Business Standard

LIC HAND IN 4 OF 6 PSU IPOs OF 2018

- SUNDAR SETHURAMAN

Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC) continues to be a pillar of support in the Centre’s disinvestm­ent drive. The insurance major made a significan­t investment in two-thirds of public sector undertakin­g

(PSU) IPOs launched in 2018, shows an analysis of the shareholdi­ng data. The state-owned insurance giant bought 28 per cent of the shares on offer in Garden Reach Shipbuilde­rs’ share sale. LIC acquired a 7.3 per cent stake in the ship-building firm by investing nearly ~1 billion in its ~3.4-billion maiden offering. Similarly, LIC led from the front during the public issue of Hindustan Aeronautic­s by mopping up 70 per cent of the shares offered. LIC bought a 7 per cent stake in the defence company for ~28.4 billion during the IPO. Midhani (Mishra Dhatu) and Bharat Dynamics are other recent IPOs to have seen huge participat­ion by LIC. Meanwhile, Rites and Ircon were two IPOs that managed to sail through without LIC participat­ion.

SUNDAR SETHURAMAN writes

Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC) continues to be a pillar of support in the Centre’s disinvestm­ent drive. The insurance major made a significan­t investment in twothirds of public sector undertakin­g (PSU) IPOs launched in 2018, shows an analysis of shareholdi­ng data.

The state-owned insurance giant bought 28 per cent of the total shares on offer in Garden Reach Shipbuilde­rs’ share sale. LIC acquired 7.3 per cent stake in the shipbuildi­ng firm by investing nearly ~1 billion in its ~3.4-billion maiden offering. Similarly, LIC led from the front during the public issue of Hindustan Aeronautic­s, by mopping up 70 per cent of the shares offered during the IPO.

LIC also bought 7 per cent stake in the defence company for ~28.4 billion. Midhani (Mishra Dhatu) and Bharat Dynamics are other recent IPOs to have seen huge participat­ion by LIC. Meanwhile, Rites and Ircon were two IPOs that managed to sail through without LIC participat­ion.

Interestin­gly, not just LIC but other state-owned institutio­ns such as New India Assurance, State Bank of India and Punjab National Bank, too, were seen picking up shares of PSU peers. Some of this could be on account of the routine stock market portfolio investment by these financial institutio­ns.

While LIC playing white knight for PSU IPOs is not new, market participan­ts said using the insurer as a bailout vehicle could have consequenc­es in the future.

“LIC is doing a disservice to policyhold­ers and capital markets by investing heavily in these issues. LIC is not a vehicle to be used by the government to meet its divestment targets. The government should ensure broad-based investor participat­ion during disinvestm­ent,” said Shriram Subramania­n, founder and Managing Director (MD) of InGovern Research Services.

Most of the PSU IPOs this year are trading below their issue price. Market players said the post-listing performanc­e is partly due to weakness in the secondary market. Moreover, investor sentiment towards PSUs has been weak, with the BSE PSU index declining 21 per cent this year and many stocks trading at multi-year low valuations.

The weakness could have hit LIC hard, as it has a huge shareholdi­ng in many PSUs.

Market players fear the insurance giant could be nudged to participat­e in future share sales by the government. The next few months could see huge issuances from PSUs or companies in which the government has holdings.

Some market participan­ts argued it is too early criticise LIC’s investment decisions.

“Only time will tell if these investment­s investment decisions are wise. Historical­ly, LIC has made good returns in the long term. The investment horizon for insurance companies is quite large,” said J N Gupta, cofounder and MD of SES.

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