LIC’s potential investors fret over govt rule
MUMBAI: Prospective investors in Life Insurance Corporation of India’s (LIC) $8 billion IPO are seeking assurances from company management that it will not sacrifice their interests to meet the goals set out by the government, its controlling shareholder, sources said.
In virtual roadshows for India’s biggest ever public listing, LIC management and the IPO bankers have been peppered with questions about the insurer’s past investments and their quality, four people with knowledge of the matter said.
LIC has in recent years been a key buyer of shares in stateowned firms sold off by New Delhi, often bailing out lessthan-successful public issues of shares. It has also been tapped to rescue struggling financial institutions.Potential conflicts of interest issues are taking centrestage in the IPO roadshows that began last week and are expected to go on till the end of the month, the sources said.
“The government tends to act as a regulator, manager and shareholder and it tends to get its position confused at different points of time,” said Shriram Subramanian, founder of proxy advisory firm InGovern, who has not attended the roadshows.
“The government ministries may tend to think that LIC is 100% under their control and would like to exert that kind of an influence whenever required and that is a concern for investors,” Subramanian added.
How effectively LIC and its investment bankers are able to address the investor concerns will help in determining the insurer’s valuation in the float, and consequently the state of finances of the Indian government which is banking on proceeds from the IPO to plug an annual fiscal deficit hole.
The Finance Ministry did not respond to emails seeking comment while LIC declined. The sources declined to be identified as the discussions are private.
In its draft prospectus, the insurer cited involvement of the government, which owns 100% of LIC now and is expected to own about 95% after the IPO, as a risk factor and said that minority shareholders could be disadvantaged by government action.
LIC chairman M R Kumar told a news conference on Monday that potential investors should not worry about government control post the IPO as decisions are taken by its board and not by the government.
LIC, which was formed six decades ago when India’s insurance sector was nationalised, straddles the business in the country, with more than 280 million policies and over 60% of the insurance segment.
It is also a big investor, owning as of March last year ₹23.5 lakh crore ($315 billion) worth of government securities, higher than even the central bank, out of the total central and state government securities worth ₹115.2 lakh crore, according to the prospectus.