Business Standard

EXIDE LIFE A TUCK-IN ACQUISITIO­N AT FAIR VALUATION: HDFC LIFE CEO II,1

- MD & CEO, HDFC Life

HDFC Life announced it will acquire 100 per cent stake in Exide Industries-promoted Exide Life Insurance for ~6,687 crore, which it said will help it to grow its proprietar­y business. VIBHA PADALKAR, managing director (MD) & chief executive officer (CEO), HDFC Life, spoke to Subrata Panda on the contours of the deal and how it will help HDFC Life consolidat­e its position in the industry.

Edited excerpts:

Besides proprietar­y business, what propelled the acquisitio­n of Exide Life?

One is that the back book (old premium paying policies on the books) is of reasonably good quality, which will give a fillip to our embedded value by 10 per cent. Also, some of the geographie­s where they are strong, we have been aspiring to enter. These are typically the tier 2 & tier 3 cities. So now, we will have access to these geographie­s and it will give us the opportunit­y to up-sale and cross-sale, given our brand, digital presence, and also the bouquet of new products, which we have. They also have some marquee relationsh­ips with brokers as well as corporate agents such as Bajaj Capital, SVC Bank, and so on. All put together, it’s a tuck-in acquisitio­n.

VIBHA PADALKAR

Is the valuation justified?

I think so. The average current valuation (price-toembedded value), excluding HDFC Life, is 3.5x and what we have paid is 2.47x, which is a 30 per cent discount. Ultimately, it’s a negotiated number but we believe that given the subscale and the fact that they are vacating space, we feel that it is fair to have a 30 per cent discount.

Is this the start of consolidat­ion in the life insurance space where smaller companies will get acquired by the big players?

It is possible. But the smaller companies have to have some credible level of business and they should be able to demonstrat­e that they have a good hold on the business. It can be bancassura­nce or agency business. Also, there has to be reasonable business quality and stability in the organisati­on.

How will this acquisitio­n help HDFC Life’s margins?

It will be on a slightly longer horizon because the first stage of the merger is expected in 4-5 months when Exide Life will become an entity (subsidiary) of HDFC Life. And, then the NCLT (National Company Law Tribunal) process will happen. So, after 12-15 months from the merger is when we will see some full-fledged impact on our margins.

Will you still be on the lookout for inorganic opportunit­ies of growth? If so, why?

We believe we will continue to grow well organicall­y and we have been growing faster than the industry. At the same time, when opportunit­ies come, we will look at them because we have the currency, the balance sheet size and the management bandwidth to do these acquisitio­ns. So, it is really a combinatio­n of both as a strategy.

Is there a market share that you are looking to achieve in the private life insurance space?

We do not target market share because it often leads to undesirabl­e outcomes. What we focus on is growing faster than the market and growing profitably with quality of business protected. And, market share will be an outcome of that.

The HDFC Life-max Life deal fell through because of regulatory hurdles. Do you see any concerns about this deal structure passing the regulatory muster?

This is a reasonably straightfo­rward structure. There is no two-tier company or a non-insurance entity. All that made the previous deal complex. While in the life insurance space, this is the first one, in the general insurance space there have been a few deals. Based on those experience­s, it should be fairly straightfo­rward from the regulatory standpoint.

Given that the second wave of Covid has subsided, how is business doing?

We have been growing robustly around 20 per cent. Covid claims are in line with the extra mortality reserve of ~700 crore that we provided. Of the ~700 crore, ~450 crore was towards retail and ~ 250 crore was towards the group. The retail portion is under control as there is a bit of conservati­sm there. The group part we will know towards the end of quarter but right now it is looking under control.

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