Insurance industry: Balancing the board board

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Government has increased the FDI cap in general insurance companies

By Siddharth Acharya

The recent times, particularly after February – March 2020, have changed the world in so many ways we could not have imagined. COVID-19 brought about human suffering, pain and agony in ways that most humankind could not have ever visualized. It can be counted as a black swan event, if there ever was one. One of the most affected sectors has been the insurance sector. The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a massive number of health claims. Already, the Indian insurance industry was passing through challenging times. A market that was restricted in structure for many decades was opened up for international players by the turn of the last century. The last two decades, however, have not been able to produce the kind of high growth and penetration as was expected. The enthusiasm of international players to enter also has been tepid.

There would be many reasons for this ‘slower than expected’ growth. But a key one is how the leading insurance players from overseas saw the future of the Indian market. The idea was that time tested products, distribution methods and operational techniques would deliver results. This was perhaps not the case. Missing the pulse of the Indian market and the omission to adapt products and processes to gel well with the Indian context contributed to the market not doing as good as it could have. It also affected the enthusiasm of new players to come in.

Recently, the Government has increased the FDI cap in general insurance companies to 76% with a view to provide a fillip to the Indian Insurance Sector. Many foreign insurance players now have adequate opportunities to enter into the Indian Insurance Sector and acquire controlling stakes in Indian Insurance Companies. India – an interesting challenge every market is different and needs different treatment. However, the scenario in the Indian market is a bit more complex. Here we have a relatively under penetrated market with a very large potential, operating in a complex and sub-optimal environment. We have striking contrasts like low per capita income, but very high mobile penetration. Such parameters are not observed in other markets. So transplanting external solutions may not yield good results. With a penetration of less than 4% India offers a tremendous opportunity to grow.

However, the access to the consumers is an area which poses a major challenge. Traditional channels may not really work well and technology innovation would play a key role in solving the puzzle here.

Another dimension of the Indian market which makes it interesting is the range of risks that are offered for insurance – bicycle to satellite! The array of products required to offer meaningful and effective coverage requires thought and innovation. This aspect stretches the abilities of the insurers to the maximum. Overall, the status of the industry and the avenues of growth in the Indian market make the demands of the Indian market specific to products and distribution. It calls for deep domain expertise at the leadership levels.

The challenges before the board of the companies are also very different compared to that of other markets and industries. For any organization it is absolutely critical to get the right leadership at the top to guide it ahead. Board of directors, as the top leadership of a company, assumes tremendous importance in this context. Constituting a board with the right combination of skills is half the job done well. The Board of any company would collectively determine the fortunes of the organization, driven strongly by the background and perspectives of individual members. So, deciding the mix of profiles that would need to go into the board is a defining decision. Traditional wisdom and many research findings point to the need to have good diversity in the profile of members of the board.

This is to harvest wide skill-sets and provide overall guidance and direction to the company. As the board needs to operate on a wide range of activities from strategic direction to high level operating leadership, having members with complementing backgrounds is essential.

We can find several reports and studies advocating the need for diversity. It is important that we understand and evaluate the generic reports on board constitution with specific industry context while looking at specifics. From that perspective, the insurance industry in India may need a slightly different treatment compared to the generic principles of board constitution. A quick look at insurance players in the Indian market gives us a picture of boards constituted with experts from various financial services and other fields. There is a clearly visible tendency to staff the board with nominee members of the owners, investors and so on.

We often find that the presence of insurance industry experts is quite limited. This limits the growth potential or trajectory of the Insurers. Perhaps, some parallels can be drawn from guidelines / regulations drawn up by regulators in other financial sectors. The RBI, for e.g., has drawn up guidelines providing for banks to have a large number of independent directors. Such guidelines further provide for the Chair of the Board to be an independent director. Similarly, such guidelines also provide that various important committees of the Board are also constituted by and are chaired by independent directors. This ensures adequate corporate governance at the board level at all times. It is not that the Insurance regulator in India has not taken steps in this regard – they have issued guidelines for corporate governance for insurers in India. These however need some reforms. With the changing environment, it is time that the insurance regulator also needs to change with the times. The insurance companies would certainly benefit with the compulsory inclusion of domain experts in insurance and independent directors on their boards to steer them through challenging times.

At this critical juncture, insurers would need to carefully evaluate the constitution of their boards from the perspective of skills and expertise to counter the challenges discussed above. Attracting leading brains in the insurance domain for board level positions could be a productive move from the side of insurers. It is also the right time for companies to re-balance the board skills, by bringing in more insurance domain expertise. This will ensure the benefit, not only of the insurance companies, but also the customers and the industry at large.

(The author is a practicing advocate in Banking and Insurance Law and practices in the Supreme Court of India and National Company Law Tribunal and looks into various regulatory decisions of the government. He can be reached out at siddharthacharya90@gmail.com. Views expressed are personal and do not reflect the official position or policy of Financial Express Online.)

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Bharti AXA Life partners with Utkarsh SFB

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Bharti AXA Life Insurance has entered into a bancassurance partnership for Utkarsh Small Finance Bank to distribute its life insurance products.

Bharti AXA’s suite of life insurance plans, including protection, health, savings and investment plans, will be available for purchase to 3 million+ customers of the Bank across its 600+ branches in 202 districts spread across 19 States and two Union Territories.

Parag Raja, MD & CEO, Bharti AXA Life Insurance, said in a statement, “This tie-up will help us reach the tier-II and -III markets with insurance solutions. Our alliance with Utkarsh Small Finance Bank will also help empower the Bank’s customers with protection and holistic financial planning solutions from our comprehensive product portfolio.’’

Govind Singh, MD & CEO, Utkarsh Small Finance Bank said: “This is a significant development for the Bank, as we increase our third-party product offering to our customers spread across the country. With Bharti-AXA Life Insurance Co Ltd, we strengthen our insurance product offering and further diversify the value proposition to our customers. With this tie-up, the Bank is well placed to provide our customers a choice of life insurance products that best suits their needs and convenience.”

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Coverfox reduces monthly net burn by half between April 2020 to March 2021

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After the resignation of Coverfox’s CEO and CTO in early 2020, Sanjib Jha, CEO of Coverfox claims to have reduced the company’s monthly net burn by half from April 2020 to March 2021.

Jha attributed this shift to the company’s increased focus on digital automation. Coverfox started off as a pure call centre selling insurance products assisting the customers to purchase the insurance products. But today, it has pivoted from a call centre heavy burn model to an e-commerce model which is said to have brought over 6x efficiency to the company’s operations.

“We have implemented strategies like a lead scoring system using data analytics to optimise the performance of our call centre and shift to a fully digital journey along with the launch of our B2C mobile application. The use of data and advanced analytics has helped to create a bridge between the behavioural characteristics of customers and their spending habits in insurance buying products, providing a true fodder for machine learning models,” Jha told BusinessLine.

The company’s new B2C app currently has 100K installs and has contributed to an upwards of 1 crore of business in the four months of its launch. He added that, for decades, insurance has been sold as a push product by agents in India. There has been less product knowledge, no transparency, and no proper claim management system.

To address this, Coverfox increased effort on the product side to move to a fully digital sales model which minimises call centre effort. Be it chatbots, Artificial Intelligence (AI) based voice bots, Machine Learning based document scanning, end to end digital flows, lead scoring etc.

Coverfox.com currently has over 3 million monthly visits and plans to expand its catalogue soon to serve a broader audience in need of digital insurance products, particularly bite-sized ones. The company’s services include motor vehicles (both personal and commercial vehicles such as taxi and GCV), health, term life, as focused insurance products.

Revenue and profit

Commenting on the company’s revenue number and profitability, Jha said “We are in structural space and can state that the company is on sound footing now and has achieved gross margin profitability on retail product lines – motor, health and term insurance products.

We have been able to maintain positive gross margins since January 2021, owing to our continuous efforts in optimizing the operations and becoming a customer-focused insurtech.”

Coverfox used to be a prominent player in the insurtech space and had raised capital from marquee investors such as Narayana Murthy’s Catamaran Ventures, SAIF partners, and Accel among others. Coverfox’s direct competitor, PolicyBazaar has recently got the SEBI’s approval for a ₹6,017 Cr IPO and may raise around ₹750 crore through a private placement of equity shares.

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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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Trade credit insurance norms to kick in from Nov 1

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Companies are gearing up for trade credit insurance covers, for which the guidelines come into effect from November 1. This is expected to improve liquidity for micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs).

A number of insurance companies are said to be working on the draft agreements and products.

“The new trade credit insurance (TCI) guidelines have come at the right time. The Factoring Regulation (Amendment) Act, 2021 allows NBFCs [non-banking financial companies] as factors. Once the RBI [Reserve Bank of India] amends the TReDS [trade receivables discounting system] guidelines to allow an NBFC as a financier on the platform, it will increase liquidity and financiers will have a risk-sharing partner,” said Ketan Gaikwad, Managing Director and CEO, Receivables Exchange Of India Limited (RXIL).

SME IPOs pack a punch on the returns front

RXIL had earlier initiated a TCI-backed transaction with Tata AIG General Insurance Company as the insurer and ICICI Bank and Yes Bank as financiers in a sandbox environment.

Gaikwad said RXIL has applied to the RBI for approval and will also seek board approval soon.

The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India had in September announced guidelines for TCI cover to enable general insurance companies to offer it to suppliers as well as licensed banks and other financial institutions to help businesses manage country risk, access new markets and manage the non-payment risk associated with the trade financing portfolio.

Gujarat to have 10 model MSMEs to showcase use of AI, IoT

General insurers can also offer TCI with customised covers for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and MSMEs.

Arun Poojari, CEO, Cashinvoice, a digital supply chain finance marketplace, noted that several pilots were on for these covers.

“There is a testing with an insurance company on the Cashinvoice platform. By nature, this is a very powerful proposition and bound to be accepted in a big way,” he said.

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SBI General Insurance expects 20% growth in FY22

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SBI General Insurance is expecting close to 20 per cent growth in business in FY22 backed by a steady demand for health insurance products and an improvement in motor insurance starting third quarter of this fiscal.

In the first half (April-September), the non-life insurer had witnessed 14 per cent growth in gross direct premium underwritten to ₹4,129 crore, as compared with ₹3,620 crore in the same period last year, as per data available on the IRDAI website.

According to Prakash Chandra Kandpal, MD & CEO, SBI General, the non-life industry has come back to the pre-Covid level and has clocked a growth of around 13 per cent in the first half of this fiscal. “The industry is estimated to grow by around 15 per cent during the current fiscal driven mainly by health and motor. Though there may be some challenge for motor due to chip issue, Q3 should be good for motor insurance. We (at SBI General) expect to grow by around 20 per cent. The key areas of focus for us will be health, motor, SME and rural,” Kandpal told BusinessLine.

The second half of the fiscal is usually considered to be busy season and with the economy opening and with vaccination gaining pace, the insurer is hopeful of clocking a good growth.

Motor insurance accounts for nearly 25 per cent of SBI General’s total business; crop around 25-30 per cent; health close to 20 per cent; fire 15 per cent and others account for remaining 10-12 per cent.

Growing demand

Health insurance, which had been witnessing traction on the back of government initiatives such as Ayushman Bharat, came to the fore due to Covid related hospitalisation and the rise in medical cost. With the kind of effort given by the government in creating medical infrastructure in the country, the total health insurance industry is expected to double in the next three-to-four years.

“After the second wave we saw an increased interest in both retail as well as group health cover. Companies doubled the coverage for their employees. We are seeing a 40-50 per cent growth in health insurance industry portfolio and this trend is expected to continue moving forward as the uninsured population in India is still high,” he said.

This apart, a majority of the people who have health insurance, are not “adequately covered”. Most consumers in India have an average health cover of ₹ 3-5 lakh. However, the recent spike in hospitalisation and the increased medical cost is pushing more and more people to go in for a higher cover.

‘Claims spike’

On the claims side, the non-life insurers had witnessed a sudden spike in claims in Q1 of this fiscal due to the second wave. However, with the increase in vaccination and with people becoming more aware and paying more attention to health and fitness, the claims could be more manageable for insurers.

“The spike in claims was mainly because of the non-standardised protocol being followed by the medical industry. Moving forward we may see that the number of claims may increase but the average claims might be lower,” he said.

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How a youngster can build a balanced portfolio for life needs

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Arun is 27 years old. He started working about four years back.

His parents do well financially and are not dependent on him. Both are in government sector and have pensionable jobs.

He wants to contribute ₹5 lakh towards his sister’s wedding that is scheduled after six months. Additionally, he wants to set aside ₹5 lakh for own wedding that he expects to happen in the next 3-5 years. Any excess can go towards retirement.

Arun has bought life cover for ₹1 crore and a private health insurance plan of ₹10 lakh. His parents and sister are covered under separate plans.

His only savings are ₹8 lakh in EPF and ₹15 lakhs in bank fixed deposits. Of this, he has set aside ₹10 lakh towards emergency corpus. This can cover 12-15 months of his expenses.

Further, every month, ₹20,000 goes towards EPF. He can invest another ₹80,000 per month.

He knows he can invest aggressively given his age and income profile, but he is not clear about whether he will be comfortable with portfolio ups and downs.

Recommendations

Arun has got his insurance covered. He must, however, revisit the insurance portfolio once he gets married or assumes a financial liability such as loan. The emergency fund of ₹10 lakhs is robust too.

For his sister’s wedding, he can set aside ₹5 lakh from his fixed deposits. The wedding is too soon to take any investment risk.

For his wedding, he has just given a ballpark. Additionally, the timing is also not very certain. Assuming we have four years to save for his wedding, he will need to invest about ₹11,500 per month to accumulate his wedding fund. He can put this money in a bank recurring deposit or a debt mutual fund.

The rest of the amount (around ₹68,000) can go towards his long-term goals, including retirement. He is already contributing to EPF. Given his age, he must consider allocating money to growth assets such as equities.

At this life stage, it is important not to get bogged down with retirement planning calculations. Many life milestones are yet to come, and the best earning years are ahead of him. His time and energy are better spent on enhancing career and income prospects. From an investment perspective, he just needs to continue investing regularly.

He is new to risky investments and is unsure about his risk appetite. There are a few things that you can learn only through experience. Risk appetite is one such thing. While his age ensures this risk-taking ability is high,behavioural DNA defines his risk appetite otherwise. He wouldn’t know his true risk appetite unless he experiences market ups and downs first-hand.

Two approaches

There are two approaches he can take.

1. Not take any risk. Stick with EPF, PPF and bank fixed deposits. Given his age, such a conservative portfolio is not warranted. Moreover, he would never discover his risk appetite.

2. Take risk but reduce portfolio volatility. This is a better approach.

He can work with an asset allocation approach. From the incremental investments, he can route 50 per cent of the money towards equity and the remaining towards fixed income. He can start with a small allocation and inch up to 50-60 per cent in the equity investments.

After saving for his marriage expenses he can invest another ₹88,500 for long-term savings, out of which ₹20,000 already goes towards EPF. Assuming he wants to go with 50:50 allocation, ₹44,000 from his monthly savings can be in equity products.

For equity investments, he can

1. Start with a large-cap or a multi-cap fund. A simple large-cap index fund will do. Or

2. Pick a dynamic asset allocation fund or a balanced advantage fund. Or

3. Pick a single asset allocation fund that invests in domestic stocks, international stocks, and gold. Or

4. Pick a large-cap index fund, an international stock fund and a gold ETF/mutual funds. This replicates the third approach but is cumbersome to invest for a new investor.

The first approach is simple since picking up an index fund is an easy decision. For the second and third approach, he will have to pick up an actively managed fund and choosing one can be tricky. However, the second and third approaches are likely to be less volatile and easy to stick with. This is just the initial choice. As he gets more comfortable with equity investments, he can add different types of funds in the portfolio.

In the fixed income portfolio, he is already contributing to EPF. He can also invest in PPF. Beyond these two products, he can consider bank fixed deposits or a good credit quality and low duration debt mutual fund. For his income profile, debt MFs will be more tax efficient than bank FDs. However, debt funds carry higher risk than bank FDs.

The writer is a SEBI-registered investment advisor and founder of www.PersonalFinancePlan.in

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Neeraj Chopra, Olympic gold medalist signs first brand endorsement with Tata AIA Life

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Tata AIA Life Insurance on Wednesday announced the signing of a multi-year brand partnership with Indian athlete and Olympic gold medallist Neeraj Chopra, as its brand ambassador. This association also marks the very first brand partnership to be signed with the champion javelin thrower, post his historic win at the recent Tokyo Olympics.

Commenting on the partnership, Venky Iyer, Executive Vice President and Chief Distribution Officer, Tata AIA Life Insurance, said in a statement, “As a VSM awardee in the Army and a National Icon today, Neeraj symbolises incredible passion for excellence and a great commitment to serving the nation. For us at Tata AIA, his sports journey echoes greatly with our vision of enabling dreams and inspiring healthier and happier lives. And quite like we observe in Neeraj’s journey, Passion for Excellence, and an Obsession to do the best for our consumers, the people of India, are among the core values at Tata AIA. We are delighted to partner with Neeraj and welcome him warmly into the Tata AIA family.”

Neeraj Chopra, said, “Joining the Tata AIA family was a logical step for me. I firmly believe that there is a need to educate Indians, especially the youth, about the need for life insurance and to help them plan for their financial goals, at the right time. Further, the pandemic has made us realise the key need to pursue physical and emotional wellbeing in our day to day life. Tata AIA’s protection and health and wellness solutions offer distinct and significant benefits to consumers. I am happy be a part of the brand’s vision and look forward exciting times ahead.”

Embodying the vision

Neeraj Chopra closely embodies Tata AIA’s vision of enabling dreams and inspiring healthier and happier lives and its core value of passion for excellence. He has consistently set high benchmarks and pioneered change through dedication to his sport. Over the next few years, Neeraj will support Tata AIA’s efforts in offering solutions to its consumers across the country.

The ongoing Covid-19 pandemic has also underlined the need for life and health insurance, more emphatically than ever. With a premium-to-GDP penetration of less than 3.5 per cent in India, there is a clear and urgent need to fast-track the insurance journey in the country.

Neeraj’s association with Tata AIA stems from his own experience and understanding of the need for adequate life and health cover and timely planning for one’s key life milestones. It is his firm belief that life insurance helps individuals plan for their protection related needs as well as cater to their health, wellness and wealth creation needs. This forms the basis of his choosing to partner with Tata AIA.

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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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