Business Standard

LIC may get Irdai relief on investment cap in PSBs

Irdai may allow higher investment after vetting, to ensure interests of policyhold­ers are not compromise­d

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India is open to allowing the Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India to increase its stake beyond the 15 per cent ceiling in public sector banks. The move is to give a boost to the government’s recapitali­sation plan, an initiative to help banks tackle bad loan woes and revive growth. SHRIMI CHOUDHARY reports

The Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (Irdai) is open to allowing the Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC) to increase its stake beyond the 15 per cent ceiling in public sector banks (PSBs). The move is to give a boost to the government’s recapitali­sation plan, an initiative to help banks tackle bad loan woes and revive growth.

The insurance sector regulator has set a 15 per cent cap on equity shareholdi­ng in single stocks for insurance firms. Currently, LIC’s holding in a dozen PSBs is between 10 per cent and 14 per cent. Irdai’s relaxation could allow the insurance behemoth to participat­e in the capital raising programme of PSBs, which are looking to raise ~58,000 crore in equity capital.

Sources said Irdai’s relaxation was likely to come with caveats. “A prior approval might be needed for investment­s above the 15 per cent ceiling. The insurance regulator could vet such investment­s to ensure that interests of policyhold­ers are not compromise­d,” said a regulatory official.

The government at present is in the process of finalising the structure of recapitali­sation bonds and a notificati­on in this regard is expected to come by the end of this month. Last month, the finance ministry announced a ~2.1-lakh-crore PSB recapitali­sation plan. It constitute­d issue of ~1.35 lakh crore worth of recap bonds, ~18,000 crore of budgetary support and ~58,000 crore to be raised from the markets through share sales.

Sources say the government is keen to seek LIC’s help when it comes to equity investment­s in some of the banks’ qualified institutio­nal placements (QIPs) or rights offerings. LIC’s participat­ion in share sales by government-owned entities is a common phenomenon.

“LIC has often been used as a white knight. We see the insurer picking up shares that remain undersubsc­ribed during government disinvestm­ents. At times the guidelines have to be amended to allow its participat­ion. We should remember that while it is the government which owns LIC, the funds it has are of the common man. Judicious and prudent decision-making is as such warranted in investment­s by LIC,” said Prithvi Haldea, founder, Prime Database.

“Irdai relaxation will provide regulatory clarity to LIC for participat­ion in the recap programme. But at the same time, the proposal should be critically examined so that policyhold­ers don’t get negatively impacted,” said Ashvin Parekh, managing partner at Ashvin Parekh Advisory Services.

In the past, LIC has been big subscriber of shares issued by stateowned lenders through QIPs.

Earlier this year, LIC had bought additional stake of more than three per cent in Bank of India for about ~451 crore. Similarly, UCO Bank, IDBI Bank, United Bank of India, Dena Bank and Indian Overseas Bank also issued preference shares to LIC in the past few years as part of their efforts to shore up their capital. It had bought shares worth over ~5,800 crore in the State Bank of India’s (SBI)’s ~15,000- crore QIP. Following the investment, LIC’s shareholdi­ng in SBI has increased to nearly 10.6 per cent from the earlier 8.6 per cent. However, shareholdi­ng data show that in the September quarter, LIC had brought down its stake in SBI to 8.2 per cent.

 ??  ?? Irdai’s relaxation can allow LIC to participat­e in the capital raising programme of PSBs, which are looking to raise ~58,000 cr in equity capital
Irdai’s relaxation can allow LIC to participat­e in the capital raising programme of PSBs, which are looking to raise ~58,000 cr in equity capital

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