Khaleej Times

Standard Life’s Indian deal hits a snag

- Noor Zainab Hussain

bengaluru — British insurer Standard Life said on Monday that India’s insurance watchdog had “expressed reservatio­ns” in accepting the current deal terms for the purchase by its Indian joint venture of Max Life Insurance.

In August, HDFC Standard Life Insurance (HDFC Life) agreed to buy India’s Max Life Insurance in an all-stock deal to create the nation’s top private life insurer valued at nearly $10 billion.

The deal is expected to kickstart consolidat­ion in India’s lucrative insurance sector where relatively few people hold insurance policies despite the country being the world’s second-most populous nation of 1.3 billion.

Standard Life said that Indian mortgage lender Housing Developmen­t Finance Corp, which currently owns a majority of HDFC Life, believes that the scheme of arrangemen­t submitted to the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India (IRDAI) complied with all applicable laws.

The companies, which filed an applicatio­n for IRDAI’s in-principle approval for the scheme in September, propose to make suitable representa­tions to the regulator, Standard Life said.

The current terms of the deal involve Max Life being merged into its parent company Max Financial Services, which in turn would combine its entire life insurance business with HDFC Life.

Analysts said regulators were likely to be focusing on the logistics of having an insurer merger with a non-insurer.

The deal is set to give Max Financial Services’ shareholde­rs 2.33 shares of HDFC Life for every Max Financial share held.

If it goes ahead, it would also give Standard Life about 24 per cent of HDFC Life while Housing Developmen­t Finance Corp will own a 42.5 per cent stake.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? The purchase of Max Life Insurance would have given Standard Life about 24 per cent of HDFC Life.
— Bloomberg The purchase of Max Life Insurance would have given Standard Life about 24 per cent of HDFC Life.

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