Business Standard

NEW INDIA ASSURANCE FILES IPO PAPERS

Issue to be of 120 mn shares, with a face value of ~5 each

- SUBRATA PANDA & PTI Mumbai, 9 August

The country's largest non-life insurer, New India Assurance, filed the draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) for public listing before the capital markets regulator on Wednesday. The government will be selling 96 million shares, whereas NIA will be selling 24 million shares through the IPO.

The government-owned general insurer, New India Assurance Company Ltd, has filed the draft red herring prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Board of India to list its business through an initial public offering (IPO).

The filing for IPO comes after another state-owned insurer, General Insurance Corporatio­n, filed its draft prospectus on Monday.

New India's IPO will be of 120 million shares, with a face value of ~5 each. The offer comprises a fresh issues of 24 million equity shares and an offer of sale of 96 million equity shares, according to the prospectus.

The issue size of the forthcomin­g IPO of New India Assurance is likely to be more than $1 billion (~6,300 crore), merchant banking sources said. This would constitute 14.56 per cent of the company’s post-issue share capital. The IPO is likely in mid-November.

Kotak Investment Banking, Axis Capital, IDFC Bank, Nomura Financial and YES Securities have been appointed as the merchant bankers for the IPO. After GIC, New India Assurance becomes the second government-owned general insurance company to file for listing. National insurance, United India Insurance and Oriental Insurance are in the process of listing their businesses as part of the government’s plans to list five nonlife insurers in which it holds stakes. New India Assurance posted a profit after tax of ~839.86 crore in FY 17, down 9.72 per cent from ~930.35 crore in FY16. Gross premium earned by the company in FY 17 was ~23,230.49 crore, against ~19,227.26 crore in FY16.

Combined ratio, which indicates a non-life insurer’s total outflow on its net earned premium, stood at 119.96 in FY17; in FY16, it was 117.99. Solvency ratio, which indicates an insurance company’s financial capacity to meet its shortterm and long-term liabilitie­s, was 2.22.

The Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authoritya­pproved standard solvency ratio is 1.5.

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