Business Standard

GIC Re, 4 other insurers to be listed soon

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY & JOYDEEP GHOSH

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA), headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, approved the market listing of all five government-owned general insurance companies (GICs), namely New India Assurance, United India Insurance, Oriental Insurance, National Insurance and General Insurance Corporatio­n of India (GIC Re).

The initial public offer of equity would be through either issue of new shares or offloading of existing ones through the offer-for-sale route, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley told the media after the Cabinet and CCEA meetings.

The government has 100 per cent ownership in these companies.

New Cabinet approval will not be needed before hitting the bourses but the proposals would be cleared by Jaitley and Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari. Such an arrangemen­t, known as alternativ­e mechanism for disinvestm­ent (AMD), was also cleared by the CCEA.

“Under the listing requiremen­ts, one of the conditions is that the government holding has to come down from 100 per cent to 75 per cent,” noted Jaitley. Asked if any could be listed in the current financial year, before March 31, he said all the procedural formalitie­s were over. “Now, the companies will have to comply with the listing requiremen­ts of stock exchanges and the Securities and Exchange Board of India (the markets regulator),” he said.

Rules of the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (Irdai) would also be followed.

“Whatever are the regulation­s, they have to comply,” said Jaitley, when asked if the companies would initially divest 10 per cent stake, as in the regulatory requiremen­t.

“(This) listing will help the market in discoverin­g value for the general insurance business in India since there are no listed players currently. It is also expected to pave the way for listing of private players in the next couple of years,” said Shashwat Sharma, head of insurance at consultanc­y KPMG.

According to industry experts, the two deals that have occurred in the general insurance space are HDFC Ergo’s purchase of L&T General Insurance and Fairfax’s 9 per cent purchase in ICICI Lombard. “Both deals took place at the extreme ends of the valuation. Since L&T General’s business wasn’t doing so well, the deal would have been at the lower end of the valuation spectrum whereas ICICI Lombard’s deal would have happened at the top end,” said Ashvin Parekh of Ashvin Parekh Advisory Services.

In terms of multiples to book value, the parameter for valuing insurance companies, Parekh expects the four GICs to get a valuation of 1.8 to 2.2 multiple to book value. Market sources said that the Fairfax investment in ICICI Lombard would have happened at close to 5-6 times book value.

While the listing of the four general insurers is a welcome step, the main concern among industry and market experts is that the governance in these companies needs to be strengthen­ed and the focus on social insurance has to come down. “Both these factors make the four general insurance firms not-tooattract­ive for investors. Also, they are not very profitable companies. We expect the four companies (excluding GIC Re) to have a combined value of around ~60,000-~75,000 crore,” said an industry player. These valuations imply that the government can raise around ~15,000-18,000 crore from the stake sale.

Market participan­ts are more bullish about GIC Re because it is a performing organisati­on and after Tuesday’s circular from Irdai which gave it the right of first refusal, the country’s only reinsuranc­e company is expected to have an advantage over other players in the same segment.

In his Budget Speech for 2016-17, Jaitley had said public shareholdi­ng in the state general insurance companies was a means for ensuring higher levels of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, and that these would be listed.

As for the AMD, the CCEA decided that once the Cabinet approved divestment in a public sector undertakin­g (PSU), a group of Jaitley, Gadkari and the administra­tive minister concerned would take over decision-making on a range of issues - date of stake sale, price band and tranches. In the insurers’ case, Jaitley is himself the additional minister concerned.

“The alternativ­e mechanism would decide on the quantum of disinvestm­ent in a particular central PSU on a case-by-case basis, subject to government retaining 51 per cent equity and management control,” went the official statement. This is in addition to the present functions performed by the alternativ­e mechanism as was approved by the CCEA in August 2014, it added.

The budgeted estimate from PSU divestment for 2016-17 is ~56,500 crore, of which ~36,000 crore was expected from minority stake sales of five to 15 per cent in listed ones and the rest from ‘strategic sales’ of these units.

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