TPL Corp has formally moved a step closer to selling its insurance arm after its board approved the signing of a share purchase agreement with Jazz International Holding Ltd for the acquisition of shares and control of TPL Insurance Ltd, the group’s listed general insurer. In a notice to the Pakistan Stock Exchange dated 17 December 2025, TPL Corp said the board meeting gave “final approval” for the transaction, subject to “obtaining all required approvals”.
The update matters because it turns what had been an interesting bid into a board-sanctioned corporate action. TPL Corp had previously told the market, on 8 September 2025, that the board had granted “in-principle approval” for a potential acquisition of TPL Insurance by an entity that was, at the time, described as part of the VEON/Jazz orbit. The 17 December notice explicitly frames the latest decision as a continuation of that earlier disclosure.
Alongside TPL Corp’s announcement, the buyside investment bank, Arif Habib Ltd, circulated an addendum to the Public Announcement of Intention (PAI) to acquire shares and control of TPL Insurance. That addendum, published in newspapers on 17 December 2025, confirmed a key structuring detail: the acquirer is now being presented as Jazz International Holding Ltd, with Pakistan Mobile Communications Ltd (PMCL) – the operating company behind the Jazz brand – identified as a party “acting in concert”.
This distinction is more than paperwork. In takeover situations, who is formally named as the acquirer can shape the approvals required, the sequencing of disclosures, and how regulators assess “fit and proper” criteria – particularly relevant in a regulated business like insurance. The content in this publication is expensive to produce. But unlike other journalistic outfits, business publications have to cover the very organizations that directly give them advertisements. Hence, this large source of revenue, which is the lifeblood of other media houses, is severely compromised on account of Profit’s no-compromise policy when it comes to our reporting. No wonder, Profit has lost multiple ad deals, worth tens of millions of rupees, due to stories that held big businesses to account. Hence, for our work to continue unfettered, it must be supported by discerning readers who know the value of quality business journalism, not just for the economy but for the society as a whole.To read the full article, subscribe and support independent business journalism in Pakistan








