Insurance is a good chunk of DXC to own tbh.
Its a sizeable piece, a profitable piece and there is massive customer lock in.
If you listened to one of the recent town halls (don't ask me which one) Raul spent some time fawning over it saying just how much of the insurance vertical DXC has, which is probably a fair indicator that what this article says about Insurance is probably true.
I had previously stated on here that it was a good strong possibility for a spin off. Its certainly big enough to stand on its own two feet.
If they spin it to a separate company it will go the way of all of the others they spun out (and the same for how IBM did Kyndryl). Stand it up as a standalone piece, then sell it ready packaged - because nobody wants to buy just some random ill defined mess and restructure it themselves. Some lucky DXC exec will become CEO of the new company but only until the new buyers integrate their purchase and then he'll be paid off.
DXC will get a few billion by doing it and then promptly waste that money rather than use it to innovate.... just like all the times before.