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India’s largest-ever IPO will test foreign investor appetite

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The LIC logo looms above a couple of passersby in Mumbai in India last week. The IPO of the biggest payer in life insurance in the country is expected to fetch $2.7 billion in the country’s biggest IPO so far.

Punit Paranjpe | Afp | Getty Images

The dominant player in India’s life insurance market, Life Insurance Corporation, opens its initial public offering for subscription Wednesday in the country’s largest-ever IPO.

The government is selling a 3.5% stake in state-owned insurance behemoth LIC for an estimated $2.74 billion. The corporation will offer about 22.13 million shares for between 902 and 949 Indian rupees, or the equivalent of $11.78 to $12.39 a share at Tuesday’s exchange rates.

Trusted by millions and with enormous reach across the country, LIC is second only to bank deposits as a haven of savings in India. Between 2019 and 2021, LIC’s share of household financial savings grew 3.4 percentage points to 19.4%. That’s ahead of pension funds’ 16.7% share, while bank deposits dropped 7.1 percentage points to 29.4% during the same period.

LIC had a monopoly in India’s insurance market until 2000 and is still the dominant player, commanding about two-thirds of the life insurance market. In the fiscal year ending March 2021, LIC’s market share stood at 64.14%, down marginally from 66.22% in the previous year.

IPO timing

There is no perfect time for an IPO. Given the high liquidity in international markets it’s as good a time as any.

Arvind Virmani

Former chief economic advisor to the government of India

The company’s current implied valuation of $80 billion is roughly half of what it was in February, falling at least in part due to market conditions. It had previously planned to offer a 5% stake for about $8 billion.

Speaking to CNBC, former chief economic advisor to the government of India, Arvind Virmani, dismissed talk of the IPO being badly timed.

“There is no perfect time for an IPO. Given the high liquidity in international markets it’s as good a time as any,” he said.

Foreign investors

The complexity and scale of the LIC IPO signals the government’s intent to go one step further than previous governments.

Suyash Rai

Deputy director and fellow, Carnegie India

Speaking to CNBC, deputy director at Carnegie India, Suyash Rai, said the LIC IPO gives domestic and foreign investors an opportunity to invest in a firm that controls about two-thirds of the life insurance market in India. He said while the listing is a “continuation of a decades old policy of listing public sector financial firms,” LIC still stands out. 

“The complexity and scale of the LIC IPO does signal the government’s intent to go one step further than previous governments,” Rai said.

In an indication of its commitment to reforms in the financial sector, the government last year raised foreign equity in insurance to 74% from 49%.

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