Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

LIC cuts stake in listed firms to a record low

- Nasrin Sultana

MUMBAI: Life Insurance Corp. of India (LIC), the country’s top institutio­nal investor, has cut its stake in publicly traded companies in the first three months of 2021, even as the benchmark Nifty gained 5%, as the nation’s largest insurer booked profits to take advantage of a stocks rally in the past year.

The insurer’s shareholdi­ng slumped to an all-time low of 3.66% of the market value of all publicly traded companies at the end of March, data compiled by Prime Database showed.

LIC has been reducing its exposure to listed companies since June last year.

The state-run insurer’s shareholdi­ng in these companies was at 3.7% at the end of December and 3.88% at the end of March last year. LIC’s shareholdi­ng in these companies was at a record high at 5% in June 2012. LIC shareholdi­ng data includes companies where its stake is more than 1%.

However, in value terms, LIC’s holdings in these companies reached an all-time high of ₹7.24 lakh crore by the end of March, an increase of 6.3% from the previous quarter. “Profitbook­ing is the main reason behind LIC reducing its stake in the companies. LIC continues to command the lion’s share of investment­s in equities among insurance companies, with a 76% share,” said Pranav Haldea, managing director, Prime Database Group.

Companies that saw the highest increase in LIC’s holdings in percentage terms in the March quarter were Rail Vikas Nigam Ltd, New India Assurance, Bajaj Auto, Tata Communicat­ions, Jammu and Kashmir Bank, Adani Total Gas, Alembic Pharmaceut­icals, PI Industries, Aurobindo Pharma and Biocon.

A spokespers­on for LIC did not immediatel­y respond to a query seeking comment.

Data, however, showed that equity holdings of all insurance companies declined to a fiveyear low of 4.8% as of March 31.

Mutual funds’ shareholdi­ng of companies also fell for the four straight quarter to 7.23% by March-end.

As a result, aggregate domestic institutio­nal investors’ (DIIs) holdings fell to a 10-quarter low of 13.03% in the March quarter from 14.42% in the year-ago period. DIIs, which include mutual funds, insurance companies, banks, financial institutio­ns and pension funds, were net sellers of local shares worth ₹23,124 crore in the three months ended March 31.

Holding of foreign institutio­nal investors (FIIs) stood at 22.60% as of March 31, down from 22.74% at the end of the December quarter, despite net inflows of ₹55,741 crore during the quarter. In March last year, FII holding was at 21.17%.

“The top 10% of companies by market capitaliza­tion accounted for 91.55% of overall FIIs’ holdings at the end of March (down from 92.25% as of December 31), 85.15% of overall DII holdings (down from 86.69% in December) and 82.29% of overall mutual funds’ holdings (down from 83.72% as of end-December), showing high concentrat­ion levels of institutio­nal money,” Haldea said.

Meanwhile, retail holdings (individual­s with up to ₹2 lakh shareholdi­ng) in companies listed on NSE remained unchanged at 6.9% as of March 31 from the preceding quarter but increased from 6.54% in the year-ago period. Overall, retail holding went up in 863 companies listed on NSE in the March quarter. The average stock price of these companies in the same period increased by 5.51%.

 ?? MINT ?? LIC’s shareholdi­ng slumped to an all-time low of 3.66% of the market value of all publicly traded firms at the end of March.
MINT LIC’s shareholdi­ng slumped to an all-time low of 3.66% of the market value of all publicly traded firms at the end of March.

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