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Insurance Regulator Plans To Let PSU Banks Hold Over 10% In Some Insurers

The insurance regulator also wants such multiple ownerships only in one segment of the insurance industry.

A person fills forms. (Photographer: Akio Kon/Bloomberg)
A person fills forms. (Photographer: Akio Kon/Bloomberg)

With the consolidation of 10 state-run banks underway, the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India is planning to allow them to cross the 10 percent ownership caps in more than one insurance companies but limit the management control to only one entity.

The insurance regulator also wants such multiple ownerships only in one segment of the insurance industry--either in life or in general insurance and the extant rules do not allow a bank to promote more than one insurance company in the same segment.

Some of the 10 public sector banks that are merging into four are promoters of insurance entities as well. For instance, Punjab National Bank, Union Bank, Andhra Bank, Canara Bank and Oriental Bank of Commerce run life insurance subsidiaries now.

The move comes after the government had in August announced the second round of bank mergers under which 10 banks will merge to create just four large banks.

Accordingly, the third-largest public sector lender PNB will take over Oriental Bank of Commerce and United Bank of India; Syndicate Bank will merge Canara Bank; Andhra Bank and Corporation Bank will be amalgamated with Union Bank and Indian Bank merging with Allahabad Bank.

“We are thinking of allowing state-run banks to own more than 10 percent in more than one insurance companies, but to have management say in only one of them,” Khuntia told reporters on the sidelines of an Assocham event in Mumbai on Friday.

If a bank gives up the board membership of invested insurance companies and abdicate the decision-making process, then it can hold more than 10 percent stake in many of them but operating in the same segment-which is life or general, the regulator clarified.

The insurance regulator also wants more insurance companies to go public to get better valuation which has been evident from the valuation of the listed insurers like HDFC Life, ICICI Prudential, ICICI Lombard General, and SBI Life.

"We'd like more insurers to be listed. Earlier, we had come out with a draft demanding all those completed 10 years of operations should list but they some of them are finding difficulties in share sale as some they are still yet to cross the critical size even after 10 years. Given that, we are not forcing them but nudging them," Khuntia said.

He said IRDAI had given approval to Reliance General for listing but probably it may not go through now.

Raising concerns over the low insurance penetration the country he said only 10 percent of what could be insured is covered now.

"We have a protection gap of 90 percent now, whereas in Japan the protection level is 44 percent, in Taiwan it is a high 84 percent and Australia has a protection level of 67 percent. So, this is the gap that we have to bridge," he said.

On the persistency level in the insurance space, he said while the world average is 90 percent, our average is just 65 percent, he said, adding however that some domestic insurers have come close to 90 percent but he wants to see all of them touching the 90 percent mark.