: Presentation'. Refer to note B2 for further information. There is no impact on the total equity for any period presented as a result of this restatement.# Condensed consolidated statement of cash flows

For the six month period ended 30 June 2014

Note Reviewed 6 months 2014 £m Restated2 Reviewed 6 months 2013 £m Restated2 Audited Full year 2013 £m
Cash flows from operating activities
Cash (used in)/generated from continuing operations (1,257) 2,663 2,562
Tax paid (301) (215) (463)
Net cash (used in)/from operating activities - continuing operations (1,558) 2,448 2,099
Net cash from operating activities - discontinued operations1 - 105 1,919
Total net cash (used in)/from operating activities (1,558) 2,553 4,018
Cash flows from investing activities
Acquisitions of, and additions to, subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates, net of cash acquired (74) (29) (29)
Disposals of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates, net of cash transferred (41) 388 377
New loans to joint ventures and associates (41) (5) (6)
Repayment of loans to joint ventures 2 5 25
Net new loans to joint ventures and associates (39) - 19
Purchases of property and equipment (7) (36) (30)
Proceeds on sale of property and equipment 16 10 56
Other cash flow related to intangible assets 32 (28) (59)
Net cash (used in)/from investing activities - continuing operations (113) 305 334
Net cash used in investing activities - discontinued operations1 - - (1,588)
Total net cash (used in)/from investing activities (113) 305 (1,254)
Cash flows from financing activities
Treasury shares purchased for employee trusts - - (32)
New borrowings drawn down, net of expenses 992 1,042 2,201
Repayment of borrowings (1,486) (871) (2,441)
Net (repayment)/drawdown of borrowings (494) 171 (240)
Interest paid on borrowings (256) (292) (605)
Preference dividends paid (9) (9) (17)
Ordinary dividends paid (277) (264) (429)
Coupon payments on direct capital instruments and fixed rate tier 1 notes (16) (17) (92)
Capital contributions from non-controlling interests of subsidiaries - - 1
Dividends paid to non-controlling interests of subsidiaries (96) (75) (134)
Changes in controlling interest in subsidiary (6) - -
Net cash used in financing activities - continuing operations (1,154) (486) (1,548)
Net cash from financing activities - discontinued operations1 - 15 19
Total net cash used in financing activities (1,154) (471) (1,529)
Total net (decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents (2,825) 2,387 1,235
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January 25,989 24,564 24,564
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents (359) 674 190
Cash and cash equivalents at 30 June/31 December B1 22,805 27,625 25,989
  1. Discontinued operations represents the results of the US life and related internal asset management businesses (US Life) up until the date of disposal (2 October 2013).
  2. The statement of cash flows has been restated following the adoption of amendments to 'IAS 32: Financial Instruments: Presentation'. Refer to note B2 for further information.

The cash flows presented in this statement cover all the Group's activities and include flows from both policyholder and shareholder activities. Operating cash flows reflect the movement in both policyholder and shareholder controlled cash and cash equivalent balances. During the period the net operating cash outflow reflects a number of factors, including the level of premium income, payments of claims, creditors and surrenders and purchases and sales of operating assets including financial investments. It also includes changes in the size and value of consolidated cash investment funds and changes in the Group participation in these funds.

Page 43

B1 - Basis of preparation

The condensed consolidated financial statements for the six months to 30 June 2014 have been prepared in accordance with IAS 34, Interim Financial Reporting, as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and endorsed by the European Union (EU), and the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority.

The accounting policies applied in the condensed consolidated financial statements are the same as those applied in Aviva plc's 2013 Annual Report and Accounts, except for the adoption of new standards, interpretations and amendments to existing standards as detailed in Note B2.

The results for the six months to 30 June 2014 are unaudited but have been reviewed by the auditor, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. The interim results do not constitute statutory accounts as defined in Section 434 of the Companies Act 2006.

The results for the full year 2013 have been taken from the Group's 2013 Annual Report and Accounts and have been restated for the adoption of amendments to an existing accounting standard noted in Note B2. Therefore, these interim accounts should be read in conjunction with the 2013 Annual Report and Accounts that were prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board and endorsed by the European Union.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP reported on the 2013 financial statements and their report was unqualified and did not contain a Statement under section 498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006. The Group's 2013 Annual Report and Accounts has been filed with the Registrar of Companies.

After making enquiries, the directors have a reasonable expectation that the Company and the Group as a whole have adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. For this reason, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the interim financial statements.

Items included in the financial statements of each of the Group's entities are measured in the currency of the primary economic environment in which that entity operates (the 'functional currency'). The consolidated financial statements are stated in pounds sterling, which is the Company's functional and presentational currency. Unless otherwise noted, the amounts shown in the financial statements are in millions of pounds sterling (£m).

The long-term nature of much of the Group's operations means that, for management's decision-making and internal performance management, short-term realised and unrealised investment gains and losses are treated as non-operating items. As a result, the Group focuses on an operating profit measure that incorporates an expected return on investments supporting its long-term and non-long-term businesses. Operating profit for long-term business is based on expected investment returns on financial investments backing shareholder and policyholder funds over the reporting period, with allowance for the corresponding expected movements in liabilities. Variances between actual and expected investment returns, and the impact of changes in economic assumptions on liabilities, are disclosed separately outside operating profit.

For non-long-term business, the total investment income, including realised and unrealised gains, is analysed between that calculated using a longer-term return and short-term fluctuations from that level. Operating profit also excludes impairment of goodwill, joint ventures and associates; amortisation and impairment of intangibles; the profit or loss on disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates; integration and restructuring costs; and exceptional items.

Page 44

B2 - New standards, interpretations and amendments to published standards that have been adopted by the Group

The Group has adopted amendments to IAS 32 Financial Instruments: Presentation that became effective as of 1 January 2014. These amendments clarify the meaning of 'currently legally enforceable right to set-off' to reinforce that a right to set-off must not be contingent on any future event, including counterparty default or bankruptcy. Additionally, IAS 32 clarified that a settlement mechanism must be in place to ensure settlement in practice that is either simultaneous or sufficient to result in insignificant credit and liquidity risk.

The amendments to IAS 32 have been applied retrospectively in accordance with the transitional provisions of the standard. The primary impact of the application of the amendments has resulted in the grossing up of certain assets and liabilities related to derivatives and repurchase arrangements in the statement of financial position that were previously reported net. There is no impact on the profit or loss or equity for any period presented.

The effect on the statement of financial position at 30 June 2013 and 31 December 2013 is set out in the table below.

Impact of amendments to accounting standards on condensed consolidated statement of financial position

30 June 2013 31 December 2013
As previously reported £m Effect of amendments to IAS 32 £m Restated £m As reported £m Effect of amendments to IAS 32 £m Restated £m
Total assets 319,342 4,005 323,347 278,876 2,751 281,627
Effect analysed as:
Financial investments 192,670 800 193,470 192,961 1,066 194,027
Receivables 7,981 496 8,477 7,060 416 7,476
Prepayments and accrued income 2,704 122 2,826 2,498 137 2,635
Cash and cash equivalents 25,075 2,587 27,662 24,999 1,132 26,131
Total equity and liabilities 319,342 4,005 323,347 278,876 2,751 281,627
Total liabilities 307,978 4,005 311,983 267,859 2,751 270,610
Effect analysed as:
Payables and other financial liabilities 9,764 4,005 13,769 9,194 2,751 11,945

The change in cash and cash equivalents of £2,587 million at 30 June 2013 (31 December 2013: £1,132 million) has been presented in the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows as an increase of opening cash and cash equivalents of £1,111 million as at 1 January 2013, an increase in net cash flows from operating activities for the six months then ended of £1,397 million (year ended 31 December 2013: £8 million decrease) and an increase in the effect of exchange rate changes of £79 million (31 December 2013: £29 million).# B3 - Exchange rates

The Group's principal overseas operations during the period were located within the Eurozone, Canada and Poland. The results and cash flows of these operations have been translated into sterling at the average rates for the period and the assets and liabilities have been translated at the period end rates as follows:

6 months 2014 6 months 2013 Full Year 2013
Eurozone
Average rate (€1 equals) £0.82 £0.85 £0.85
Period end rate (€1 equals) £0.80 £0.86 £0.83
Canada
Average rate ($CAD1 equals) £0.55 £0.64 £0.62
Period end rate ($CAD1 equals) £0.55 £0.62 £0.57
Poland
Average rate (PLN1 equals) £0.20 £0.20 £0.20
Period end rate (PLN1 equals) £0.19 £0.20 £0.20
United States
Average rate ($US1 equals) £0.60 £0.65 £0.64
Period end rate ($US1 equals) £0.58 £0.66 £0.60

B4 - Subsidiaries

This note provides details of the acquisitions and disposals of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates that the Group has made during the period, together with details of businesses held for sale at the period end.

(a) Acquisitions

There have been no material acquisitions during the period.

(b) Disposal and re-measurements of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates

The profit on the disposal and re-measurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates comprises:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full Year 2013 £m
Ireland - long-term business - 88 87
Spain - long-term business - 197 197
Malaysia - 39 39
Russia - 1 1
Czech Republic, Hungary and Romania - 1 1
Italy - long-term business (see (iii) below) (6) (151) (178)
Korea (see (ii) below) 2 - (20)
Turkey - general insurance (see (c) below) 9 - (9)
Aviva Investors (see (iv) below) 32 - -
Poland - - (4)
Indonesia (see (i) below) (3) - -
Other small operations 17 5 1
Profit on disposal and remeasurement from continuing operations 51 180 115
Profit on disposal and remeasurement from discontinued operations (see (v) below) - 91 808
Total profit on disposal and remeasurement 51 271 923

(i) Indonesia

In the second half of 2013, management decided to restructure existing operations in Indonesia and establish a new joint venture. The Indonesian operations were classified as held for sale at 31 December 2013 as Aviva's holding was to change from a 60% controlling interest which was consolidated to a 50% joint venture accounted for using equity accounting. On 17 January 2014, Aviva and PT Astra International Tbk signed an agreement to form the 50-50 joint venture (Astra Aviva Life) which completed in May 2014. A net gain of £1 million was recognised during HY14. Recycling of currency translation and investment valuation reserves of £4 million on completion resulted in an overall net loss of £3 million.

(ii) Korea

In 2013, management determined that the value of our long-term business joint venture in South Korea, Woori Aviva Life Insurance Co. Ltd, would be principally recovered through sale and it was classified as held for sale and re-measured at fair value, based on expected sales proceeds less costs to sell of £19 million. On 27 June 2014 the Group completed its disposal of the 47% interest for consideration of £17 million, after transaction costs. Net assets disposed of were £19 million resulting in a loss of £2 million (FY13: £20 million loss on re-measurement). Recycling of currency translation and investment valuation reserves of £4 million on completion resulted in an overall net gain during HY14 of £2 million.

(iii) Eurovita

In the first half of 2013, the Italian long-term business Eurovita Assicurazioni S.p.A ("Eurovita") was classified as held for sale, as a result of management determining that the value of the business would be principally recovered through sale. Finoa Srl ("Finoa"), an Italian holding company in which Aviva owns a 50% share, owns a 77.55% share of Eurovita. Following classification as held for sale, Eurovita was re-measured at fair value based on expected sales proceeds less costs to sell of £39 million with a re-measurement loss of £178 million (Aviva share: £74 million loss) at FY13. On 30 June 2014 Finoa disposed of its entire interest in Eurovita for gross cash consideration of £36 million. The overall loss on the sale of Finoa's 77.55% stake in Eurovita was £6 million analysed as:

6 months 2014 £m
Loss on disposal attributable to:
Aviva 4
Non-controlling interest (10)
Total loss on disposal (6)

Aviva's £4 million gain was calculated as follows:

6 months 2014 £m
Assets
Financial Investments 2,857
Other assets 4
Cash and cash equivalents 175
Total assets 3,036
Liabilities
Insurance liabilities 103
Liability for investment contracts 2,687
Unallocated divisible surplus 123
External borrowings 28
Other liabilities 23
Total liabilities 2,964
Net assets 72
Non-controlling interests before disposal (44)
Group's share of net assets disposed of 28
Cash consideration received 18
Less: transaction costs attributable to Aviva (4)
Net cash consideration 14
Loan settlement¹ 9
Currency translation reserve recycled to the income statement 9
Profit on disposal 4

¹ A loan between Aviva and Eurovita had been provided against in 2013 as its repayment was uncertain as of 31 December 2013. However, this provision was reversed in HY14 as the loan was repaid in full upon the closing of the sale.

(iv) River Road

On 28 March 2014 Aviva Investors announced its agreement to sell US equity manager River Road Asset Management, LLC ("River Road") to Affiliated Managers Group, Inc. The sale was completed on 30 June 2014 for consideration of £74 million, after transaction costs. Assets disposed of were £42 million, comprised of £38 million of goodwill and intangibles and £4 million of other investments, resulting in a £32 million gain on disposal.

(v) Discontinued operations - US long term business

The sale of the Aviva USA business completed on 2 October 2013 and the transaction proceeds received were based on the estimated earnings and other improvements in statutory surplus over the period from 30 June 2012 to 30 September 2013. The final purchase price is subject to customary completion adjustments. The process to agree completion adjustments is on-going and is expected to complete in the second half of 2014. Until the outcome of this process is known there remains uncertainty on the final determination of the completion adjustment. The transaction resulted in a profit on disposal of £808 million in 2013, reflecting management's best estimate of the completion adjustment.

(c) Assets and liabilities of operations classified as held for sale

During 2014 it was determined that the value of the Group's Taiwan joint venture, First-Aviva Life Insurance Co. Ltd. ("Taiwan") , would no longer be recovered principally through a sale. As a result, the business was reclassified out of "Assets of operations held for sale" and into "Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures". As the recoverable amount at the date it ceased to be held for sale was lower than its carrying value when it was classified as held for sale, no re-measurement gain or loss was recorded following this reclassification.

The assets and liabilities of operations classified as held for sale as at 30 June 2014 are as follows:

6 months 2014 Total £m 6 months 2013 Total £m Full Year 2013 Total £m
Assets
Goodwill - - 4
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets - 496 -
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures and associates - 13 29
Property and equipment 1 - -
Investment property - 6 -
Loans - 3,784 -
Financial investments 23 34,884 2,675
Reinsurance assets 26 712 37
Deferred acquisition costs 6 2,342 6
Other assets 29 960 196
Cash and cash equivalents 64 965 351
149 44,162 3,298
Additional impairment to write down the disposal group to fair value less costs to sell - (2,450) (185)
Total assets 149 41,712 3,113
Liabilities
Insurance liabilities (134) (33,332) (238)
Liability for investment contracts - (4,858) (2,710)
Unallocated divisible surplus - 18 4
Provisions - (177) (3)
Deferred tax liabilities - (688) (1)
Current tax liabilities - (19) -
External borrowings - (212) (29)
Other liabilities (5) (1,852) (46)
Total liabilities (139) (41,120) (3,023)
Net assets 10 592 90

Assets held for sale as of 30 June 2014 relate to the general insurance operations in Turkey and other small operations. In the second half of 2013 management committed to sell the Turkey general insurance business. As of 31 December 2013 the business was re-measured at fair value based on an expected sales price less costs to sell of £2 million resulting in a loss on re-measurement of £9 million in FY13 following its classification as held for sale. At 30 June 2014, the business remains held for sale. In the first half of 2014, the underlying carrying value decreased from £11 million to £2 million while the fair value remained unchanged, resulting in a re-measurement gain of £9 million in HY14.

B5 - Segmental information

The Group's results can be segmented, either by activity or by geography. Our primary reporting format is along market reporting lines, with supplementary information being given by business activity. This note provides segmental information on the condensed consolidated income statement and condensed consolidated statement of financial position. The Group has determined its operating segments along market reporting lines.# Segmental Information

These reflect the management structure whereby a member of the Executive Management team is accountable to the Group CEO for the operating segment for which they are responsible.

United Kingdom & Ireland

The United Kingdom and Ireland comprises two operating segments - Life and General Insurance. The principal activities of our UK and Ireland Life operations are life insurance, long-term health (in the UK) and accident insurance, savings, pensions and annuity business, whilst UK and Ireland General Insurance provides insurance cover to individuals and businesses, for risks associated mainly with motor vehicles, property and liability (such as employers' liability and professional indemnity liability) and medical expenses. UK & Ireland General Insurance includes the results of our Ireland Health business.

France

The principal activities of our French operations are long-term business and general insurance. The long-term business offers a range of long-term insurance and savings products, primarily for individuals, with a focus on the unit-linked market. The general insurance business predominantly sells personal and small commercial lines insurance products through agents and a direct insurer.

Poland

Activities in Poland comprise long-term business and general insurance operations.

Italy, Spain and Other

These countries are not individually significant at a Group level, so have been aggregated into a single reporting segment in line with IFRS 8. This segment includes our operations in Italy and Spain (including Aseval up until the date of its disposal in April 2013 and Eurovita up until the date of its disposal in June 2014). The principal activities of our Italian operations are long-term business and general insurance. The long term business offers a range of long-term insurance and savings products, and the general insurance business provides motor and home insurance products to individuals, as well as small commercial risk insurance to businesses. The principal activity of the Spanish operation is the sale of long-term business, accident and health insurance and a selection of savings products. Our Other European operations include Turkey (both Life and General Insurance); the operations of Turkey General Insurance are classified as held for sale as at 30 June 2014. This segment also includes the results of our Russian and Romanian businesses until the date of their disposals in 2013.

Canada

The principal activity of the Canadian operation is general insurance. In particular it provides personal and commercial lines insurance products through a range of distribution channels.

Asia

Our activities in Asia principally comprise our long-term business operations in China, India, Singapore, Hong Kong, Vietnam, Indonesia and Taiwan. This segment also includes the results of Malaysia and South Korea until the date of their disposals (in April 2013 and June 2014 respectively). Asia also includes general insurance operations in Singapore and health operations in Indonesia.

Aviva Investors

Aviva Investors operates in most of the markets in which the Group operates, in particular the UK, France and Canada and other international businesses, managing policyholders' and shareholders' invested funds, providing investment management services for institutional pension fund mandates and managing a range of retail investment products, including investment funds, unit trusts, OEICs and ISAs. This segment also includes the results of River Road Asset Management LLC until the date of its disposal (in June 2014).

Other Group activities

Investment return on centrally held assets and head office expenses, such as Group treasury and finance functions, together with certain taxes and financing costs arising on central borrowings are included in 'Other Group activities', along with central core structural borrowings and certain tax balances in the segmental statement of financial position. The results of our reinsurance operations are also included in this segment.

Discontinued operations

In October 2013, the Group sold its US Life and annuity business and associated investment management operations ('US Life') and therefore the results of US Life up to that date are presented as discontinued operations for the comparative periods in the financial statements.

Measurement basis

The accounting policies of the segments are the same as those for the Group as a whole. Any transactions between the business segments are subject to normal commercial terms and market conditions. The Group evaluates performance of operating segments on the basis of: (i) profit or loss from operations before tax attributable to shareholders (ii) profit or loss from operations before tax attributable to shareholders, adjusted for non-operating items outside the segment management's control, including investment market performance and fiscal policy changes.

Page 49

B5 - Segmental information continued

(a) (i) Segmental income statement for the six month period ended 30 June 2014

United Kingdom & Ireland Life² United Kingdom & Ireland GI £m Europe France £m Europe Poland £m Italy, Spain and Other £m Canada £m Asia £m Aviva Investors²,³ £m Other Group activities⁴ £m Total £m
Gross written premiums 2,253 2,264 3,045 239 2,040 1,062 461 - 2 11,366
Premiums ceded to reinsurers (379) (245) (32) (3) (40) (34) (72) - - (805)
Internal reinsurance revenue (3) - (1) - (2) (2) - - 8 -
Premiums written net of reinsurance 1,871 2,019 3,012 236 1,998 1,026 389 - 10 10,561
Net change in provision for unearned premiums (36) 17 (97) - (5) (28) (9) - - (158)
Net earned premiums 1,835 2,036 2,915 236 1,993 998 380 - 10 10,403
Fee and commission income 194 89 105 69 42 7 6 127 - 639
2,029 2,125 3,020 305 2,035 1,005 386 127 10 11,042
Net investment income/(expense) 4,331 165 3,519 73 1,534 100 82 93 (40) 9,857
Inter-segment revenue - - - - - - - 67 - 67
Share of profit/(loss) of joint ventures and associates 80 - 5 2 4 - (11) - - 80
Profit on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, - - - - 3 14 1 33 - 51
joint ventures and associates
Segmental income¹ 6,440 2,290 6,544 380 3,576 1,119 458 320 (30) 21,097
Claims and benefits paid, net of recoveries from reinsurers (3,866) (1,404) (2,237) (162) (1,480) (598) (191) - (38) (9,976)
Change in insurance liabilities, net of reinsurance (514) 80 (776) (23) (102) (65) (160) - 27 (1,533)
Change in investment contract provisions (710) - (1,216) 1 (803) - - (93) - (2,821)
Change in unallocated divisible surplus (157) - (1,656) (3) (732) - (28) - - (2,576)
Fee and commission expense (254) (645) (309) (36) (145) (275) (35) (8) (32) (1,739)
Other expenses (291) (121) (119) (29) (59) (44) (33) (144) (47) (887)
Inter-segment expenses (60) (2) - (3) - (2) - - - (67)
Finance costs (90) (2) (2) - (1) (2) - (2) (165) (264)
Segmental expenses (5,942) (2,094) (6,315) (255) (3,322) (986) (447) (247) (255) (19,863)
Profit/(loss) before tax 498 196 229 125 254 133 11 73 (285) 1,234
Tax attributable to policyholders' returns (93) - - - - - - - - (93)
Profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 405 196 229 125 254 133 11 73 (285) 1,141
Adjusted for non-operating items:
Reclassification of corporate costs and unallocated interest - 4 8 - - - - - (12) -
Investment return variances and economic assumption changes on 45 - 28 (5) (104) - (8) - - (44)
long-term business
Short-term fluctuation in return on investments backing - (7) (44) - (10) (42) - - (62) (165)
non-long-term business
Economic assumption changes on general insurance and health - 66 - - - 1 - - - 67
business
Impairment of goodwill, joint ventures and associates - - - - - - 24 - - 24
Amortisation and impairment of intangibles 13 - - - 7 4 - 7 7 38
Profit on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, - - - - (3) (14) (1) (33) - (51)
joint ventures and associates
Integration and restructuring costs 14 5 1 - - 1 - (5) 26 42
Exceptional items - - - - - - - - - -
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders 477 264 222 120 144 83 26 42 (326) 1,052

¹ Total reported income, excluding inter-segment revenue, includes £8,228 million from the United Kingdom (Aviva plc's country of domicile). Income is attributed on the basis of geographical origin which does not differ materially from revenue by geographical destination, as most risks are located in the countries where the contracts were written.
² UK and Ireland Life operating profit includes £6 million relating to the UK retail fund management business. This was transferred from UK Life to Aviva Investors in May 2014. Aviva Investors operating profit includes £2 million relating to this business post transfer.
³ Aviva Investors operating profit also includes £1 million profit relating to the Aviva Investors Pooled Pensions business.
⁴ Other group activities include Group Reinsurance.

Page 50

B5 - Segmental information continued

(a) (ii) Segmental income statement for the six month period ended 30 June 2013

United Kingdom & Ireland Life £m United Kingdom & Ireland GI £m Europe France £m Europe Poland £m Italy, Spain and Other £m Canada £m Asia £m Aviva Investors² £m Other Group activities³ £m Continuing operations £m Discontinued operations⁴ £m Total £m
Gross written premiums 2,588 2,413 2,936 236 1,757 1,162 351 - 8 11,451 1,103 12,554
Premiums ceded to reinsurers (400) (248) (28) (4) (38) (32) (63) - (1) (814) (66) (880)
Internal reinsurance revenue - (4) (3) (1) (7) (4) - - 19 - - -
Premiums written net of reinsurance 2,188 2,161 2,905 231 1,712 1,126 288 - 26 10,637 1,037 11,674
Net change in provision for unearned premiums (20) 50 (92) (5) 3 (20) (1) - (4) (89) - (89)
Net earned premiums 2,168 2,211 2,813 226 1,715 1,106 287 - 22 10,548 1,037 11,585
Fee and commission income 234 100 90 27 60 21 10 126 (1) 667 5 672
2,402 2,311 2,903 253 1,775 1,127 297 126 21 11,215 1,042 12,257
Net investment income/(expense) 2,468 131 400 (1) 629 (6) 32 70 237 3,960 1,493 5,453
Inter-segment revenue - - - - - - - 55 - 55 33 88
Share of (loss)/profit of joint ventures and associates

(a) (iii) Segmental income statement for the year ended 31 December 2013

United Kingdom & Ireland £m Europe Life £m GI £m France £m Poland £m Italy, Spain and Other £m Canada £m Asia £m Aviva Investors2 £m Other Group activities3 £m Continuing operations £m Discontinued operations4 £m Total £m
Gross written premiums 4,971 4,664 5,634 484 3,277 2,318 678 - 9 22,035 1,589 23,624
Premiums ceded to reinsurers (743) (455) (63) (6) (79) (60) (146) - 6 (1,546) (100) (1,646)
Internal reinsurance revenue - (9) (6) (3) (5) (8) - - 31 - - -
Premiums written net of reinsurance 4,228 4,200 5,565 475 3,193 2,250 532 - 46 20,489 1,489 21,978
Net change in provision for unearned premiums (9) 185 (25) (2) 31 (54) 8 - - 134 - 134
Net earned premiums 4,219 4,385 5,540 473 3,224 2,196 540 - 46 20,623 1,489 22,112
Fee and commission income 424 198 190 60 115 40 14 238 - 1,279 28 1,307
Segmental income1 4,643 4,583 5,730 533 3,339 2,236 554 238 46 21,902 1,517 23,419
Net investment income/(expense) 6,898 293 3,332 180 1,628 17 40 148 (27) 12,509 2,340 14,849
Inter-segment revenue - - - - - - - 143 - 143 49 192
Share of profit of joint ventures and associates 88 - 8 3 6 - 15 - - 120 - 120
Profit/(loss) on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates 87 - - (4) 13 - 19 - - 115 808 923
Segmental income1 11,716 4,876 9,070 712 4,986 2,253 628 529 19 34,789 4,714 39,503
Claims and benefits paid, net of recoveries from reinsurers (8,960) (2,818) (4,858) (363) (3,222) (1,342) (489) - (41) (22,093) (2,037) (24,130)
Change in insurance liabilities, net of reinsurance 4,102 119 (1,618) (103) (2) (42) 92 - (55) 2,493 (312) 2,181
Change in investment contract provisions (4,829) - (1,725) 34 (386) - - (144) - (7,050) (31) (7,081)
Change in unallocated divisible surplus 199 - 426 16 (363) - 2 - - 280 - 280
Fee and commission expense (598) (1,479) (554) (60) (286) (620) (61) (23) (294) (3,975) (438) (4,413)
Other expenses (370) (301) (280) (51) (214) (136) (73) (446) (349) (2,220) (293) (2,513)
Inter-segment expenses (129) (4) - (7) - (3) - - - (143) (49) (192)
Finance costs (224) (6) (4) - (4) (6) - (5) (360) (609) (16) (625)
Segmental expenses (10,809) (4,489) (8,613) (534) (4,477) (2,149) (529) (618) (1,099) (33,317) (3,176) (36,493)
Profit/(loss) before tax 907 387 457 178 509 104 99 (89) (1,080) 1,472 1,538 3,010
Tax attributable to policyholders' returns (190) - - - - - (1) - - (191) - (191)
Profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 717 387 457 178 509 104 98 (89) (1,080) 1,281 1,538 2,819
Adjusted for non-operating items:
Reclassification of corporate costs and unallocated interest - 7 21 - - - - - (28) - - -
Investment return variances and economic assumption changes on long-term business 414 - (70) 1 (267) - (29) - - 49 (452) (403)
Short-term fluctuation in return on investments backing non-long-term business - 74 15 - 12 122 - - 113 336 - 336
Economic assumption changes on general insurance and health business - (28) - - - (4) - - (1) (33) - (33)
Impairment of goodwill, joint ventures and associates - - - - 48 - 29 - - 77 - 77
Amortisation and impairment of intangibles 21 1 - - 17 15 1 22 14 91 9 100
(Profit)/loss on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates (87) - - 4 (13) - (19) - - (115) (808) (923)
Integration and restructuring costs 59 24 25 1 8 9 7 41 189 363 3 366
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders 1,124 465 448 184 314 246 87 (26) (793) 2,049 290 2,339
  • 1 Total reported income, excluding inter-segment revenue, includes £15,862 million from the United Kingdom (Aviva plc's country of domicile). Income is attributed on the basis of geographical origin which does not differ materially from revenue by geographical destination, as most risks are located in the countries where the contracts were written.
  • 2 Aviva Investors operating profit includes £2 million profit relating to the Aviva Investors Pooled Pensions business.
  • 3 Other group activities include Group Reinsurance.
  • 4 Discontinued operations represent the results of the US life and related internal asset management businesses (US Life) until the date of disposal (2 October 2013).

Page 51

B5 - Segmental information continued (a) (iv) Segmental statement of financial position as at 30 June 2014

United Kingdom & Ireland £m Europe Life £m GI £m France £m Poland £m Italy, Spain and Other £m Canada £m Asia £m Aviva Investors £m Other Group activities £m Total £m
Goodwill - 1,034 - 8 254 20 48 - - - 1,364
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets 130 2 108 7 605 43 2 31 37 - 965
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures and associates 1,006 - 148 10 97 14 313 - - - 1,588
Property and equipment 12 20 220 3 5 10 3 1 12 - 286
Investment property 5,530 7 1,629 - 2 - - 1,021 458 - 8,647
Loans 21,917 86 791 - 11 134 28 - - - 22,967
Financial investments 91,484 4,749 67,221 2,866 20,689 3,388 2,843 683 3,684 - 197,607
Deferred acquisition costs 1,305 451 233 24 92 265 5 9 - - 2,384
Other assets 19,691 4,036 11,073 298 1,929 974 390 634 3,879 - 42,904
Assets of operations classified as held for sale - - - - 140 - - - 9 - 149
Total assets 141,075 10,385 81,423 3,216 23,824 4,848 3,632 2,379 8,079 - 278,861
Insurance liabilities
Long-term business and outstanding claims provisions 68,093 5,521 16,339 2,553 9,287 2,328 2,294 - 39 - 106,454
Unearned premiums 284 2,064 483 41 293 1,082 54 - 1 - 4,302
Other insurance liabilities - 83 47 - 1 91 - - 2 - 224
Liability for investment contracts 54,830 - 49,172 13 9,767 - - 1,781 - - 115,563
Unallocated divisible surplus 2,008 - 5,749 73 918 - 175 - - - 8,923
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 87 - 3,073 - 317 - - - 5,986 - 9,463
External borrowings 2,054 - - - 56 - - - 4,834 - 6,944
Other liabilities, including inter-segment liabilities 7,639 (2,640) 4,396 129 794 308 343 327 4,000 - 15,296
Liabilities of operations classified as held for sale - - - - 138 - - - 1 - 139
Total liabilities 134,995 5,028 79,259 2,809 21,571 3,809 2,866 2,108 14,863 - 267,308
Total equity 11,553
Total equity and liabilities 278,861

Page 52

B5 - Segmental information continued (a) (v) Segmental statement of financial position as at 30 June 2013 - (Restated)

United Kingdom & Ireland £m Europe Life1 £m GI1 £m France1 £m Poland £m Italy, Spain and Other £m Canada1 £m Asia1 £m Aviva Investors £m United States £m Other Group activities £m Total £m
Goodwill - 1,043 - 9 314 51 58 29 - - - 1,504
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets 125 3 131 9 661 56 4 57 - 49 - 1,095
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures and associates 957 - 158 11 112 - 260 4 - - - 1,502
Property and equipment 84 21 232 2 7 21 5 1 - 22 - 395
Investment property 6,629 8 1,531 - 2 - - 1,016 - 646 - 9,832
Loans 22,871 343 869 - 25 86 31 - - - - 24,225
Financial investments 90,929 4,211 64,579 2,817 20,431 3,709 2,970 774 - 3,050 - 193,470
Deferred acquisition costs 1,317 511 234 21 118 282 5 - - - - 2,488
Other assets 17,506 5,013 14,983 223 2,131 1,205 404 530 - 5,129 - 37,144
Assets of operations classified as held for sale - - - - 140 - - - - - - 140
Total assets 140,318 6,153 82,687 3,103 23,976 5,370 3,736 3,411 - 8,900 - 274,054
Insurance liabilities
Long-term business and outstanding claims provisions 66,572 5,685 16,857 2,779 8,817 2,418 2,349 - - 1,867 - 107,344
Unearned premiums 276 2,071 488 42 270 1,119 48 - - 104 - 4,418
Other insurance liabilities - 82 49 - 1 88 - - - - - 220
Liability for investment contracts 52,209 - 46,259 12 9,177 - - 1,708 - - - 109,365
Unallocated divisible surplus 2,147 - 5,456 77 881 - 184 - - - - 8,745
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 82 - 2,884 - 301 - - - - 4,682 - 7,949
External borrowings 1,961 - - - 62 - - - - - - 2,023
Other liabilities, including inter-segment liabilities 7,662 (2,172) 4,352 133 741 282 317 309 - 3,966 - 20,588
Liabilities of operations classified as held for sale - - - - 140 - - - - - - 140
Total liabilities 130,909 5,666 76,335 3,043 20,389 3,907 3,153 3,026 - 10,619 - 257,047
Total equity 9,409
Total equity and liabilities 274,054

Page 53# B5 - Segmental information

(a) (vi) Segmental statement of financial position as at 31 December 2013 - (Restated)

United Kingdom & Ireland £m Europe Life1 £m GI1 £m France1 £m Poland £m Italy, Spain and Other £m Canada1 £m Asia1 £m Aviva Investors £m Other Group activities £m Total £m
Goodwill - 1,039 - 9 303 49 49 27 - 1,476 1,476
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets 148 2 122 8 637 58 2 48 43 1,068 1,068
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures and associates 1,001 - 153 9 94 - 210 - - 1,467 1,467
Property and equipment 22 20 229 2 5 12 4 1 18 313 313
Investment property 6,364 7 1,545 - 2 - - 982 551 9,451 9,451
Loans 22,629 270 852 - 23 76 29 - - 23,879 23,879
Financial investments 90,646 4,696 65,601 3,045 20,469 3,402 2,756 687 2,725 194,027 194,027
Deferred acquisition costs 1,316 456 229 23 100 268 4 - 1 2,397 2,397
Other assets 19,620 4,167 11,051 220 1,967 1,081 343 532 5,455 44,436 44,436
Assets of operations classified as held for sale - - - - 3,042 - 62 - 9 3,113 3,113
Total assets 141,746 10,657 79,782 3,316 26,642 4,946 3,459 2,277 8,802 281,627 281,627
Insurance liabilities
Long-term business and outstanding claims provisions 67,484 5,657 16,185 2,640 9,575 2,372 2,142 - 45 106,100 106,100
Unearned premiums 248 2,094 404 43 298 1,088 50 - 1 4,226 4,226
Other insurance liabilities - 84 50 - 1 92 - - 2 229 229
Liability for investment contracts 54,679 - 49,856 14 9,750 - - 1,759 - 116,058 116,058
Unallocated divisible surplus 1,857 - 4,292 72 342 - 150 - - 6,713 6,713
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 287 - 3,032 - 324 - - - - 6,719 10,362
External borrowings 2,620 - - - 72 - - - - 5,127 7,819
Other liabilities, including inter-segment liabilities 8,489 (3,337) 3,782 114 963 411 354 272 5,032 16,080 16,080
Liabilities of operations classified as held for sale - - - - 3,003 - 20 - - 3,023 3,023
Total liabilities 135,664 4,498 77,601 2,883 24,328 3,963 2,716 2,031 16,926 270,610 270,610
Total equity 11,017 11,017
Total equity and liabilities 281,627 281,627

1 The statement of financial position has been restated following the adoption of amendments to 'IAS 32: Financial Instruments: Presentation'. Refer to note B2 for further information.

(b) Further analysis by products and services

The Group's results can be further analysed by products and services which comprise long-term business, general insurance and health, fund management and other activities.

Long-term business

Our long-term business comprises life insurance, long-term health and accident insurance, savings, pensions and annuity business written by our life insurance subsidiaries, including managed pension fund business and our share of the other life and related business written in our associates and joint ventures, as well as lifetime mortgage business written in the UK.

General insurance and health

Our general insurance and health business provides insurance cover to individuals and to small and medium sized businesses, for risks associated mainly with motor vehicles, property and liability, such as employers' liability and professional indemnity liability, and medical expenses.

Fund management

Our fund management business invests policyholders' and shareholders' funds, provides investment management services for institutional pension fund mandates and manages a range of retail investment products, including investment funds, unit trusts, OEICs and ISAs. Clients include Aviva Group businesses and third-party financial institutions, pension funds, public sector organisations, investment professionals and private investors.

Other

Other includes service companies, head office expenses, such as Group treasury and finance functions, and certain financing costs and taxes not allocated to business segments.

(b) (i) Segmental income statement - products and services for the six month period ended 30 June 2014

Long-term business £m General insurance and health2 £m Fund management £m Other £m Total £m
Gross written premiums1 6,734 4,632 - - 11,366
Premiums ceded to reinsurers (462) (343) - - (805)
Premiums written net of reinsurance 6,272 4,289 - - 10,561
Net change in provision for unearned premiums - (158) - - (158)
Net earned premiums 6,272 4,131 - - 10,403
Fee and commission income 348 35 144 112 639
6,620 4,166 144 112 11,042
Net investment income/(expense) 9,546 363 2 (54) 9,857
Inter-segment revenue - - 66 - 66
Share of profit of joint ventures and associates 79 1 - - 80
(Loss)/profit on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates (5) 9 33 14 51
Segmental income 16,240 4,539 245 72 21,096
Claims and benefits paid, net of recoveries from reinsurers (7,172) (2,804) - - (9,976)
Change in insurance liabilities, net of reinsurance (1,543) 10 - - (1,533)
Change in investment contract provisions (2,821) - - - (2,821)
Change in unallocated divisible surplus (2,576) - - - (2,576)
Fee and commission expense (543) (1,116) (10) (70) (1,739)
Other expenses (410) (209) (153) (115) (887)
Inter-segment expenses (60) (6) - - (66)
Finance costs (89) (5) (2) (168) (264)
Segmental expenses (15,214) (4,130) (165) (353) (19,862)
Profit/(loss) before tax from continuing operations 1,026 409 80 (281) 1,234
Tax attributable to policyholder returns (93) - - - (93)
Profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 933 409 80 (281) 1,141
Adjusted for: Non-operating items from continuing operations 21 (6) (32) (72) (89)
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits from continuing operations 954 403 48 (353) 1,052
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits from discontinued operations - - - - -
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 954 403 48 (353) 1,052

1 Gross written premiums include inward reinsurance premiums assumed from other companies amounting to £102 million, of which £62 million relates to property and liability insurance and £40 million relates to long-term business.
2 General insurance and health business segment includes gross written premiums of £646 million relating to health business. The remaining business relates to property and liability insurance.

(b) (ii) Segmental income statement - products and services for the six month period ended 30 June 2013

Long-term business £m General insurance and health2 £m Fund management £m Other £m Total £m
Gross written premiums1 6,553 4,898 - - 11,451
Premiums ceded to reinsurers (465) (349) - - (814)
Premiums written net of reinsurance 6,088 4,549 - - 10,637
Net change in provision for unearned premiums - (89) - - (89)
Net earned premiums 6,088 4,460 - - 10,548
Fee and commission income 338 41 159 129 667
6,426 4,501 159 129 11,215
Net investment income/(expense) 3,615 125 2 218 3,960
Inter-segment revenue - - 48 - 48
Share of (loss)/profit of joint ventures and associates (15) 1 - - (14)
Profit on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates 175 - - 5 180
Segmental income 10,201 4,627 209 352 15,389
Claims and benefits paid, net of recoveries from reinsurers (8,573) (2,885) - - (11,458)
Change in insurance liabilities, net of reinsurance 1,917 (8) - - 1,909
Change in investment contract provisions (1,961) - - - (1,961)
Change in unallocated divisible surplus 585 - - - 585
Fee and commission expense (620) (1,251) (22) (416) (2,309)
Other expenses (451) (215) (169) (372) (1,207)
Inter-segment expenses (44) (4) - - (48)
Finance costs (102) (6) (2) (185) (295)
Segmental expenses (9,249) (4,369) (193) (973) (14,784)
Profit/(loss) before tax from continuing operations 952 258 16 (621) 605
Tax attributable to policyholder returns 18 - - - 18
Profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 970 258 16 (621) 623
Adjusted for: Non-operating items from continuing operations (60) 170 26 249 385
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits from continuing operations 910 428 42 (372) 1,008
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits from discontinued operations3 111 - 22 (8) 125
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 1,021 428 64 (380) 1,133

1 Gross written premiums include inward reinsurance premiums assumed from other companies amounting to £85 million, of which £30 million relates to property and liability insurance and £55 million relates to long-term business.
2 General insurance and health business segment includes gross written premiums of £650 million relating to health business. The remaining business relates to property and liability insurance.
3 Discontinued operations represent the results of the US life and related internal asset management businesses (US Life) until the date of disposal (2 October 2013).# B5 - Segmental information continued

(b) (iii) Segmental income statement - products and services for the year ended 31 December 2013

Long-term business £m General insurance and health £m Fund management £m Other £m Total £m
Gross written premiums¹ 12,674 9,361 - - 22,035
Premiums ceded to reinsurers (905) (641) - - (1,546)
Premiums written net of reinsurance 11,769 8,720 - - 20,489
Net change in provision for unearned premiums - 134 - - 134
Net earned premiums 11,769 8,854 - - 20,623
Fee and commission income 656 80 292 251 1,279
12,425 8,934 292 251 21,902
Net investment income/(expense) 12,184 349 3 (27) 12,509
Inter-segment revenue - - 143 - 143
Share of profit of joint ventures and associates 117 3 - - 120
Profit/(loss) on the disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates 125 (10) - - 115
Segmental income 24,851 9,276 438 224 34,789
Claims and benefits paid, net of recoveries from reinsurers (16,333) (5,760) - - (22,093)
Change in insurance liabilities, net of reinsurance 2,519 (26) - - 2,493
Change in investment contract provisions (7,050) - - - (7,050)
Change in unallocated divisible surplus 280 - - - 280
Fee and commission expense (1,078) (2,492) (34) (371) (3,975)
Other expenses (764) (495) (369) (592) (2,220)
Inter-segment expenses (134) (9) - - (143)
Finance costs (219) (11) (4) (375) (609)
Segmental expenses (22,779) (8,793) (407) (1,338) (33,317)
Profit/(loss) before tax from continuing operations 2,072 483 31 (1,114) 1,472
Tax attributable to policyholder returns (191) - - - (191)
Profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 1,881 483 31 (1,114) 1,281
Adjusted for:
Non-operating items from continuing operations 20 314 62 372 768
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits from continuing operations 1,901 797 93 (742) 2,049
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits from discontinued operations³ 272 - 31 (13) 290
Operating profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 2,173 797 124 (755) 2,339

¹ Gross written premiums include inward reinsurance premiums assumed from other companies amounting to £246 million, of which £142 million relates to property and liability insurance and £104 million relates to long-term business.
² General insurance and health business segment includes gross written premiums of £1,196 million relating to health business. The remaining business relates to property and liability insurance.
³ Discontinued operations represent the results of the US life and related internal asset management businesses (US Life) until the date of disposal (2 October 2013).

Page 58

B5 - Segmental information continued

(c) (i) Segmental statement of financial position - products and services as at 30 June 2014

Long-term business £m General insurance and health £m Fund management £m Other £m Total £m
Goodwill 277 1,044 - 43 1,364
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets 731 155 31 48 965
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures and associates 1,560 15 - 13 1,588
Property and equipment 172 89 1 24 286
Investment property 8,057 135 - 455 8,647
Loans 22,746 221 - - 22,967
Financial investments 183,329 10,724 34 3,520 197,607
Deferred acquisition costs 1,510 865 9 - 2,384
Other assets 31,193 5,963 502 5,246 42,904
Assets of operations classified as held for sale - 149 - - 149
Total assets 249,575 19,360 577 9,349 278,861
Gross insurance liabilities 96,740 14,240 - - 110,980
Gross liabilities for investment contracts 115,563 - - - 115,563
Unallocated divisible surplus 8,923 - - - 8,923
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 3,477 - - 5,986 9,463
External borrowings 2,110 - - 4,834 6,944
Other liabilities, including inter-segment liabilities 11,559 (1,776) 315 5,198 15,296
Liabilities of operations classified as held for sale - 139 - - 139
Total liabilities 238,372 12,603 315 16,018 267,308
Total equity 11,553
Total equity and liabilities 278,861

(c) (ii) Segmental statement of financial position - products and services as at 30 June 2013 - (Restated¹)

Long-term business £m General insurance and health £m Fund management £m Other £m Total £m
Goodwill 341 1,060 29 74 1,504
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets 802 158 57 78 1,095
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures and associates 1,492 6 4 - 1,502
Property and equipment 253 105 1 36 395
Investment property 9,041 145 - 646 9,832
Loans 23,785 429 - 11 24,225
Financial investments 179,880 10,634 29 2,927 193,470
Deferred acquisition costs 1,521 955 12 - 2,488
Other assets 32,489 5,790 505 8,340 47,124
Assets of operations classified as held for sale 41,665 9 38 - 41,712
Total assets 291,269 19,291 675 12,112 323,347
Gross insurance liabilities 97,754 15,306 - - 113,060
Gross liabilities for investment contracts 113,285 - - - 113,285
Unallocated divisible surplus 6,569 - - - 6,569
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 5,167 - - 7,173 12,340
External borrowings 2,776 - - 5,478 8,254
Other liabilities, including inter-segment liabilities 12,653 (2,988) 382 7,308 17,355
Liabilities of operations classified as held for sale 40,912 1 13 194 41,120
Total liabilities 279,116 12,319 395 20,153 311,983
Total equity 11,364
Total equity and liabilities 323,347

¹ The statement of financial position has been restated following the adoption of amendments to 'IAS 32: Financial Instruments: Presentation'. Refer to note B2 for further information.

Page 59

B5 - Segmental information continued

(c) (iii) Segmental statement of financial position - products and services as at 31 December 2013 - (Restated¹)

Long-term business £m General insurance and health £m Fund management £m Other £m Total £m
Goodwill 328 1,048 27 73 1,476
Acquired value of in-force business and intangible assets 791 160 48 69 1,068
Interests in, and loans to, joint ventures and associates 1,462 5 - - 1,467
Property and equipment 187 91 1 34 313
Investment property 8,760 140 - 551 9,451
Loans 23,523 346 - 10 23,879
Financial investments 180,694 10,742 35 2,556 194,027
Deferred acquisition costs 1,525 862 10 - 2,397
Other assets 31,328 4,845 459 7,804 44,436
Assets of operations classified as held for sale 2,949 164 - - 3,113
Total assets 251,547 18,403 580 11,097 281,627
Gross insurance liabilities 96,153 14,402 - - 110,555
Gross liabilities for investment contracts 116,058 - - - 116,058
Unallocated divisible surplus 6,713 - - - 6,713
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 3,643 - - 6,719 10,362
External borrowings 2,678 - - 5,141 7,819
Other liabilities, including inter-segment liabilities 12,019 (2,574) 346 6,289 16,080
Liabilities of operations classified as held for sale 2,881 142 - - 3,023
Total liabilities 240,145 11,970 346 18,149 270,610
Total equity 11,017
Total equity and liabilities 281,627

¹ The statement of financial position has been restated following the adoption of amendments to 'IAS 32: Financial Instruments: Presentation'. Refer to note B2 for further information.

Page 60

B6 - Tax

This note analyses the tax charge for the period and explains the factors that affect it.

(a) Tax charged/(credited) to the income statement

(i) The total tax charge comprises:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full Year 2013 £m
Current tax
For the period 270 212 517
Prior period adjustments - (2) 13
Total current tax from continuing operations 270 210 530
Deferred tax
Origination and reversal of temporary differences 115 (13) 63
Changes in tax rates or tax laws (3) - (13)
Write-(back)/down of deferred tax assets (11) 2 14
Total deferred tax from continuing operations 101 (11) 64
Total tax charged to income statement from continuing operations 371 199 594
Total tax charged to income statement from discontinued operations - 117 265
Total tax charged to income statement 371 316 859

(ii) The Group, as a proxy for policyholders in the UK, Ireland and Singapore, is required to record taxes on investment income and gains each year. Accordingly, the tax benefit or expense attributable to UK, Ireland and Singapore insurance policyholder returns is included in the tax charge. The tax charge attributable to policyholders' returns included in the charge above is £93 million (HY13: £18 million credit; FY13: £191 million charge).

(iii) The tax charge/(credit) can be analysed as follows:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full Year 2013 £m
UK tax 131 (57) 76
Overseas tax 240 373 783
371 316 859

(b) Tax charged/(credited) to other comprehensive income

(i) The total tax charge/(credit) comprises:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full Year 2013 £m
Current tax from continuing operations
In respect of pensions and other post-retirement obligations (38) (7) (15)
In respect of foreign exchange movements (7) 20 6
(45) 13 (9)
Deferred tax from continuing operations
In respect of pensions and other post-retirement obligations 105 (58) (110)
In respect of fair value gains on owner-occupied properties - - -
In respect of unrealised gains on investments 13 (3) 8
118 (61) (102)
Tax charged/(credited) to other comprehensive income arising from continuing operations 73 (48) (111)
Tax credited to other comprehensive income arising from discontinued operations - (126) (169)
Total tax charged/(credited) to other comprehensive income 73 (174) (280)

Page 61

B6 - Tax continued

(c) Tax credited to equity

Tax credited directly to equity in the period in respect of coupon payments on direct capital instruments and fixed rate tier 1 notes amounted to £4 million (HY13: £4 million; FY13: £22 million). In addition, at 31 December 2013, tax of £30 million was credited to equity in respect of the recycling of the currency translation reserve to the income statement on the sale of Aviva USA Corporation.# (d) Tax reconciliation

The tax on the Group's profit/(loss) before tax differs from the theoretical amount that would arise using the tax rate of the home country of the Company as follows:

Shareholder £m Policyholder £m 6 months 2014 £m Shareholder £m Policyholder £m 6 months 2013 £m Shareholder £m Policyholder £m Full Year 2013 £m
Total profit/(loss) before tax 1,141 93 1,234 1,110 (18) 1,092 2,819 191 3,010
Tax calculated at standard UK corporation tax rate of 21.5% (2013: 23.25%) 245 20 265 258 (4) 254 656 44 700
Reconciling items
Different basis of tax - policyholders - 73 73 - (14) (14) - 147 147
Adjustment to tax charge in respect of prior periods (16) - (16) 1 - 1 (18) - (18)
Non-assessable income and items not taxed at the full statutory rate (25) - (25) (38) - (38) (54) - (54)
Non-taxable loss/(profit) on sale of subsidiaries and associates 3 - 3 (64) - (64) (154) - (154)
Disallowable expenses 25 - 25 55 - 55 98 - 98
Different local basis of tax on overseas profits 77 - 77 110 - 110 184 - 184
Change in future local statutory tax rates (3) - (3) - - - (9) - (9)
Movement in deferred tax not recognised (22) - (22) 21 - 21 (21) - (21)
Tax effect of profit from joint ventures and associates (4) - (4) (9) - (9) (10) - (10)
Other (2) - (2) - - - (4) - (4)
Total tax charged/(credited) to income statement 278 93 371 334 (18) 316 668 191 859

The tax charge/(credit) attributable to policyholders' returns is removed from the Group's total profit before tax in arriving at the Group's profit before tax attributable to shareholders' profits. As the net of tax profit attributable to with-profit and unit-linked policyholders is zero, the Group's pre-tax profit/(loss) attributable to policyholders is an amount equal and opposite to the tax charge/(credit) attributable to policyholders included in the total tax charge. The difference between the policyholder tax charge/(credit) and the impact of this item in the tax reconciliation can be explained as follows:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full Year 2013 £m
Tax attributable to policyholder returns 93 (18) 191
UK corporation tax at a rate of 21.5% (2013: 23.25%) in respect of the policyholder tax deduction (20) 4 (44)
Different basis of tax - policyholders per tax reconciliation 73 (14) 147

Legislation was substantively enacted in July 2013 to reduce the main rate of UK corporation tax to 21% from 1 April 2014, with a further reduction to 20% from 1 April 2015. The 20% rate has been used in the calculation of the UK's deferred tax assets and liabilities as at 30 June 2014.

Page 62

B7 - Earnings per share

(a) Basic earnings per share

(i) The profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders is:

6 months 2014 6 months 2013 Full Year 2013
Operating profit £m Non-operating items £m Total £m
Profit/(loss) before tax attributable to shareholders' profits 1,052 89 1,141
Tax attributable to shareholders' profit/(loss) (253) (25) (278)
Profit/(loss) for the period 799 64 863
Amount attributable to non-controlling interests (84) (24) (108)
Cumulative preference dividends for the period (9) - (9)
Coupon payments in respect of direct capital instruments (DCI) and fixed rate tier 1 notes (net of tax) (12) - (12)
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders from continuing operations 694 40 734
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders from discontinued operations - - -
Profit/(loss) attributable to ordinary shareholders 694 40 734

(ii) Basic earnings per share is calculated as follows:

6 months 2014 6 months 2013 Full Year 2013
Operating profit £m Net of tax, non-controlling interests, preference dividends and DCI¹ £m Per share p
Operating profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 1,052 694 23.6
Non-operating items:
Investment return variances and economic assumption changes on long-term business 44 - -
Short-term fluctuation in return on investments backing non-long-term business 165 119 4.0
Economic assumption changes on general insurance and health business (67) (52) (1.8)
Impairment of goodwill, joint ventures and associates and other amounts expensed (24) (24) (0.8)
Amortisation and impairment of intangibles (38) (27) (0.9)
Profit on disposal and remeasurement of subsidiaries, joint ventures and associates 51 47 1.6
Integration and restructuring costs and exceptional items (42) (23) (0.7)
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders from continuing operations 1,141 734 25.0
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders from discontinued operations - - -
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 1,141 734 25.0
1 DCI includes direct capital instruments and fixed rate tier 1 notes.

(iii) The calculation of basic earnings per share uses a weighted average of 2,941 million (HY13: 2,942 million; FY13: 2,940 million) ordinary shares in issue, after deducting shares owned by the employee share trusts. The actual number of shares in issue at 30 June 2014 was 2,948 million (HY13: 2,947 million; FY13: 2,947 million) and 2,945 million (HY13: 2,944 million; FY13: 2,938 million) excluding shares owned by the employee share trusts.

Page 63

B7 - Earnings per share continued

(b) Diluted earnings per share

(i) Diluted earnings per share is calculated as follows:

6 months 2014 6 months 2013 Full Year 2013
Total £m Weighted average number of shares million Per share p
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 734 2,941 25.0
Dilutive effect of share awards and options - 40 (0.4)
Diluted earnings per share from continuing operations 734 2,981 24.6
Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders - 2,941 -
Dilutive effect of share awards and options - 40 -
Diluted earnings per share from discontinued operations - 2,981 -
Diluted earnings per share 734 2,981 24.6

(ii) Diluted earnings per share on operating profit attributable to ordinary shareholders is calculated as follows:

6 months 2014 6 months 2013 Full Year 2013
Total £m Weighted average number of shares million Per share p
Operating profit attributable to ordinary shareholders 694 2,941 23.6
Dilutive effect of share awards and options - 40 (0.3)
Diluted operating profit per share from continuing operations 694 2,981 23.3
Operating profit attributable to ordinary shareholders - 2,941 -
Dilutive effect of share awards and options - 40 -
Diluted operating profit per share from discontinued operations - 2,981 -
Diluted operating profit per share 694 2,981 23.3

Page 64

B8 - Dividends and appropriations

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full Year 2013 £m
Ordinary dividends declared and charged to equity in the period
Final 2013 - 9.40 pence per share, paid on 16 May 2014 277 - -
Final 2012 - 9.00 pence per share, paid on 17 May 2013 - 264 264
Interim 2013 - 5.60 pence per share, paid on 15 November 2013 - - 165
Total 277 264 429
Preference dividends declared and charged to equity in the period 9 9 17
Coupon payments on direct capital instruments and fixed rate tier 1 notes 16 17 92
Total 302 290 538

Subsequent to 30 June 2014, the directors declared an interim dividend for 2014 of 5.85 pence per ordinary share (HY13: 5.60 pence), amounting to £172 million (HY13: £165 million) in total. The dividend will be paid on 17 November and will be accounted for as an appropriation of retained earnings in the year ending 31 December 2014. Interest on the direct capital instruments issued in November 2004 and the fixed rate tier 1 notes issued in May 2012 is treated as an appropriation of retained profits and, accordingly, is accounted for when paid. Tax relief is obtained at a rate of 21.5% (2013: 23.25%).# B9 - Insurance liabilities

(a) Carrying amount

(i) Insurance liabilities (gross of reinsurance) at 30 June/31 December comprise:

30 June 2014 30 June 2013 31 December 2013
Long-term business £m General insurance and health £m Total £m Long-term business £m General insurance and health £m Total £m Long-term business £m General insurance and health £m Total £m
Long-term business provisions
Participating 44,248 - 44,248 49,037 - 49,037 45,098 - 45,098
Unit-linked non-participating 8,424 - 8,424 8,225 - 8,225 8,714 - 8,714
Other non-participating 42,697 - 42,697 72,368 - 72,368 41,160 - 41,160
95,369 - 95,369 129,630 - 129,630 94,972 - 94,972
Outstanding claims provisions 1,371 7,529 8,900 1,455 7,866 9,321 1,287 7,730 9,017
Provision for claims incurred but not reported - 2,533 2,533 - 2,820 2,820 - 2,568 2,568
1,371 10,062 11,433 1,455 10,686 12,141 1,287 10,298 11,585
Provision for unearned premiums - 4,302 4,302 - 4,610 4,610 - 4,226 4,226
Provision arising from liability adequacy tests - 10 10 - 11 11 - 10 10
Other technical provisions - - - - - - - - -
Total 96,740 14,374 111,114 131,085 15,307 146,392 96,259 14,534 110,793
Less: Amounts classified as held for sale - (134) (134) (33,331) (1) (33,332) (106) (132) (238)
96,740 14,240 110,980 97,754 15,306 113,060 96,153 14,402 110,555

(ii) Change in insurance liabilities recognised as an expense

The purpose of the following table is to reconcile the change in insurance liabilities, net of reinsurance, shown on the income statement, to the change in insurance liabilities recognised as an expense in the relevant movement tables in this note. The components of the reconciliation are the change in provision for outstanding claims on long-term business (which is not included in a separate movement table), and the unwind of discounting on GI reserves (which is included within finance costs within the income statement). For general insurance and health business, the change in the provision for unearned premiums is not included in the reconciliation as, within the income statement, this is included within earned premiums.

30 June 2014 30 June 2013
Gross £m Reinsurance £m Net £m Gross £m Reinsurance £m Net £m Gross £m Reinsurance £m Net £m
Continuing Operations
Long-term business
Change in long-term business provisions (note B9(b)) 1,630 (202) 1,428 (1,842) (220) (2,062) (2,423) (164) (2,587)
Change in provision for outstanding claims 117 (2) 115 142 3 145 75 (7) 68
1,747 (204) 1,543 (1,700) (217) (1,917) (2,348) (171) (2,519)
General insurance and health
Change in insurance liabilities (note B9(c)) (37) 30 (7) (70) 80 10 (33) 64 31
Less: Unwind of discount on GI reserves and other (9) 6 (3) (9) 7 (2) (15) 10 (5)
(46) 36 (10) (79) 87 8 (48) 74 26
Total change in insurance liabilities 1,701 (168) 1,533 (1,779) (130) (1,909) (2,396) (97) (2,493)
Discontinued Operations
Long term business
Change in long term business provisions (note B9(b)) 146 (14) 132 331 (19) 312
Change in provision for outstanding claims 6 2 8 (11) 11 -
152 (12) 140 320 (8) 312
General insurance and health
Change in insurance liabilities (note B9(c)) - - - - - -
Less: Unwind of discount on GI reserves and other - - - - - -
- - - - - -
Total change in insurance liabilities 152 (12) 140 320 (8) 312
Total 1,701 (168) 1,533 (1,627) (142) (1,769) (2,076) (105) (2,181)

Page 66

B9 - Insurance liabilities continued

31 December 2013 Continuing Operations Discontinued Operations
Gross £m Reinsurance £m Net £m Gross £m Reinsurance £m Net £m Gross £m Reinsurance £m Net £m
Long term business
Change in long term business provisions (note B9(b)) (2,423) (164) (2,587) 331 (19) 312 (2,092) (183) (2,275)
Change in provision for outstanding claims 75 (7) 68 (11) 11 - 64 4 68
(2,348) (171) (2,519) 320 (8) 312 (2,028) (179) (2,207)
General insurance and health
Change in insurance liabilities (note B9(c)) (33) 64 31 - - - (33) 64 31
Less: Unwind of discount on GI reserves and other (15) 10 (5) - - - (15) 10 (5)
(48) 74 26 - - - (48) 74 26
Total change in insurance liabilities (2,396) (97) (2,493) 320 (8) 312 (2,076) (105) (2,181)

(b) Movements in long-term business liabilities

The following movements have occurred in the long-term business provisions (gross of reinsurance) during the period:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full year 2013 £m
Carrying amount at 1 January 94,972 131,190 131,190
Provisions in respect of new business 2,408 2,973 5,671
Expected change in existing business provisions (2,500) (3,672) (8,015)
Variance between actual and expected experience 355 764 2,871
Impact of operating assumption changes (170) 36 428
Impact of economic assumption changes 1,630 (1,740) (2,812)
Other movements (93) (57) (235)
Change in liability recognised as an expense 1,630 (1,696) (2,092)
Effect of portfolio transfers, acquisitions and disposals¹ (109) (3,244) (34,441)
Foreign exchange rate movements (1,125) 3,572 509
Other movements 1 (192) (194)
Carrying amount at 30 June/31 December 95,369 129,630 94,972

¹ The movement during HY14 includes £103 million related to the disposal of Eurovita and £6 million related to the restructuring of our operations in Indonesia.

(c) Movements in general insurance and health liabilities

The following changes have occurred in the general insurance and health claims provisions (gross of reinsurance) during the period:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full year 2013 £m
Carrying amount at 1 January 10,298 10,554 10,554
Impact of changes in assumptions 91 (48) (80)
Claim losses and expenses incurred in the current period 2,938 3,123 6,337
Decrease in estimated claim losses and expenses incurred in prior periods (124) (136) (237)
Incurred claims losses and expenses 2,905 2,939 6,020
Less: Payments made on claims incurred in the current period (1,342) (1,362) (3,352)
Payments made on claims incurred in prior periods (1,729) (1,764) (3,001)
Recoveries on claim payments 120 108 285
Claims payments made in the period, net of recoveries (2,951) (3,018) (6,068)
Unwind of discounting 9 9 15
Changes in claims reserve recognised as an expense (37) (70) (33)
Effect of portfolio transfers, acquisitions and disposals (3) (9) (44)
Foreign exchange rate movements (195) 212 (178)
Other movements (1) (1) (1)
Carrying amount at 30 June/31 December 10,062 10,686 10,298

Page 67

B10 - Liability for investment contracts

(a) Carrying amount

The liability for investment contracts (gross of reinsurance) at 30 June/31 December comprised:

30 June 2014 £m 30 June 2013 £m 31 December 2013 £m
Long-term business
Participating contracts 67,512 70,249 70,628
Non-participating contracts at fair value 48,051 46,501 48,140
Non-participating contracts at amortised cost - 1,393 -
48,051 47,894 48,140
115,563 118,143 118,768
Less: Amount classified as held for sale - (4,858) (2,710)
Total 115,563 113,285 116,058

(b) Movements in participating investment contracts

The following movements have occurred in the provisions (gross of reinsurance) during the period:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full year 2013 £m
Carrying amount at 1 January 70,628 66,849 66,849
Provisions in respect of new business 2,319 1,686 3,421
Expected change in existing business provisions (882) (1,100) (2,243)
Variance between actual and expected experience 317 (401) 1,085
Impact of operating assumption changes 4 (2) 329
Impact of economic assumption changes 30 (61) (301)
Other movements (2) 7 (47)
Change in liability recognised as an expense 1,786 129 2,244
Effect of portfolio transfers, acquisitions and disposals¹ (2,671) (39) (39)
Foreign exchange rate movements (2,231) 3,117 1,380
Other movements - 193 194
Carrying amount at 30 June/31 December 67,512 70,249 70,628

¹ The movement during HY14 relates to the disposal of Eurovita.

(c) Movements in non-participating investment contracts

The following movements have occurred in the provisions (gross of reinsurance) during the period:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full year 2013 £m
Carrying amount at 1 January 48,140 47,699 47,699
Provisions in respect of new business 1,248 1,805 3,386
Expected change in existing business provisions (1,130) (1,687) (2,698)
Variance between actual and expected experience 129 1,374 3,122
Impact of operating assumption changes (1) 5 4
Impact of economic assumption changes 2 (46) 1
Other movements (24) (31) 46
Change in liability 224 1,420 3,861
Effect of portfolio transfers, acquisitions and disposals¹ (16) (1,909) (3,785)
Foreign exchange rate movements (297) 684 365
Other movements - - -
Carrying amount at 30 June/31 December 48,051 47,894 48,140

¹ The movement during HY14 relates to the disposal of Eurovita.

Page 68

B11 - Reinsurance assets

The reinsurance assets at 30 June/31 December comprised:

30 June 2014 £m 30 June 2013 £m 31 December 2013 £m
Long-term business
Insurance contracts 3,881 4,402 3,734
Participating investment contracts 2 3 2
Non-participating investment contracts¹ 2,279 1,657 2,048
6,162 6,062 5,784
Outstanding claims provisions 50 76 53
6,212 6,138 5,837
General insurance and health
Outstanding claims provisions 771 868 849
Provisions for claims incurred but not reported 341 344 315
1,112 1,212 1,164
Provisions for unearned premiums 253 269 256
1,365 1,481 1,420
7,577 7,619 7,257
Less: Amounts classified as held for sale (26) (712) (37)
Total 7,551 6,907 7,220

¹ Balances in respect of all reinsurance treaties are included under reinsurance assets, regardless of whether they transfer significant insurance risk. The reinsurance assets classified as non-participating investment contracts are financial instruments measured at fair value through profit and loss. The only exception is at 30 June 2013 where there are £101 million of reinsurance assets measured at amortised cost in US Life which was disposed on 2 October 2013.# B12 - Effect of changes in assumptions and estimates during the period

This disclosure only allows for the impact on liabilities and related assets, such as unallocated divisible surplus, reinsurance, deferred acquisition costs and AVIF, and does not allow for offsetting movements in the value of backing financial assets.

Assumptions Effect on profit 6 months 2014 £m Effect on profit 6 months 2013 £m Effect on profit Full year 2013 £m
Long-term insurance business
Interest rates (777) 1,190 1,389
Expenses 100 (16) 3
Persistency rates - - (1)
Mortality for assurance contracts - - 8
Mortality for annuity contracts 70 - 85
Tax and other assumptions (11) (214) 20
Investment contracts
Interest rates (1) - -
Expenses - - -
Persistency rates - - -
Tax and other assumptions - - -
General insurance and health business
Change in loss ratio assumptions - 1 3
Change in discount rate assumptions (67) 27 33
Change in expense ratio and other assumptions - - -
Total (686) 988 1,540

The impact of interest rates on long-term business relates primarily to UK annuities (including any change in credit default provisions), where a reduction in the valuation interest rates has increased liabilities. The overall impact on profit also depends on movements in the value of assets backing the liabilities, which is not included in this disclosure. There has been a release of expense reserves for UK annuities of £100 million as a result of continuing restructuring and process improvements, reducing the current and long-term cost base. IFRS margins in annuity reserves have been amended to ensure consistency across the business, leading to a release of reserves.

Page 69

B13 - Unallocated divisible surplus

An unallocated divisible surplus (UDS) is established where the nature of policy benefits is such that the division between shareholder reserves and policyholder liabilities is uncertain at the reporting date. This note shows the movements in the UDS during the period.

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full year 2013 £m
Carrying amount at 1 January 6,709 6,986 6,986
Change in participating contract assets 2,482 (810) (262)
Change in participating contract liabilities 89 222 (22)
Other movements 6 3 4
Change in liability recognised as an expense 2,577 (585) (280)
Effect of portfolio transfers, acquisition and disposals (123) (115) (115)
Foreign exchange rate movements (239) 265 118
Other movements (1) - -
Carrying amount at 30 June/31 December 8,923 6,551 6,709
Less: Amounts classified as held for sale - 18 4
8,923 6,569 6,713

The amount of UDS has increased significantly at 30 June 2014 driven primarily by positive investment market movements in Continental Europe. These have been caused by the significant appreciation of assets due to the fall in Eurozone government (and corporate) bond yields. Negative UDS balances result from an accounting mismatch between participating assets carried at market value and participating liabilities measured using local practice. Any negative balances are tested for recoverability using embedded value methodology and in line with local accounting practice. Testing is conducted at a participating fund-level within each life entity. Following the reversal of previous losses, all Italian participating funds at 30 June 2014 had positive UDS balances with the exception of some very small funds. The method for estimation of the recoverable negative UDS balance uses a real-world embedded value method, with a risk-discount rate of 6.10% (HY13: 6.65%, FY13: 6.60%). The embedded value method includes an implicit allowance for the time value of options and guarantees. The negative UDS balances in Italy were tested for recoverability and £1 million of negative UDS was considered irrecoverable (HY13: £105 million, of which £95 million was for Eurovita; FY13: £42 million, of which £39 million was for Eurovita). The remaining carrying value of negative UDS is £nil. The total UDS balance in Italy was £708 million positive at 30 June 2014 (HY13: £46 million negative, FY13: £205 million positive). In Spain, all participating funds had positive UDS balances at 30 June 2014, and consequently testing of negative UDS was not required. The carrying value of UDS was £209 million positive (HY13: £62 million positive, FY13: £132 million positive).

B14 - Borrowings

In April 2014 Aviva redeemed £200 million and €50 million Subordinated Notes due in 2019 at their first call dates. On 3 July 2014 Aviva plc issued €700 million of subordinated debt at an issue price of 99.699% of the nominal amount and bearing interest at 3.875% per annum. This subordinated debt matures on 3 July 2044 but the Company may, at its sole option, redeem all (but not part) of the debt on 3 July 2024 and on each interest payment date thereafter. The subordinated debt qualifies as tier 2 capital under current regulatory rules.

Page 70

B15 - Pension obligations and other provisions

(a) Carrying amounts

(i) Provisions in the condensed consolidated statement of financial position

In the condensed consolidated statement of financial position, the amount described as provisions includes pension scheme deficits and comprises:

30 June 2014 £m 30 June 2013 £m 31 December 2013 £m
Deficits in the main staff pension schemes 372 582 367
Deficits in other staff pension schemes 42 94 43
Deficits in staff pension schemes 414 676 410
Restructuring provisions 88 184 140
Other provisions 369 396 437
Total 871 1,256 987
Less: Amounts classified as held for sale - (177) (3)
871 1,079 984

(ii) Pension obligations

The assets and liabilities of the Group's material defined benefit schemes as at 30 June /31 December are shown below.

30 June 2014 £m 30 June 2013 £m 31 December 2013 £m
Total fair value of assets 13,176 12,385 12,398
Present value of scheme liabilities (12,287) (12,009) (12,159)
Net surplus in the schemes 889 376 239
Surplus included in other assets 1,261 958 606
Deficits included in provisions (372) (582) (367)
Net surplus in the schemes 889 376 239

(b) Movements in the schemes' surpluses and deficits

Movements in the pension schemes' surpluses and deficits comprise:

6 months 2014 £m 6 months 2013 £m Full Year 2013 £m
Net surplus in the schemes at 1 January 239 606 606
Current service costs - (3) (4)
Past service costs - amendments - (4) 142
Past service costs - curtailment gain - 4 5
Administrative expenses¹ (11) (9) (18)
Total pension cost (charged)/credited to expenses (11) (12) 125
Net interest credited/(charged) to investment income/(finance costs)² 9 16 37
Total recognised in the income statement from continuing operations (2) 4 162
Remeasurements:
Actual return on these assets 748 185 366
Less: Interest income on scheme assets (272) (272) (543)
Return on scheme assets excluding amounts in interest income 476 (87) (177)
Losses from change in financial assumptions (103) (165) (730)
Gains/(losses) from change in demographic assumptions 2 (51) 186
Experience gains 12 9 47
Total remeasurements recognised in other comprehensive income from continuing operations 387 (294) (674)
Employer contributions 253 83 149
Foreign exchange rate movements 12 (23) (4)
Net surplus in the schemes at 30 June / 31 December 889 376 239

¹ Administrative expenses are expensed as incurred.
² Net interest income of £16 million has been credited to investment income and net interest expense of £7 million has been charged to finance costs in HY14.

The increase in the surplus is primarily due to employer contributions and positive asset performance driven by falls in interest rates.

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B16 - Related party transactions

During the period, there have been no changes in the nature of the related party transactions from those described in the Group's annual report and accounts for the year ended 31 December 2013. There were no transactions with related parties that had a material effect on the result for the period ended 30 June 2014, 30 June 2013 or 31 December 2013.

B17 - Fair value

This note explains the methodology for valuing our assets and liabilities measured at fair value, and for fair value disclosures. It also provides an analysis of these according to a 'fair value hierarchy', determined by the market observability of valuation inputs.

(a) Basis for determining fair value hierarchy

All assets and liabilities for which fair value is measured or disclosed in the financial statements are categorised within the 'fair value hierarchy' described as follows, based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement as a whole:

Level 1
Inputs to Level 1 fair values are quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets and liabilities that the entity can access at the measurement date.

Level 2
Inputs to Level 2 fair values are inputs other than quoted prices included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly. If the asset or liability has a specified (contractual) term, a Level 2 input must be observable for substantially the full term of the instrument. Level 2 inputs include the following:
n Quoted prices for similar assets and liabilities in active markets.
n Quoted prices for identical or similar assets and liabilities in markets that are not active, the prices are not current, or price quotations vary substantially either over time or among market makers, or in which little information is released publicly.
n Inputs other than quoted prices that are observable for the asset or liability (for example, interest rates and yield curves observable at commonly quoted intervals, implied volatilities, and credit spreads).
n Market-corroborated inputs.

Where we use broker quotes and no information as to the observability of inputs is provided by the broker, the investments are classified as follows:
n Where the broker price is validated by using internal models with market observable inputs and the values are similar, we classify the investment as Level 2.# B17 - Fair value

In circumstances where internal models are not used to validate broker prices, or the observability of inputs used by brokers is unavailable, the investment is classified as Level 3. Level 3 Inputs to Level 3 fair values are unobservable inputs for the asset or liability. Unobservable inputs may have been used to measure fair value to the extent that observable inputs are not available, thereby allowing for situations in which there is little, if any, market activity for the asset or liability at the measurement date. However, the fair value measurement objective remains the same, i.e. an exit price at the measurement date from the perspective of a market participant that holds the asset or owes the liability. Therefore, unobservable inputs reflect the assumptions the business unit considers that market participants would use in pricing the asset or liability. Examples are investment properties, certain private equity investments and private placements. The majority of the Group's assets and liabilities measured at fair value are based on quoted market information or observable market data. 15.9% of assets and 1.6% of liabilities measured at fair value are based on estimates and recorded as Level 3. Where estimates are used, these are based on a combination of independent third-party evidence and internally developed models, calibrated to market observable data where possible. Third-party valuations using significant unobservable inputs validated against Level 2 internally modelled valuations are classified as Level 3, where there is a significant difference between the third-party price and the internally modelled value. Where the difference is insignificant, the instrument would be classified as Level 2.

(b) Changes to valuation technique

There were no changes in the valuation techniques during the period compared to those described in the 2013 annual consolidated financial statements, other than those noted below.

(c) Comparison of the carrying amount and fair values of financial instruments

Set out below is a comparison of the carrying amounts and fair values of financial assets and liabilities, excluding those classified as held for sale.

30 June 2014 30 June 2013 31 December 2013
Fair value £m Carrying amount £m Fair value £m
Financial assets
Loans² 22,830 22,967 25,008
Financial Investments 197,607 197,607 193,470
Fixed maturity securities 128,488 128,488 128,389
Equity securities 36,478 36,478 34,564
Other investments (including derivatives)¹ 32,641 32,641 30,517
Financial liabilities
Non-participating investment contracts³ 48,051 48,051 45,722
Net asset value attributable to unitholders 9,463 9,463 12,340
Borrowings² 7,459 6,944 8,288
Derivative liabilities¹‚⁴ 2,263 2,263 2,616

¹ Restated following the adoption of amendments to IAS 32 'Financial Instruments: Presentation' - see note B2 for details.
² Within total fair value, the estimated fair value has been provided for the portion of loans and borrowings that are carried at amortised cost as disclosed in B17(d).
³ Non-participating investment contracts are included within gross liabilities for investment contracts on the condensed statement of financial position and disclosed in note B10. At 30 June 2013, liabilities classified as held for sale of £779 million are excluded above.
⁴ Derivative liabilities are included within payables and other financial liabilities on the condensed consolidated statement of financial position.

Fair value of the following assets and liabilities approximate to their carrying amounts:
* Receivables
* Cash and cash equivalents
* Payables and other financial liabilities
* The equivalent assets to those above, which are classified as held for sale

(d) Fair value hierarchy analysis

An analysis of assets and liabilities measured at amortised cost and fair value categorised by fair value hierarchy is given below. Financial instruments relating to operations classified as held for sale have been excluded from the individual asset and liability line items and have been disclosed separately.

Fair value hierarchy | At 30 June 2014 | | | | |
| :-------------------- | :-----------------: | :-----------------: | :-----------------: | :-----------------: | :-----------------: | :-----------------: |
| | Level 1 £m | Level 2 £m | Level 3 £m | Sub-total fair value £m | Amortised cost £m | Total carrying value £m |
| Recurring fair value measurements | | | | | | |
Investment Property | - | - | 8,647 | 8,647 | - | 8,647 |
Loans | - | 3,258 | 15,340 | 18,598 | 4,369 | 22,967 |
Financial investments measured at fair value | | | | | | |
Fixed maturity securities | 75,121 | 45,078 | 8,289 | 128,488 | - | 128,488 |
Equity securities | 35,919 | 110 | 449 | 36,478 | - | 36,478 |
Other investments (including derivatives) | 24,367 | 5,243 | 3,031 | 32,641 | - | 32,641 |
Financial assets of operations classified as held for sale | 23 | - | - | 23 | - | 23 |
Total | 135,430 | 53,689 | 35,756 | 224,875 | 4,369 | 229,244 |
Financial liabilities measured at fair value | | | | | | |
Non-participating investment contracts¹ | 47,807 | 244 | - | 48,051 | - | 48,051 |
Net asset value attributable to unit holders | 9,376 | - | 87 | 9,463 | - | 9,463 |
Borrowings | - | 852 | 494 | 1,346 | 5,598 | 6,944 |
Derivative liabilities² | 250 | 1,635 | 378 | 2,263 | - | 2,263 |
Financial liabilities of operations classified as held for sale | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Total | 57,433 | 2,731 | 959 | 61,123 | 5,598 | 66,721 |

¹ In addition to the balances in this table, included within reinsurance assets in the statement of financial position and note B11 are £2,279 million of non-participating investment contracts, which are legally reinsurance but do not meet the definition of a reinsurance contract under IFRS. These assets are financial instruments measured at fair value through profit and loss and are classified as Level 1 assets.
² Derivative liabilities are included within payables and other financial liabilities on the condensed consolidated statement of financial position.

Fair value hierarchy At 30 June 2014
Level 1 £m Level 2 £m Level 3 £m Total fair value £m
Non-recurring fair value measurements¹
Properties occupied by group companies - - 246 246
Total - - 246 246

¹ Non-recurring fair value measurements are defined in IFRS 13 and are those that are required or permitted by other IFRS to be measured at fair value in the statement of financial position in particular circumstances. Owner occupied property is revalued in accordance with IAS 16.

Fair value hierarchy At 30 June 2013 (Restated³)
Level 1 £m Level 2 £m Level 3 £m Sub-total fair value £m Amortised cost £m Total carrying value £m
Recurring fair value measurements
Investment Property - 9,832 - 9,832 - 9,832
Loans - 18,431 - 18,431 5,794 24,225
Financial investments measured at fair value
Fixed maturity securities 108,451 10,679 9,259 128,389 - 128,389
Equity securities 34,062 19 483 34,564 - 34,564
Other investments (including derivatives)³ 22,631 5,553 2,333 30,517 - 30,517
Financial assets of operations classified as held for sale 2,231 31,884 833 34,948 3,726 38,674
Total 167,375 76,398 12,908 256,681 9,520 266,201
Financial liabilities measured at fair value
Non-participating investment contracts¹ 45,225 298 199 45,722 - 45,722
Net asset value attributable to unit holders 12,340 - - 12,340 - 12,340
Borrowings - 1,284 - 1,284 6,970 8,254
Derivative liabilities²‚³ 147 2,049 420 2,616 - 2,616
Financial liabilities of operations classified as held for sale - 612 299 911 1,605 2,516
Total 57,712 4,243 918 62,873 8,575 71,448

¹ In addition to the balances in this table, included within reinsurance assets in the statement of financial position and note B11 are non-participating investment contracts, which are legally reinsurance but do not meet the definition of a reinsurance contract under IFRS. £1,556 million are financial instruments measured at fair value through profit and loss and are classified as Level 1 assets.
² Derivative liabilities are included within payables and other financial liabilities on the condensed consolidated statement of financial position.
³ Restated following the adoption of amendments to IAS 32 'Financial Instruments: Presentation' - see note B2 for details.

Fair value hierarchy At 30 June 2013
Level 1 £m Level 2 £m Level 3 £m Total fair value £m
Non-recurring fair value measurements¹
Properties occupied by group companies - 261 - 261
Total - 261 - 261

¹ Non-recurring fair value measurements are defined in IFRS 13 and are those that are required or permitted by other IFRS to be measured at fair value in the statement of financial position in particular circumstances. Owner occupied property is revalued in accordance with IAS 16.

Fair value hierarchy At 31 December 2013 (Restated³)
Level 1 £m Level 2 £m Level 3 £m Sub-total fair value £m Amortised cost £m Total carrying value £m
Recurring fair value measurements
Investment Property - - 9,451 9,451 - 9,451
Loans - 3,115 15,362 18,477 5,402 23,879
Financial investments measured at fair value
Fixed maturity securities 74,904 40,602 8,879 124,385 - 124,385
Equity securities 36,783 102 441 37,326 - 37,326
Other investments (including derivatives)³ 24,129 5,170 3,017 32,316 - 32,316
Financial assets of operations classified as held for sale 2,245 282 148 2,675 - 2,675
Total 138,061 49,271 37,298 224,630 5,402 230,032
Financial liabilities measured at fair value
Non-participating investment contracts¹ 47,889 251 - 48,140 - 48,140
Net asset value attributable to unit holders 10,183 179 - 10,362 - 10,362
Borrowings - 831 482 1,313 6,506 7,819
Derivative liabilities²‚³ 220 1,830 201 2,251 - 2,251
Financial liabilities of operations classified as held for sale - - - - 29 29
Total 58,292 3,091 683 62,066 6,535 68,601

¹ In addition to the balances in this table, included within reinsurance assets in the statement of financial position and note B11 are £2,048 million of non-participating investment contracts, which are legally reinsurance but do not meet the definition of a reinsurance contract under IFRS.# B17 - Fair value continued

These assets are financial instruments measured at fair value through profit and loss and are classified as Level 1 assets.
2 Derivative liabilities are included within payables and other financial liabilities on the condensed consolidated statement of financial position.
3 Restated following the adoption of amendments to IAS 32 'Financial Instruments: Presentation' - see note B2 for details.

Fair value hierarchy

Level 1 £m Level 2 £m Level 3 £m Total fair value £m
Non-recurring fair value measurements¹
Properties occupied by group companies - - 257 257
Total - - 257 257

1 Non-recurring fair value measurements are defined in IFRS 13 and are those that are required or permitted by other IFRS to be measured at fair value in the statement of financial position in particular circumstances. Owner occupied property is revalued in accordance with IAS 16.

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B17 - Fair value continued

(e) Transfers between Levels of the fair value hierarchy

For financial instruments that are recognised at fair value on a recurring basis, the Group determines whether transfers have occurred between levels of the fair value hierarchy by re-assessing categorisation (based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement as a whole) at the end of the reporting period.

Transfers between Level 1 and Level 2

During the six month period ended 30 June 2014, transfers of financial assets from fair value hierarchy Level 1 to Level 2 amounted to £3.1 billion. These principally arose in the UK and Ireland as a result of the enhanced understanding of pricing vendor methodologies for the fair value hierarchy classification of certain debt securities. Transfers from Level 2 to Level 1 amounted to £0.2 billion and arose in Spain as a result in changes in the level of market activity for those debt securities.

Transfers to/from Level 3

Transfers out of Level 3 of £287 million relate principally to improvements in the market liquidity of debt securities held by our business in France, which were transferred to Level 1 where quoted market prices became available from an active market, or to Level 2 where valuations based on observable inputs became available. Transfers into Level 3 relate principally to debt securities held in the UK which were transferred from Level 2 due to the unavailability of market observable prices.

(f) Further information on Level 3 assets and liabilities:

The table below shows movement in the Level 3 assets and liabilities measured at fair value:

Investment Property £m Loans £m Debt securities £m Equity securities £m Other investments (including derivatives)¹ £m Financial assets of operations classified as held for sale £m Net asset value attributable to unitholders £m Derivative liabilities¹ £m Borrowings £m
Opening balance at 1 January 2014 9,451 15,362 8,879 441 3,017 148 - (201) (482)
Total net (losses)/gains recognised in the income statement 270 217 98 16 (47) - - (26) (7)
Additions 331 586 266 13 689 - - (74) -
Disposals (1,340) (825) (679) (5) (577) (148) - - -
Transfers into Level 3 - - 303 - 17 - (87) (77) (5)
Transfers out of Level 3 - - (287) - - - - - -
Foreign exchange movements (65) - (291) (16) (68) - - - -
Balance at 30 June 2014 8,647 15,340 8,289 449 3,031 - (87) (378) (494)

1 Restated following the adoption of amendments to IAS 32 'Financial Instruments: Presentation' - see note B2 for details.

Total net gains recognised in the income statement in the six-month period ended 30 June 2014 in respect of Level 3 assets measured at fair value amounted to £554 million with net losses in respect of liabilities of £33 million. Included in this balance are £497 million of net gains attributable to those assets and £32 million net losses attributable to those liabilities still held at the end of the period.

The principal assets classified as Level 3, and the valuation techniques applied to them, are:

  • n Commercial mortgage loans held by our UK Life business amounting to £9.7 billion (FY13: £9.9 billion), valued using a Portfolio Credit Risk Model (PCRM). This model calculates a Credit Risk Adjusted Value (CRAV) for each mortgage. The risk adjusted cash flows are discounted using a yield curve, taking into account the term dependent gilt yield curve, and global assumptions for the liquidity premium. The mortgage loans have been classified as Level 3 as the liquidity premium is not deemed to be market observable.
  • n Equity release mortgage loans held by our UK Life business amounting to £5.1 billion (FY13: £4.7 billion), valued using a Discounted Cash Flow model (DCF). Cash flows are adjusted for credit risk and discounted using a yield curve and global assumptions for the liquidity premium. The mortgage loans have been classified as Level 3 as assumptions used to derive the credit risk, liquidity premium and property risk are not deemed to be market observable.
  • n Investment property amounting to £8.6 billion (FY13: £9.5 billion). In the UK, investment property is valued at least annually by external chartered surveyors in accordance with guidance issued by The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, and using estimates during the intervening period. Outside the UK, valuations are produced by local qualified staff of the Group or external qualified professional valuers in the countries concerned. Fair values are determined using an income method, by which own lease agreement cash-flows are adjusted for anticipated uplifts, and discounted by rates implied by recent market transactions for similar properties where available. These inputs are deemed unobservable.
  • n Structured bond-type and non-standard debt products held by our business in France amounting to £6.4 billion (FY13: £7.1 billion), for which there is no active market. These bonds are valued either using counterparty or broker quotes. These bonds are validated against internal or third-party models. These bonds have been classified as Level 3 because either (i) the third-party models included a significant unobservable liquidity adjustment or (ii) differences between the valuation provided by the counterparty and broker quotes and the validation model were sufficiently significant to result in a Level 3 classification. The values reported in respect of these products were the lower of counterparty and broker quotes and internally modelled valuations.

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B17 - Fair value continued

  • n Private equity investment funds amounting to £1.0 billion (FY13: £1.1 billion), together with external hedge funds held principally by businesses in the UK and France amounting to £1.1 billion (FY13: £1.1 billion), and property funds amounting to £0.6 billion (FY13: £0.5 billion) are valued based on external reports received from the fund manager. Where these valuations are at a date other than balance sheet date, as in the case of some private equity funds, we make adjustments for items such as subsequent draw-downs and distributions and the fund manager's carried interest.
  • n Level 3 investments including a collateralised loan obligation of £0.4 billion (FY13: £0.4 billion) and UK non-recourse loans of £0.5 billion (FY13: £0.8 billion) have been valued using internally developed discounted cash flow models.
  • n Investments including debt securities held by our French business of £0.7 billion (FY13: £0.7 billion) and notes issued by loan partnerships held by our UK Life business amounting to £0.2 billion (FY13: £0.3 billion) have been valued using third party or counterparty valuations.
  • n Other Level 3 investments amount to £1.5 billion (restated FY13: £1.2 billion) and relate to a diverse range of different types of securities held by a number of businesses throughout the Group.

Where possible, the Group tests the sensitivity of the fair values of Level 3 investments to changes in unobservable inputs to reasonable alternatives. Valuations for Level 3 investments are sourced from independent third parties when available and, where appropriate, validated against internally-modelled valuations, third-party models or broker quotes. Where third-party pricing sources are unwilling to provide a sensitivity analysis for their valuations, the Group undertakes, where feasible, sensitivity analysis on the following basis:

  • n For third-party valuations validated against internally-modelled valuations using significant unobservable inputs, the sensitivity of the internally modelled valuation to changes in unobservable inputs to a reasonable alternative is determined.
  • n For third-party valuations either not validated or validated against a third-party model or broker quote, the third-party valuation in its entirety is considered an unobservable input. Sensitivities are determined by flexing inputs of internal models to a reasonable alternative, including the yield, NAV multiple, IRR or other suitable valuation multiples of the financial instrument implied by the third-party valuation. For example, for a fixed income security the implied yield would be the rate of return which discounts the security's contractual cash flows to equal the third-party valuation.

On the basis of the methodology outlined above, the Group is able to perform sensitivity analysis for £35.0 billion of the Group's Level 3 assets. For these Level 3 investments, changing unobservable valuation inputs to a reasonable alternative would result in a change in fair value by ± £1.7 billion. Of the £0.8 billion Level 3 investments for which sensitivity analysis is not provided, it is estimated that a 10% change in valuation downwards of these investments would result in a change in fair value of £80 million.

The principal liabilities classified as Level 3, and the valuation techniques applied to them, are:

  • n Securitised mortgage loan notes of £0.5 billion (FY13: £0.5 billion). These are valued using a similar technique to the related Level 3 equity release mortgage loans described above.# B18 - Risk management

Derivative liabilities of £0.4 billion (restated FY13: £0.2 billion) represent exposures to over the counter derivatives such as credit default swaps and inflation swaps. These swaps are valued using either a DCF model or other valuation models. Cash flows within these models may be adjusted based on assumptions reflecting the underlying credit risk and liquidity risk and these assumptions are deemed to be not market observable.

Net asset value attributable to unitholders of £0.1 billion (FY13: £nil) relates to minority interests in consolidated investment funds that are priced based on unobservable inputs. Where possible, the Group tests the sensitivity of the fair values of Level 3 liabilities to changes in unobservable inputs to reasonable alternatives. Sensitivities are determined by flexing inputs of internal models to a reasonable alternative, including the yield, NAV multiple, IRR or other suitable valuation multiples of the financial instrument. The Group is able to perform sensitivity analysis for £0.8 billion of the Group's Level 3 liabilities. For these Level 3 liabilities, changing unobservable valuation inputs to a reasonable alternative would result in a change in fair value by ± £40 million. Of the £0.2 billion Level 3 liabilities for which sensitivity analysis is not provided it is estimated that a 10% change in valuation downwards of these liabilities would result in a change in fair value of £20 million.

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B18 - Risk management

As a global insurance group, risk management is at the heart of what we do and is the source of value creation as well as a vital form of control. It is an integral part of managing and maintaining financial strength and stability for our customers, shareholders and other stakeholders. Our sustainability and financial strength are underpinned by an effective risk management process which helps us identify major risks to which we may be exposed, establish appropriate controls and take mitigating actions for the benefit of our customers and investors. The Group's risk strategy is to invest its available capital to optimise the balance between return and risk while maintaining an appropriate level of economic (i.e. risk-based) capital and regulatory capital. Consequently, our risk management goals are to:

  • Embed rigorous risk management throughout the business, based on setting clear risk appetites and staying within these;
  • Allocate capital where it will make the highest returns on a risk-adjusted basis; and
  • Meet the expectations of our customers, investors and regulators that we will maintain sufficient capital surpluses to meet our liabilities even if a number of extreme risks materialise.

Aviva's risk management framework has been designed and implemented to support these objectives. The key elements of our risk management framework comprise our risk appetite; risk governance, including risk policies and business standards, risk oversight committees and roles & responsibilities; and the processes we use to identify, measure, manage, monitor and report (IMMMR) risks, including the use of our risk models and stress and scenario testing.

Risk environment

The first six months of 2014 have seen continued strengthening of the financial markets with monetary policies and emerging economic growth in the US, Europe and Japan helping to bolster this position. Global equities have remained stable at or close to all-time highs and corporate credit spreads have continued their decline to levels not seen since before the 2008 financial crisis. Eurozone sovereign bonds have also benefitted from the increased liquidity in the system provided by the ECB, with yields registering the lowest levels seen to date, while UK gilt and US treasury long term yields have begun to pick-up with the prospect of interest rate rises in the near to medium term future. Currencies have been relatively stable during the first half of 2014 with pound sterling continuing to strengthen against the US dollar and Euro.

The Omnibus II Directive (the amendments to the Solvency II Directive) has reached the final stage of formal adoption by member states and transposition into national law. However, while consultation over implementing technical standards and supervisory guidelines continues, there remains some uncertainty over the detailed requirements, in particular their interpretation, and impact of the new European prudential regime, which will be effective from 1 January 2016. Aviva continues to actively participate in the development of Solvency II through key European industry working groups.

The Group is designated as being a Global Systemically Important Insurer (G-SII), bringing it within the scope of the G-SII policy requirements of the International Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS). Requirements include developing a Systemic Risk Management Plan, recovery and resolution plans and a liquidity risk management plan. New basic capital requirements (BCR) are currently in field-testing and will be privately reported to supervisors from 2015. The BCR will form the basis for yet to be developed higher loss absorbency capital requirements, which will apply from January 2019, if the Group remains a G-SII.

Risk profile

We continue to manage our risk profile to reflect Aviva's objective of maintaining financial strength and reducing capital volatility. During the first half of 2014 we announced disposals of our US asset management boutique River Road, South Korean joint venture and Turkish general insurance business as well as a significant restructure of our Italian business. As described below, a number of foreign exchange rate, credit and equity hedges are in place and restrictions on non-domestic investment in sovereign and corporate debt from Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain remain in place. Going forward, the Group's focus will continue to be on building the balance sheet and cash-flow position, and decreasing the balance sheet volatility and internal and external leverage. Our risk management processes enable us to monitor all our capital measures and to identify and manage mismatches between our assets and liabilities. These processes include the use of derivative hedges which are described in more detail below.

Material risks and uncertainties

In accordance with the requirements of the FCA Handbook (DTR 4.2.7) we provide an update here on the material risks and uncertainties facing the Group. The types of risks to which the Group is exposed have not changed significantly over the half-year to 30 June 2014 and remain credit, market, life insurance, general insurance, liquidity, asset management, operational and reputational risks. These risks are described below. Further detail on these risks is given within note 58 of the Aviva plc Annual Report and Accounts 2013.

(a) Credit risk

Aviva has a strong record of managing credit risk and we see credit as an area where we can make a good return for the benefit of both our policyholders and shareholders. During the first half of 2014 we continued to limit our sovereign and corporate debt exposure to Greece, Italy, Portugal and Spain, which has benefitted from an increase in market values. The completion of the disposal of the Group's interest in Eurovita has resulted in a significant reduction to Italian sovereign and corporate debt. In light of the improving economic situation in Ireland, we have made a modest increase in our exposure to Irish sovereign debt during the first six months of 2014. We have in place a comprehensive group-wide reporting system that consolidates credit exposures across geographies, business lines and exposure types. We have a robust framework of limits and controls to diversify the portfolio and enable the early identification of potential issues. Refer to section D.3.3.5 of this report for details of our sovereign exposures to Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy. During the first half of 2014 the credit rating profile of our debt securities portfolio has remained strong, and the average rating has risen slightly in line with the general market's rating agency upgrades. At 30 June 2014, the proportion of our shareholder debt securities that are investment grade has increased slightly to 90.7% (31 December 2013: 90.2%).

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B18 - Risk management continued

The Group has in place a series of macro credit hedges to reduce the overall credit risk exposure. The notional size of these long-term hedges remained at approximately £4 billion during the first half of 2014.

(b) Market risk

We continue to limit our direct equity exposure. A rolling central equity hedging strategy remains in place to help control the Group's overall direct and indirect exposure to equities. At 30 June 2014 the Group's shareholder funds held £1.5 billion notional of equity hedge put spreads, with nine months to maturity and an average strike of 78%-65% of the prevailing market levels on 30 June 2014. We have a limited appetite for interest rate risk as we do not believe it is adequately rewarded. Our conservative and disciplined approach to asset and liability management and pricing limit our exposure to interest rate and guarantee risk. Asset and liability durations across the Group are generally well matched and actions have been taken to manage guarantee risk in the current low interest rate environment. In particular, a key objective is to match the duration of our annuity liabilities with assets of the same duration. These assets include corporate bonds, residential mortgages and commercial mortgages. Should they default before maturity, it is assumed that the Group can reinvest in assets of a similar risk and return profile, which is subject to market conditions.# B18 - Risk management continued

Interest rate hedges are used to manage asymmetric interest rate exposures in some of our life insurance businesses as well as an efficient way to manage cash flow and duration matching (the most material examples relate to guaranteed annuity exposures in both UK and Ireland). These hedges are used to protect against interest rate falls and are sufficient in scale to materially reduce the Group's interest rate exposure. At a Group level we actively seek to manage currency risk primarily by matching assets and liabilities in functional currencies at the business unit level. Foreign currency dividends from subsidiaries are hedged using foreign exchange forwards to provide certainty regarding the sterling value to be received by the Group. Hedges have also been used to protect the Group's capital against a significant depreciation in local currency versus sterling. At 30 June 2014 the Group had in place Euro hedges with notional values of £3.5 billion.

(c) Liquidity risk

Liquidity risk is the risk of not being able to make payments as they become due because there are insufficient assets in cash form or that can easily be turned into cash. The relatively illiquid nature of insurance liabilities is a potential source of additional investment return by allowing us to invest in higher yielding, but less liquid assets such as commercial mortgages. The Group seeks to ensure that it maintains sufficient liquid financial resources to meet its obligations as they fall due through the application of a Group liquidity risk policy and business standard. At Group and business unit level, there is a liquidity risk appetite which requires that sufficient liquid resources be maintained to cover net outflows in a stress scenario. The Company's main sources of liquidity are liquid assets held within the Company and Aviva Group Holdings Limited (AGH), and dividends received from the Group's insurance and asset management businesses. Sources of liquidity in normal markets also include a variety of short and long-term instruments including commercial papers and medium and long-term debt. In addition to the existing liquid resources and expected inflows, the Group and Company maintain significant undrawn committed borrowing facilities (30 June 2014: £1.4 billion) from a range of leading international banks to further mitigate this risk.

(d) Life insurance risk

The profile of most of our life insurance risks, primarily persistency, mortality and expense risk, has remained stable in the first half of 2014. Our economic exposure to longevity risk has decreased as a result of the Aviva Staff Pension Scheme entering into a longevity swap covering £5 billion of pensioner in payment scheme liabilities on 5 March 2014, while any significant reduction in individual annuity new business volumes as a result of the UK budget changes to compulsory annuitisation will also reduce our longevity risks exposure over the longer term to the extent not offset by increased bulk purchase annuity volumes. Despite this longevity risk remains the Group's most significant life insurance risk due to the Group's existing annuity portfolio. Persistency risk remains significant and continues to have a volatile outlook, with underlying performance linked to economic conditions. Businesses across the Group mitigate this risk through a range of customer retention activities. The Group has continued to write substantial volumes of life protection business, and to utilise reinsurance to reduce exposure to potential mortality losses. All life insurance risks benefit from significant diversification against other risks in the portfolio, limiting the impact on the Group's aggregate risk profile. Provisions made for insurance liabilities are inherently uncertain. Due to this uncertainty, life insurance reserves are regularly reviewed by qualified and experienced actuaries at the business unit and Group level in accordance with the Group's reserving framework. This and other risks are subject to an overarching risk management framework and various mechanisms to govern and control our risks and exposures.

General insurance risk

The Group writes a balanced portfolio of general insurance risk (including personal motor; household; commercial motor; property and liability) across a geographically diversified spread of markets including UK; Ireland; Canada; France; Italy; Turkey and Poland. This risk is taken on, in line with our underwriting and pricing expertise, to provide an appropriate level of return for an acceptable level of risk. Underwriting discipline and a robust governance process is at the core of the Group's underwriting strategy. Provisions made for insurance liabilities are inherently uncertain. Due to this uncertainty, general insurance reserves are regularly reviewed by qualified and experienced actuaries at the business unit and Group level in accordance with the Group's reserving framework. These and other key risks, including the occurrence of unexpected claims from a single source or cause and inadequate reinsurance protection/risk transfer, are subject to an overarching risk management framework and various mechanisms to govern and control our risks and exposures. During the first half of 2014, Aviva's general insurance risk profile has remained stable. As with life insurance risks, general insurance risks also benefit from the significant diversification that arises from being part of a large and diverse portfolio, limiting the impact on the Group's aggregate risk profile. Aviva successfully completed the renewal of its group-wide catastrophe protection on 1 April 2014. Aviva has chosen to reduce the level of risk it retains through the purchase of additional reinsurance protection including a new groupwide aggregate protection. Processes are in place to manage catastrophe risk in individual business units and at a group level.

(e) Asset management risk

Asset management risk arises through exposure to negative investment performance, fund liquidity, and factors that influence franchise value such as product development appropriateness and capability, and client retention. Aviva is directly exposed to the risks associated with operating an asset management business through its ownership of Aviva Investors. The underlying risk profile of our asset management risk is derived from investment performance, specialist investment professionals and leadership, product development capabilities, fund liquidity, margin, client retention, regulatory developments, fiduciary and contractual responsibilities. These key risks are monitored on an on-going basis with issues escalated to the appropriate governance committee.

(f) Operational risk

The Group continues to operate, validate and enhance its key operational controls and purchase insurance to minimise losses arising from inadequate or ineffective internal processes, people and systems or from external events. The Group maintains constructive relationships with its regulators around the world and developments in relation to key regulatory changes such as Solvency II are monitored closely. We continue to work with regulatory bodies to help deliver an appropriate outcome to Solvency II and prepare for the necessary business changes. Similarly, we are monitoring the development of IFRS 4 Phase 2 and will prepare for the necessary business changes.

(g) Brand and reputation risk

Our success and results are, to a certain extent, dependent on the strength of our brands, the brands of our partners and our reputation with customers, agents, regulators, rating agencies, investors and analysts. While we are well recognised, we are vulnerable to adverse market and customer perception. Any of our brands or our reputation could also be affected if products or services recommended by us or any of our intermediaries do not perform as expected whether or not the expectations are founded, or the customer's expectations for the product have changed. We monitor this risk and have controls in place to limit our exposure.

B19 - Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents in the statement of cash flows at 30 June/31 December comprised:

30 June 2014 £m Restated¹ 30 June 2013 £m Restated¹ 31 December 2013 £m
Cash and cash equivalents 23,584 27,662 26,131
Cash and cash equivalents of operations classified as held for sale 64 965 351
Bank overdrafts (843) (1,002) (493)
Net cash and cash equivalents at 30 June/31 December 22,805 27,625 25,989

¹ The statement of cash flows and the statement of financial position have been restated following the adoption of amendments to 'IAS 32: Financial Instruments: Presentation'. Refer to note B2 for further information.

B20 - Contingent liabilities and other risk factors

During the period, there have been no material changes in the nature of the contingent liabilities and other risk factors from those described in note 53 of the Group's 2013 Annual report and accounts.

Directors' responsibility statement

The directors' confirm that these condensed interim financial statements have been prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting', as adopted by the European Union and as issued by the IASB and that the interim management report includes a fair review of the information required by DTR 4.2.7 and DTR 4.2.8, namely:
* an indication of important events that have occurred during the first six months and their impact on the condensed set of financial statements, and a description of the principal risks and uncertainties for the remaining six months of the financial year; and
* material related-party transactions in the first six months and any material changes in the related-party transactions described in the last annual report.Information on the current directors responsible for providing this statement can be found on the Company's website at: http://www.aviva.com/investor-relations/corporate-governance/board-of-directors/

By order of the Board

Mark Wilson
Group chief executive officer

Thomas D. Stoddard
Chief financial officer

6 August 2014

Page 80

Independent review report to Aviva plc

Report on the condensed consolidated interim financial statements

Our conclusion

We have reviewed the condensed consolidated interim financial statements, defined below, in the half year report of Aviva plc for the six months ended 30 June 2014. Based on our review, nothing has come to our attention that causes us to believe that the condensed consolidated interim financial statements are not prepared, in all material respects, in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34 as adopted by the European Union and as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board, and the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority. This conclusion is to be read in the context of what we say in the remainder of this report.

What we have reviewed

The condensed consolidated interim financial statements, which are prepared by Aviva plc, comprise:
* the condensed consolidated statement of financial position as at 30 June 2014;
* the condensed consolidated income statement and statement of comprehensive income for the period then ended;
* the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows for the period then ended;
* the condensed consolidated statement of changes in equity for the period then ended; and
* the explanatory notes to the condensed consolidated interim financial statements.

As disclosed in note B1, the financial reporting framework that has been applied in the preparation of the full annual financial statements of the group is applicable law and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRSs) as adopted by the European Union and as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board. The condensed consolidated interim financial statements included in the half year report have been prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard 34, 'Interim Financial Reporting', as adopted by the European Union and the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.

What a review of condensed consolidated financial statements involves

We conducted our review in accordance with International Standard on Review Engagements (UK and Ireland) 2410, 'Review of Interim Financial Information Performed by the Independent Auditor of the Entity' issued by the Auditing Practices Board for use in the United Kingdom. A review of interim financial information consists of making enquiries, primarily of persons responsible for financial and accounting matters, and applying analytical and other review procedures. A review is substantially less in scope than an audit conducted in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK and Ireland) and, consequently, does not enable us to obtain assurance that we would become aware of all significant matters that might be identified in an audit. Accordingly, we do not express an audit opinion.

We have read the other information contained in the half year report and considered whether it contains any apparent misstatements or material inconsistencies with the information in the condensed consolidated interim financial statements.

Responsibilities for the condensed consolidated interim financial statements and the review

Our responsibilities and those of the directors

The half year report, including the condensed consolidated interim financial statements, is the responsibility of, and has been approved by, the directors. The directors are responsible for preparing the half year report in accordance with the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority.

Our responsibility is to express to the company a conclusion on the condensed consolidated interim financial statements in the half year report based on our review. This report, including the conclusion, has been prepared for and only for the company for the purpose of complying with the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the Financial Conduct Authority and for no other purpose. We do not, in giving this conclusion, accept or assume responsibility for any other purpose or to any other person to whom this report is shown or into whose hands it may come save where expressly agreed by our prior consent in writing.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Chartered Accountants
6 August 2014
London

Notes:
(a) The maintenance and integrity of the Aviva plc website is the responsibility of the directors; the work carried out by the auditors does not involve consideration of these matters and, accordingly, the auditors accept no responsibility for any changes that may have occurred to the financial statements since they were initially presented on the website.
(b) Legislation in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

End of part 3 of 5

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