Business Standard

LIC to reduce exposure in Tata Sons

- DEV CHATTERJEE

India’s largest insurer, government­owned Life Insurance Corporatio­n (LIC), will stop fresh investment­s in Tata Sons, alongwith all other insurance companies, as the Tata group holding company turns private. This is because the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (Irdai) bars insurance companies from investing in any private entity.

According to a source, the life insurance giant is in talks with Irdai to give it some time for reducing exposure in Tata Sons. LIC is the biggest investor in Tata Sons’ debt (non- convertibl­e debentures (NCDs)), and as of March 2017, had total NCDs outstandin­g worth ~210 billion with “sizeable” exposure from LIC.

In its talks with Irdai, a source said Tata Sons had cited an Irdai ruling in January 2015, when it had directed insurance companies to treat their exposure to IDFC as exposure to the banking sector, instead of the infrastruc­ture sector. But, Irdai gave insurance companies a two-year window to reduce their exposure in IDFC’s bonds. This was soon after IDFC received its banking licence and the banking entity was listed separately.

A Tata Sons spokespers­on declined to comment but insiders said the group is in talks with other lenders on alternativ­e fundraisin­g.

In September last year, Tata Sons had sought shareholde­r approval to turn into a private company, which according to the Mistry family — its minority shareholde­r — was detrimenta­l to their interests. They had moved a petition in the National Corporate Law Tribunal (NCLT) against it.

In November, the NCLT’s Mumbai bench had ruled that Tata Sons can file but not press a plea to become a private company till the next hearing on January 16.

The restrictio­n on LIC comes at a time when Tata Sons’ fund requiremen­ts in the coming months will be huge. It would have to raise funds to retain its 32 per cent stake in Tata Steel, scheduled for the current quarter. Beside making an additional ~300-billion investment in Tata Teleservic­es by March this year. Tata Teleservic­es would use the proceeds to repay own debt.

An LIC official said Tata Sons was always a good investment because of its good credit rating. For the year ended March 2017, Tata Sons had cash reserve of ~116 billion. Apart from holdings in other Tata-listed entities, Tata Sons derives financial muscle from its 73.5 per cent stake worth ~3.7 trillion in Tata Consultanc­y Services, which gives it enough financial space to raise funds from other lenders. The company made profit of ~8.24 billion on revenue of ~102 billion for FY17.

In FY17, Tata Sons’ internal accruals have been lower than in FY16, on account of provision for diminution in value of investment­s and exceptiona­l items worth ~67.7 billion. Primarily to pay damages to NTT DoCoMo to buy back the latter’s 26.5 per cent stake in Tata Teleservic­es.

The amount of damages payable to NTT DoCoMo was deposited by Tata Sons with the Delhi high court in July 2016. While this led to an increase in net debt as of March 31, 2017, the financial profile of the company remains healthy ( see chart), analysts said.

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