Business Standard

Govt may permit foreign direct investment in LIC

- NIKUNJ OHRI

The government is considerin­g allowing foreign direct investment (FDI) in Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC) to enable overseas investors to buy stakes in the insurer. “Discussion­s on structurin­g the increase in foreign shareholdi­ng and the ceiling are ongoing and a decision is yet to be taken,” an official said.

FDI of up to 74 per cent is permitted in insurance companies, but LIC and other public sector insurance companies come under their own statutes. The current norms mandate foreign investors to seek permission from the

Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t

Authority of India

(IRDAI) if they pick up a stake larger than 5 per cent in an insurance company, said Rajesh

Dalmia, partner at EY

India.

Allowing foreign investors to invest in

LIC would aid its listing, expected to be the largest initial public offering in India.

Although the embedded value of LIC is yet to be derived, the issue size could be around ~1 trillion.

The listing would involve part-sale of the government’s stake in the insurer and raising fresh equity share capital.

The government is looking to appoint up to 10 book running lead managers with experience in public offerings and will form a team. As many as 16 merchant banks — BNP Paribas, Citigroup Global Markets India, Bofa Securities, Goldman Sachs (India) Securities, HSBC Securities and Capital Markets (India), JP Morgan India, Nomura Financial Advisory and Securities (India), Axis Capital, DAM Capital Advisors, HDFC Bank, ICICI Securities, IIFL Securities, JM Financial, Kotak Mahindra Capital, SBI Capital Market, and YES Securities India — are in the fray to assist the LIC IPO.

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