We remain optimistic on growth, says ICICI Lombard CEO

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With the merger of Bharti AXA’s non-life business complete, ICICI Lombard General Insurance is excited about the business opportunities it has brought. In an interview with BusinessLine, Bhargav Dasgupta, Managing Director and CEO, ICICI Lombard outlines plans for the company post the second wave of the pandemic. Excerpts:

What is the strategy for the second half of the fiscal, especially with the merger of Bharti AXA’s non-life business?

We remain optimistic. For us the focus was in terms of getting the integration done. We got the approval and we had three working days to make it effective. It has gone smoothly. We are now working as a team. The reorganisation also has happened. Apart from that, there are a lot of business opportunities that we remain confident about. We believe health will be a big opportunity, we think motor will come back, and our corporate lines are doing well.

What’s the roadmap going forward post the Bharti AXA transaction?

Bharti AXA’s non-life business is around 20 per cent of our size as a company. As part of the transaction, we diluted about 7.3 per cent of our company. There are two things that we are looking at in terms of business, apart from people integration. One is the operational synergies. Over the last 12 months since we announced the deal, we’ve done a lot of preparatory work. Next three-to-six months we want to implement some of those things. The second is the revenue synergy and that is visible in terms of our quarterly numbers. We believe there is an even bigger opportunity with their distributors to give them new products. Some of these partners can sell more products in more markets. There is a scope for growth.

Are you re-entering the crop insurance segment?

We are already back in crop insurance because Bharti AXA was writing crop insurance. We will have the crop business, but as a percentage of our overall business, it may be relatively low. For the whole year, it will be about five per cent of our business. We want to stay invested and see how it goes for a couple of years before we take a decision on it.

We had a concern in crop insurance at two levels — one the reinsurance terms became very unfavourable. The underwriting aggression was also a bit high. And some of the challenges were in terms of the ground level implementation of the scheme on the crop cutting. Now, improvements has happened on all of these, so we’ll have to observe it.

As an industry, we are paying 18 per cent GST for health insurance, which is extremely high compared to global standards. The GST rate could be reduced to 5 or 12 per cent Bhargav Dasgupta MD and CEO ICICI Lombard

Motor segment continues to be very weak right now. Is that a concern?

There is an interesting dichotomy in motor, which has three components – private car, two-wheeler and commercial vehicles. In private cars, there is demand but there are supply-side constraints in terms of chip shortage.

On the two-wheeler, there is no supply-side issue but there seems to be a demand constraint at this point in time. It’s very unusual. We are hopeful that this festival season, the two-wheeler demand will pick up.

Motor third-party insurance rates have not increased. Is that another concern?

That is of course a concern because typically, the regulator would look at the actuarial data and give a price increase every year. It had issued an exposure draft in February-March of 2020, which had talked about a price increase about 7-8 per cent on a portfolio basis. That did not take place because of the pandemic-induced lockdown. This year, again, we had the second wave, so there was no price increase. In the meantime, there have been some judgments from the Supreme Court, which has increased the cost of claims. It’s an area of concern. We as an industry, need a price increase.

Any wish list for the Budget?

One wish list is for the budget, the other is for the GST Council. As an industry, we are paying 18 per cent GST for health insurance, which is extremely high compared to global standards. The GST rate could be reduced to 5 or 12 per cent. It’s been reduced to 12 per cent for commercial motor policy. Something similar on the health will be one ask that the industry has had for a long time. And a linked issue is the input credit for corporates as when they buy health insurance, they also don’t get that benefit.

On the Budget, we respect the fact that there are a lot of fiscal constraints and that the Finance Minister wants to streamline the personal benefits. But within the benefit pool that is there, if there could be some increase for health insurance and something for home insurance, in terms of tax breaks. It won’t be very expensive for the exchequer, but it will be a good nudge for people to buy insurance.

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ICICI Lombard ties up with Vega Helmets

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ICICI Lombard General Insurance has partnered with Vega to offer personal accident insurance cover on every online purchase of Vega helmet.

“The personal accident insurance policy will provide individuals with the benefit of accidental death with sum insured of ₹1 lakh. The cover is applicable on a worldwide basis,” it said in a statement.

Sanjeev Mantri, Executive Director, ICICI Lombard said, “ICICI Lombard has always been a stout supporter of road safety and has undertaken several activities under our ‘Ride to Safety’ initiative which aims at creating awareness about safety rules. Taking the spirit ahead, this tie-up takes us one step closer to ensuring an individual’s personal security.”

Girdhari Chandak, MD, Vega Helmets said, “We are glad that through our tie-up with ICICI Lombard General Insurance, we are able to protect both the riders’ physical and financial well-being and provide them with a holistic and well-rounded bundle of protection.”

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Surge in non-Covid health cover claims, average ticket size: ICICI Lombard CEO

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In a breather to non-life insurance companies, Covid-related health insurance claims have dropped with the ebbing of the second wave of the pandemic.

However, there has been a rise in non-Covid-related health claims and their average ticket size has risen significantly, said Bhargav Dasgupta, Managing Director and CEO, ICICI Lombard General Insurance. If this trend continues, it could impact health insurance premium.

Average ticket size

According to Dasgupta, the insurer has seen a 20 per cent increase in the average ticket size of these claims over two years, from 2019-20 to now, which is about 10 per cent compounded growth.

“As Covid claims have come down, the frequency of non-Covid health claims has gone up. Some of the other infectious diseases have spiked this year such as malaria, chikungunya and dengue. Also, there was some amount of backlog of the elective surgeries that have now caught up in this quarter,” he said in an interview with BusinessLine, adding that the ticket size of claims has gone up for similar ailments.

“We’ll have to see if it’s a temporary increase or permanent in nature. This could perhaps be because of additional RT-PCR tests that hospitals have do or some more procedures that they’re following, but hopefully that will stabilise,” he said, adding that if healthcare costs continue to increase at the level they are going up it could start impacting the premium for customers.

Dasgupta said that the insurer increased pricing on its corporate health portfolio, but is on the wait-and-watch mode on retail health insurance.

“On the retail side, we have to go back to the IRDAI and seek price increase. As of now, we’ve not done that. This is just one quarter data; we want to wait for this fiscal and see the data and then decide. We are not using the Covid spike to ask for a price increase because that would not be fair on customers,” he stressed.

Between April and September 2021, the insurer received 72,059 Covid-related health claims and 2,38,409 claims for non-Covid cases.

Dasgupta, however, continues to be confident about growth prospects, and said there is a structural increase in the demand for health insurance.

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ICICI Lombard Q2 net rises 7.4%

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ICICI Lombard General Insurance reported a 7.4 per cent jump in its net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal at ₹446.67 crore. Its net profit was ₹415.74 crore in the same period last fiscal.

“The financials for the current year represent numbers of the merged entity, accordingly the first quarter of 2021-22 has been restated. The comparative numbers for the previous year in the financials pertain to standalone ICICI Lombard and hence are not comparable,” ICICI Lombard General Insurance said in a statement on Thursday.

This follows its acquisition of the non-life insurance business of Bharti AXA General Insurance. On September 3, the firm had announced that it had received regulatory and other approvals from IRDAI for the demerger of general insurance business of Bharti AXA General.

Premium income

For the quarter-ended September 30, 2021, ICICI Lombard posted a 32 per cent increase in its net premium income to ₹3,250.29 crore as against ₹2,462.52 crore in the corresponding quarter in 2020-21.

Net income from investments also soared by 35 per cent on a year-on-year basis to ₹551.75 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal.

Claims paid by the general insurer shot up by 76.6 per cent to ₹2,119.32 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal from ₹1,200.27 crore a year ago.

Claims for the first half of the fiscal include impact of Covid claims on health book of ₹561 crore as against ₹115 crore in the first half of 2020-21 and ₹339 crore in the fiscal year 2020-21, it said in its investor presentation.

Combined ratio stood at 105.3 per cent in the second quarter of the fiscal as against 99.7 per cent a year ago. Solvency ratio stood at 2.49x as at September 30, 2021 as against 2.61x at June 30, 2021.

The board of directors of the company declared an interim dividend of ₹4 per share for the first half of the fiscal year.

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ICICI Lombard ceases to be a subsidiary of ICICI Bank

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ICICI Lombard General Insurance has ceased to be a subsidiary of ICICI Bank.

“With the bank’s shareholding reducing from 51.86-48.08 per cent, ICICI Lombard has ceased to be a subsidiary of the bank,” ICICI Bank said in a stock exchange filing on Thursday.

This follows the allotment of equity shares of ICICI Lombard to the eligible shareholders of Bharti AXA General Insurance after the scheme of arrangement amongst Bharti AXA and ICICI Lombard and their respective shareholders and creditors.

ICICI Lombard had on September 8 informed the stock exchanges that its board has allotted 3.57 crore equity shares to shareholders of Bharti AXA.

The IRDAI Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India had on September 3 given its final approval for the acquisition of the non-life insurance business of Bharti AXA General Insurance by ICICI Lombard General Insurance. The transaction had been originally announced on August 21, 2020.

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ICICI Bank gets Irdai nod to cut stake in non-life arm to 30%, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: The insurance regulator Irdai has allowed ICICI Bank to bring down its stake in ICICI Lombard General Insurance to 30%. The private bank currently holds just below 52% in the non-life company.

The approval to reduce promoter stake was conveyed to the bank, while approving the scheme of demerger of the general insurance business of Bharti Axa, which was acquired by ICICI Lombard last year through a scheme of arrangement. The scheme will result in the merger of Bharati Axa General Insurance with ICICI Lombard.

Last year, ICICI Lombard had signed a deal to purchase Bharti Axa, as part of which Bharti Axa shareholders will receive two shares of ICICI Lombard for every 115 shares held by them.

Last month, a senior finance ministry official said that the Indian insurance industry is moving from being a promoter-led to a market-led one with the capital markets becoming a dominant source of capital for the companies. The RBI too has been asking lenders to bring down their stake in insurance companies below 50%. In May 2021, HDFC sold overe 44 lakh shares in HDFC Ergo to bring down its stake below 50% and comply with RBI norms.

Approving the reduction in stake, the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai) said that the private insurer must ensure that its solvency margin ratio should remain above control level at all times. Also ICICI Bank is required to infuse capital to meet business growth or solvency in proportion to shareholding after merger.



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ICICI Lombard gets final IRDAI approval for Bharti Axa acquisition, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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India’s largest private sector general insurer ICICI Lombard late Friday said that it has received the final nod from the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) for its acquisition of Bharti Axa General Insurance.

The insurance regulator IRDAI’s final approval for the merger of the two general insurance businesses comes over a year after ICICI Lombard bought out Bharti Axa in an all-stocks deal that reportedly valued the latter at over Rs 2,500 crore.

“IRDAI, through its communication dated September 3, 2021, has granted its final approval with respect to the said transaction,” ICICI Lombard said in a statement on Friday.

“The demerger and transfer of general insurance business, as envisaged in the scheme, shall be effective within 3 days from the date of the final approval,” the insurer said.

IRDAI has also granted approval to ICICI Bank for bringing down its stake in ICICI Lombard to 30 per cent from the current 52%, subject to compliance with requisite regulations.

Separately, the insurance regulator has also asked the merged entity to maintain solvency requirements above the mandated 150% as well as permitted private lender ICICI Bank to infuse capital as necessary proportionate to new shareholding structure, in a letter on Friday as per stock exchange disclosures.

“The proposed transaction is expected to result in value creation for all stakeholders through meaningful revenue and operational synergies. Further, policyholders and partners should benefit from an enhanced product suite and deeper customer connect touch points,” ICICI Lombard added in the statement. “The employees of both the businesses will also benefit via greater opportunities across functions and geographies.”

Last year, ICICI Lombard entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Bharti Enterprises-promoted Bharti AXA General Insurance in an all-stock transaction.

The shareholders of Bharti AXA shall receive two shares of ICICI Lombard for every 115 shares of Bharti AXA held by them. Bharti Enterprises currently owns 51 per cent stake in Bharti AXA General Insurance, while French insurer AXA has 49 per cent.



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Pick up in disbursements, fall in provisions & more, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: ICICI Bank‘s 78 per cent profit growth YoY largely met Street expectations. The 18 per cent growth in net interest income was higher than 14-16 per cent growth anticipated by an ETMarkets.com poll. Provisions fell 63 per cent against expectations of an up to 70 per cent drop. Net interest margin (NIM) rose to 3.89 per cent while asset quality, as suggested by gross non-performing assets (NPAs), deteriorated marginally. Here are the key takeaways from the quarterly results:

Profit in line, NII beats expectations
ICICI Bank’s 78 per cent rise in June quarter was largely in line with an ETMarkets.com poll estimate of 77 per cent growth.

The bottonline growth was lower than 260.47 per cent growth in profit the bank reported in March quarter, but higher than 36 per cent profit growth it reported in the year-ago quarter.

NII growth for the quarter at 15-16 per cent beat expectations. Analysts at an ET NOW poll had expected NII growth at 14 per cent.

Disbursements pick up
ICICI Bank said retail disbursements have picked up in June and July after moderating in April and May due to Covid containment measures in place across various parts of the country.

The disbursement levels, it said, recovered to March levels in June, driven by spending in categories like consumer durables, utilities, education, and insurance. Credits received in the overdraft accounts of business banking and SME customers also picked up in June and July after declining in April and May, it said.

Provisions fall, NPA rises marginally
ICICI Bank said it has changed its policy on non-performing loans during the June quarter to make it more conservative. Provisions for the quarter fell 63 per cent to Rs 2,852 crore from Rs 7,594 crore against expectations of up to 70 per cent fall. This could be due to the bank’s policy change, which the bank said resulted in higher provision on non-performing advances amounting to Rs 1,127 crore for aligning provisions on outstanding loans to the revised policy.

Gross non-performing assets, meanwhile, rose to 5.15 per cent against 4.96 per cent in the March quarter and 5.46 per cent in the year-ago quarter.

Recoveries and upgrades of NPAs, excluding write-offs and sale, stood at Rs 3,627 crore. The bank wrote off Rs 1,589 crore worth gross NPAs in June quarter. Excluding NPAs, the total fund-based outstanding to all borrowers under resolution as per the various extant regulations was Rs 4,864 crore or 0.7 per cent of the total loan portfolio.

Uncertainty still looms
In the absence of regulatory dispensations like moratorium on loan repayments and standstill on asset classification, the impact on the quality of the loan portfolio would likely be sharper and earlier during FY22, the bank said.

“The impact, including with respect to credit quality and provisions, of the Covid-19 pandemic on the bank and the group, is uncertain and will depend on the trajectory of the pandemic, progress and effectiveness of the vaccination programme, the effectiveness of current and future steps taken by the government and central bank to mitigate the economic impact,” it said.

Retail loan growth up 20%, SME 43%
Retail loan portfolio comprised 61.4 per cent of the total loan portfolio as of June 30. Including non-fund outstanding, retail accounted for 50.4 per cent of the total portfolio as on June 30.

For the quarter, the credit growth for the retail segment stood at 20 per cent. The business banking portfolio climbed 53 per cent YoY and was 5.4 per cent of total loans on June 30. The SME business, comprising borrowers with a turnover of less than Rs 250 crore, advanced 43 per cent year-on-year and accounted for 4 per cent of total loans as on June 30.

“Growth in the domestic corporate portfolio was about 11 per cent year-on-year, driven by disbursements to higher-rated corporates and public sector undertakings across various sectors. The growth in performing domestic corporate portfolio, excluding the builder portfolio, was 15 per cent year-on-year on June 30, 2021,” it said. Overall, the credit growth was up 20 per cent, while deposit growth rose 16 per cent.

Subsidiaries reported mixed growth
Subsidiaries reported mixed growth. ICICI Securities, on a consolidated basis, saw 61 per cent YoY jump in profit at Rs 311 crore from Rs 193 crore YoY. ICICI Prudential Asset Management Company clocked 48 per cent year-on-year jump in profit at Rs 380 crore compared Rs 257 crore YoY. The profit after tax at ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company fell to Rs 152 crore from Rs 398 crore. Overall, ICICI Bank’s consolidated profit after tax came in at Rs 4,747 crore compared with Rs 4,886 in the March quarter and Rs 3,118 crore in the year-ago quarter.



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ICICI Lombard Q4 net profit rises 23%

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Private sector ICICI Lombard General Insurance reported a 22.6 per cent increase in its fourth quarter net profit at Rs 345.68 crore compared to Rs 281.93 crore in the same period in 2019-20.

For the fiscal year 2020-21, its net profit increased by 23.4 per cent to Rs 1,473.05 crore as against Rs 1,193.76 crore in 2019-20.

For the quarter ended March 31, 2021, its gross direct premium income increased by 9.4 per cent to Rs 3,478 crore as against Rs 3,181 crore in the same period in the previous fiscal.

Combined ratio stood at 101.8 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2020-21 versus 100.1 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2019-20.

Solvency ratio was 2.90x at March 31, 2021 as against 2.76x at December 31, 2020 and 2.17x at March 31, 2020.

“The company paid an interim dividend of ₹ 4 share during the year. The board of directors of the company has proposed final dividend of ₹ 4 per share for 2020-21,” it said in a statement, adding that the payment is subject to the approval of shareholders in the ensuing Annual General Meeting. The overall dividend for 2020-21 including proposed final dividend is ₹8 per share.

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South Indian Bank gets nod to raise Rs 240 crore

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The lender said that up to 28,30,18,867 equity shares of face value of Rs 1 each at an issue price of Rs 8.48 each will be issued to the insurance companies.

South Indian Bank (SIB) said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday that an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) of the bank approved the special resolution to raise Rs 240 crore by issuing equity shares on a preferential basis from HDFC Life Insurance Company, Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance Company, SBI Life Insurance Company and ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company.

The lender said that up to 28,30,18,867 equity shares of face value of Rs 1 each at an issue price of Rs 8.48 each will be issued to the insurance companies.

Post-allotment of the securities HDFC Life, Kotak Mahindra Life and SBI Life will hold 4.23 % shares of the bank each, while ICICI Lombard General Insurance will hold 0.85 % share.

SIB had obtained approval of shareholders in the last annual general meeting for raising of funds in Indian or foreign currency by way of issuance of debt securities up to Rs 500 crore.

South Indian Bank has also obtained approval of shareholders for increasing the authorised capital of the bank to Rs 350 crore. The Thrissur-based bank had reported a net loss of `91.62 crore in the third quarter of the fiscal on account of higher credit cost.

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