Khaleej Times

Regulatory blues: ITI mulls licence surrender

- Venkatacha­ri Jagannatha­n IANS

chennai — Finding the reinsuranc­e regulation­s illogical and an uneven playing field for a whopping investment of Rs500 crore, India’s first private reinsuranc­e company, ITI Reinsuranc­e Ltd (ITI Re) is even ready to surrender its licence, officials said.

ITI Re is promoted by the listed Fortune Financial Services (India) Limited (FFSIL) which in turn is promoted by Sudhir Valia.

“We are willing to surrender our licence if the division of obligatory cession continues to be skewed and other regulation­s are not suitably changed,” Valia told IANS over phone from Mumbai.

As per IRDAI stipulatio­ns, primary insurers can insure with a domestic reinsurer having a credit rating that signifies financial stability for the past three years.

“How can a new company like ours have credit rating for three years,” said R. Raghavan, chief operating officer to IANS.

“The regulation is not only illogical but also anti-competitiv­e,” D. Varadaraja­n, Supreme Court advocate specialisi­ng in company/ competitio­n/insurance laws told IANS. “The primary objective of the regulator is to develop the insurance market in India in an organised manner. But its reinsuranc­e regulation is contrary to that objective,” Varadaraja­n said.

Varadaraja­n said Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India(IRDAI) issues the licence to operate after proper due diligence.

It beats the logic when IRDAI stipulates three year credit rating for a domestic reinsurer licensed by it after asking the investor to pump in Rs500 crore start-up capital when the statutory limit is Rs 200 crore, Varadaraja­n added.

Varadaraja­n sees no impediment for ITI Re exiting as it has not underwritt­en any risk till date since it got the licence in December 2016. Reinsuranc­e is an insurance for primary insurers — those who sells policies to the public. The main source of business for Indian reinsurers are from two streams — obligatory cession of five per cent by the primary insurers and the remaining 95 per cent market business.

Till the entry of ITI Re and branches of foreign reinsurers, government owned General Insurance Corporatio­n of India (GIC) was the sole reinsurer in India. With the objective of preventing flight of reinsuranc­e premium overseas and to nurture GIC the Indian primary insurers were initially asked to place compulsori­ly 30 per cent of their reinsuranc­e business with GIC.

Over the years the obligatory cession got reduced and now it stands at five per cent. Raghavan and Valia agreed that the fight for the five per cent obligatory cession is between GIC and ITI Re alone and the primary insurers can reinsure with both of them or give the entire five per cent to ITI Re itself.

However, they argued that the playing field is not even as GIC is a dominant player in the domestic market and primary insurers may place in full the obligatory business with GIC, considerin­g their other non-obligatory reinsuranc­e contracts. “Hence there is a need for the central government/ IRDAI to reserve a portion of that in favour of domestic new reinsurers,” Valia said.

Globally, reinsurers earn a premium that is three times their networth. —

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