Business Standard

LIC expects steady growth in life insurance premiums by Q3

- SUBRATA PANDA

State-owned Life Insurance Corporatio­n (LIC) is expecting the sector it operates in to post steady growth in new business premium (NBP) by the end of the December quarter (Q3FY21), assuming the economy bounces back.

The first quarter of FY21 was a rough one for life insures because NBP contracted 18.64 per cent to ~49,335 crore against ~60,637 crore in Q1FY20 due the lockdown.

LIC’S NBP also contracted by 18.45 per cent to ~36,530 crore against ~44,794 crore while that of private insurers dropped 19.17 per cent to ~12,805 crore from ~15,842 crore.

“Economic activity, which came to a standstill during lockdown, gradually started looking up once the unlock process started in June. The economy started to move in a northern direction and the upturn was reflected in the performanc­e of life insurers in June,” said T C Suseel Kumar, managing director, LIC.

In the fortnight ended July 15, LIC saw 46 per cent growth in NBP over last year. At the end of Q1, the insurer issued 2 million new policies and captured a market share of 74 per cent in terms of premium in the life insurance market.

Due to the pandemic and the subsequent lockdown, insurance companies have had to make adjustment, the most important being a leap from a manual paper-bound process to end-to-end paper-less or digital-based selling through all the channels of distributi­on. And, keeping in mind the initiative­s taken by insurers, “we can foresee fairly steady growth in premium by the end of Q3”, Kumar said.

The pandemic is expected to boost demand for pure protection products, which, in turn, are bound to improve the margins of insurance companies. Also, the recent fluctuatio­n in the equi

ty market is an opportunit­y for insurers to market unit-linked insurance plans, said Kumar. Since interest rates are going down, there’s an upsurge in the sale of guaranteed-return plans as well, he added.

In the financial year so far, LIC, which is the biggest player in the equity markets, has invested ~20,000 crore. Taking advantage of the volatility in the markets, LIC has been buying bluechips at attractive prices and booking profit selectivel­y at higher levels.

“LIC, being long-term investor, usually is sector-agnostic and focuses on diversifie­d investment. However, due to the current pandemic the focus was on large caps and the sectors that are badly affected were avoided,” Kumar said.

While experts have suggested stress may build up in the balance sheets of companies because of the pandemic, LIC, which is a major investor also in debt papers of Indian firms, does not expect major defaults.

The government in the Budget this year announced LIC would be listed. However, experts said this might be delayed. But Kumar said the process of listing was in progress and the government had floated a request for proposal (RFP) for selecting a transactio­n advisor.

While private insurers are focusing more on the direct and bancassura­nce channel, LIC added 32,586 agents in Q1. Private insurers have shed 5,360 of them.

It expects strong business from its bank partners like IDBI and Axis Bank. In FY20, IDBI Bank generated more than ~700 crore in new business for LIC.

To attract millennial­s, the corporatio­n last year took steps including improving its customer service experience and upgrading its online services. Of the 21.8 million new policies it sold in FY20, nearly 50 per cent were to millennial customers.

This year the trend is similar as 48 per cent of the policies have been sold to millennial­s.

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