Business Standard

Centre may exit AI, sell holding to LIC firms hold stake in many bluechip companies. According to regulation­s of the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (Irdai), insurance companies can hold up to 15 per cent in a company. “A valuatio

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The Centre may completely exit Air India by selling its residual stake to Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC) and other financial institutio­ns, according to government sources. This move would help address investors’ concerns related to possible interferen­ce in the airline’s operation.

As part of the privatisat­ion process, the government has decided to disinvest 76 per cent equity stake in Air India Limited, along with Air India’s 100 per cent holding in its subsidiary, Air India Express Limited, as well as 50 per cent in ground handling joint venture AISATS.

A senior official aware of the government’s plans told Business Standard discussion­s are about to start with LIC and other stateowned insurance companies for selling the government’s remaining stake in Air India after employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) are given out to the permanent employees.

Subsequent to the ESOP, an employee stock pool will be created, resulting in the government shareholdi­ng falling below 20 per cent. “After creating the ESOP pool, we will reach out to the board of the financial institutio­ns to discuss selling our residual shareholdi­ng,’’ the official said. With some financial institutio­ns holding the stake, the Ministry of Civil Aviation will have little oversight over the airline, he said. “So, the private management will be able to run it (Air India) as any other competitiv­e entity in the aviation sector,” the official added. Queries sent to

LIC remained unanswered.

Potential bidders and sector analysts had earlier argued any government holding in Air India may discourage investors. “Our view is that a joint ownership with the government is, at best, a very difficult propositio­n and we would not go down that path,” Rakesh Gangwal, co-founder of IndiGo, had earlier said.

LIC and other state-owned insurance

According to the preliminar­y informatio­n memorandum, Air India’s new owner will be asked to list the company in some time. The terms will be spelt out in share purchase deal. In recent times, the government has leaned on stateowned insurer to support a number of its other initiative­s: offering soft loans to the railways, subscribin­g to the power sector’s Ujwal Discom Assurance Yojana bonds and investing in the National Investment and Infrastruc­ture Fund.

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