Shares of PB Fintech likely to see limited upside in near term, says JM Financial, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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PB Fintech, the parent company of PolicyBazaar, made a positive stock market debut with a 17.35% gain on Monday. The listing pop came as a positive surprise to many experts and analysts, however, JM Financial Services expects limited scope for further gains in the stock.

The brokerage has set a price target of Rs 1,270, which implies a near 5 per cent downside from the current market price. “We initiate coverage with a ‘hold’ rating, solely due to premium valuations with significant upside risks in our ‘bull’ scenario that can drive share price to over Rs 2,200 by December 2024,” it said.

Though the brokerage firm sees limited near-term upside against CMP post the strong listing, they reckon there is a likely path for PB Fintech to grow to a valuation of $13.5 billion over the next couple of years against $7.3 billion currently. This is only if few incremental levers fall into place, which are unlikely in the very near-term, the brokerage said.

These levers consist of digital penetration reaching 5.5 per cent against 4.5 per cent.

Shares of PB Fintech likely to see limited upside in near term, says JM Financial

“Policybazaar is the dominant market leader in a large and growing industry with strong tailwinds such as increasing digital penetration, rising disposable income and insurance awareness. We do believe Policybazaar will be in the driving seat in enhancing insurance penetration in India,” JM Financial said

The brokerage firm is of the strong opinion that the company should continue deepening scale moats in light of new-found competition emerging from insurers’ direct channels and cross-sell by fin-tech players like PhonePe and Paytm.

JM Financial expects PB Fintech, PolicyBazaar’s parent, to grow revenues by 31 per cent annually over the next 10 years.

“While we expect slight market share loss in online distribution due to insurers’ investment in direct channel and newer competition, this loss will be aptly compensated by the company’s growth in physical distribution” it added.



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IPO craze continues; 2 public issues to open next week for subscription, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The current month will continue to be a busy one for the primary market, as two companies –Tarsons Products and Go Fashion (India) Ltd — are set to float their IPOs next week to collectively raise Rs 2,038 crore. The three-day IPO of life sciences firm Tarsons Products will open on November 15 and conclude on November 17, while that of Go Fashion, which owns women’s wear brand Go Colors, will open for public subscription during November 17-22.

This comes after eight firms have successfully concluded their initial public offerings (IPOs) in November so far.

These eight firms are — One 97 Communication, owner of Paytm; FSN E-Commerce Ventures, which runs online marketplace Nykaa, Policybazaar‘s parent entity PB Fintech, Fino Payments Bank, Latent View Analytics, Sapphire Foods India, SJS Enterprises and Sigachi Industries.

So far in 2021, as many as 49 companies have floated their IPOs to raise Rs 1.01 lakh crore, according to an analysis of data with exchanges.

Apart from these, PowerGrid InvIT, the infrastructure investment trust (InvIT) sponsored by the Power Grid Corporation of India, mopped-up Rs 7,735 crore through its IPO and Brookfield India Real Estate Trust raised Rs 3,800 crore via its initial share sale.

The fundraising so far this year is way higher than Rs 26,611crore collected by 15 companies through initial share-sales in the entire 2020.

Such impressive fundraising through IPOs was last seen in 2017 when firms mobilised Rs 67,147 crore through 36 initial share sales.

Individually, Tarsons Products and Go Fashion are looking to raise Rs 1,024 crore and Rs 1,014 crore, respectively, through their public listing of shares.

Tarsons Products’ initial share sale comprises fresh issuance of equity shares worth Rs 150 crore an offer for sale of 1.32 crore equity shares by promoters and an investor.

As a part of the OFS, promoters — Sanjive Sehgal will offload up to 3.9 lakh equity shares, and Rohan Sehgal will sell up to 3.1 lakh equity shares — and investor Clear Vision Investment Holdings Pte Ltd will divest up to 1.25 crore equity shares.

The IPO price band has been set at Rs 635-662 a share, and at the upper end of the price band, the public issue is expected to fetch Rs 1,024 crore.

Proceeds from the fresh issue will be utilised towards paying debt, funding a part of the capital expenditure for the new manufacturing facility at Panchla in West Bengal, and general corporate purposes.

On Friday, Tarsons Products raised Rs 306 crore from anchor investors.

Go Fashion’s IPO comprises a fresh issue of equity shares aggregating up to Rs 125 crore and an offer for sale of up to 12,878,389 equity shares by the promoter and existing shareholders.

Under the OFS, PKS Family Trust and VKS Family Trust are going to offload 7.45 lakh equity shares each, Sequoia Capital India Investments will sell up to 74.98 lakh shares, India Advantage Fund S4 I will divest up to 33.11 lakh shares and Dynamic India Fund S4 US I will sell up to 5.76 lakh shares.

Currently, PKS Family and VKS Family Trust hold 28.74 per cent stake each in the company, Sequoia Capital holds 28.73 per cent stake, India Advantage Fund has a 12.69 per cent stake, and Dynamic India Fund owns a 1.1 per cent stake in the firm.

The company has fixed a price band of Rs 655-690 apiece for the issue, and at the upper end of the price band, the IPO is expected to garner Rs 1,013.6 crore.

Proceeds from the fresh issue will be used to fund the rollout of 120 new exclusive brand outlets, to support working capital requirements and general corporate purposes.

The equity shares of both companies will be listed on BSE and NSE. PTI SP BAL BAL



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PB Fintech plans to set up offline physical centres to complement online channel

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IPO-bound PB Fintech, an online financial services marketplace focussed on insurance, plans to open small management offices as part of its efforts to improve its market share and make its online model even more successful, Yashish Dahiya, Chairman and CEO, has said.

“The objective will be to raise conversion rates on online customers. Our business model is not that of setting up a branch. We are not setting up branches in high footfall areas. We are not setting up retail stores. They are going to be small service offices and management offices that will handhold customers at their drawing rooms or their office canteens,” Dahiya told BusinessLine.

Strategic move

He also made it clear that this should not be seen as a strategic shift for the digital company. “We will continue to acquire customers through website and app. But these are customers that need some hand holding. So far we provided that from call centre. Now, we will have our people on the ground do it from the physical centres. If we do not do this, in five years time our premium will be lot lower than if we were to do this. From overall profitability perspective, it will be margin accretive,” he said.

Alok Bansal

 

Alok Bansal, Wholetime Director & CFO, said that having a local person would give online customer added comfort that one is talking to a local agent in their own lingo. “They would feel that I have gone to the website and I also get local support enhancing what I got online,” he noted.

In financial year 2020-21, Policybazaar, which is India’s largest digital insurance marketplace, clocked insurance premium of ₹4,700 crore (new and renewals) out of its platform.

₹5,710-cr IPO on November 1

PB Fintech, which owns Policybazaar and digital consumer credit marketplace Paisabazaar, is launching its ₹5,710-crore initial public offering (IPO) on November 1.

Meanwhile, asked as to which of the two— Policybazaar or Paisabazaar— will be the main growth driver for PB Fintech in the coming years, Dahiya said that he would not like to compare the two and added that both will have their spaces.

Scaling up

Dahiya said that company’s efforts in focussing on corporates (including SMEs), points of sales Presence and physical presence is expected to help it scale up business in the coming days.

On international expansion, he said that the company has now got a presence in Dubai and sees lot of potential to grow in UAE. Going forward, one may even look at entering other geographies including Europe and South East Asia, he added.

Dahiya also said that PB Fintech may in the coming days even look at setting up investment platform for mutual funds, but quickly noted that no specific decision has been taken by its Board on this front.

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SoftBank-backed Snapdeal weighs $400 million IPO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian e-commerce retailer Snapdeal Pvt is considering an initial public offering that could raise about $400 million, joining a growing list of startups preparing to tap capital markets as the nation’s digital economy booms.

The company, which counts SoftBank Group Corp. among its investors, is speaking with advisers about a potential listing in Mumbai that could value it at as much as $2.5 billion, the people said. An IPO could take place as soon as next year, they said, asking not to be identified because the details aren’t public.

Discussions are still at an early stage, and the firm could decide not to proceed with the plan, the people said. Representatives for Snapdeal and SoftBank declined to comment.

Snapdeal, based in the New Delhi suburb of Gurgaon, was once one of the country’s top three e-commerce firms along with Flipkart Online Services Pvt. and the Indian unit of Amazon.com Inc. Founded in 2010, it offers more than 60 million products across 800 categories on its platform and delivers to more than 6,000 cities and towns across the country, according to its website.

Four years ago, Snapdeal walked away from a potential merger with Flipkart, which would have united the two local-e-commerce companies against Amazon. Since then, Flipkart sold a controlling stake to Walmart Inc. and is now progressing towards its own IPO.

The amount raised through IPOs in India so far in 2021 has already surpassed the total gathered in the last three years. The pipeline for the rest of the year includes payments service provider Paytm, online insurance platform Policybazaar and e-commerce beauty startup Nykaa.



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Zomato | Paytm | IPO: What new age tech IPOs mean for the brokerage industry, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Indian brokerage industry has had a very good run in the last one year with the stock market booming despite the ongoing Covid-19 crisis. The otherwise trying time saw the onset of two new strong trends in financial markets – the return of the retail investors and companies coming to the primary market with unprecedented force.

These two factors have kept the brokerage sector busy as well as thriving. On its part, broking companies improved their platforms to promote ease of trading with the adoption of technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), lowered brokerage fees, and tweaked their offering to suit the needs of new investors.

All these efforts helped the brokerage industry bear fruits and be future ready for the trend that is to stay for a long term. Ratings agency CRISIL estimated broking revenue to have grown around 65-70% during the financial year 2020-21 as against about 7% growth to the previous fiscal. Although the revenue forecast seems dimmer for the current financial year and probably beyond, because of market and regulatory factors, there is no denying that the industry has entered one of its most exciting times.

Riding the IPO boom
What has also ushered in a phase of change for the industry is the launching of initial public offers (IPOs). According to PrimeDatabase, there were 69 public issues which raised Rs 74,707 crore in FY21 and so far, this fiscal, around 24 companies have raised as much as Rs 37,366 crore.

The stock market debut frenzy was triggered by food delivery app Zomato, which raised $1.3 billion from the primary market this year. The owners of fintech apps like Paytm are looking forward to the IPO. The $2 billion public issue is slated to be the largest IPO in India since the Coal India IPO in 2007.
Several other unicorns and interesting start-ups joining the fray include PolicyBazaar, MobiKwik Systems, Nykaa E-Retail, and Delhivery.

There are abundant instances when the IPO mania stretched beyond a point resulting in losses for the investors. Be it the IPO boom of 1992 or the one in 1999 or the IPO boom of 2006-08 which ended with the sub prime crisis.

Time for innovation
The IPO boom is expected to bring many more millennials to the stock market given the value they see in these services companies which are in insurance, food delivery, and ecommerce, things they use on an everyday basis. With the onset of the new-age investors, helped by increased internet penetration and disposable income, the brokerage industry will go through a sea change in terms of use of technology. Already, a new crop of brokerages such as Zerodha have been creating waves in the industry. Existing and traditional brokerage firms too have ensured that they are not left behind in upgrading themselves.

As the industry and its needs evolve, technological innovations will become all the more visible. The innovations will not be restricted to investors looking at the Indian market but also beyond into more matured and bigger markets in the West. Global investments will be another area that will keep brokerages on their toes in the year ahead.

Bumps that can be straightened out
There are opportunities for revenue growth and the brokerage industry is likely to face pressure from the new regulatory changes. Two key implementations that will impact revenue growth are the upfront margin requirement mandated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India from last year and the phased increase in peak margin requirements, which will go up to 100% by September 2021. So even if new client additions bring in more revenue, these requirements would dent full potential. If Sebi were to reconsider its decision on these policies, the brokerage industry would be able to ride high.

(The author, K K Maheshwari, is President at Association of National Exchanges Members of India (ANMI). The views are his own)



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Overlooked IPO markets suddenly booming as China deals slow, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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China’s crackdown on technology companies is prompting global investors to look for new opportunities across Asia, contributing to a record jump in initial public offerings from India to South Korea that shows few signs of slowing.
Tech companies from those two countries and Southeast Asia have raised $8 billion from first-time share sales this year, already blowing past the previous annual peak. The tally is poised to get bigger with planned listings by companies including Indian fintech giant Paytm and Indonesian internet conglomerate GoTo, both of which may break local fundraising records.

Long overshadowed by their Chinese peers, this new crop of startups is coming of age just as Beijing’s clampdown puts a damper on listing and growth prospects in what had long been the region’s hottest IPO market.

The result, some bankers say, may be the start of a new era for tech listings in Asia. Investors are already boosting exposure to markets outside China, with some buying into IPOs from countries like India and Indonesia for the first time. Prospective issuers that historically benchmarked themselves against Chinese companies are now highlighting similarities to other global peers in hopes of attaining higher valuations.

“These are strong companies and stories in their own right, but the overwhelming demand has been enhanced by rotation away from China tech,” said Udhay Furtado, co-head of Asia equity capital markets at Citigroup Inc.

China’s regulatory onslaught, now in its 10th month since the shock implosion of Ant Group Co.’s IPO, has slashed valuations for the nation’s listed tech companies by nearly 40%. It has also forced many startups to pause their IPO plans after regulators announced a stricter vetting process for overseas offerings.

China and Hong Kong accounted for about 60% of Asian tech IPOs since the end of June, down from 83% in the second quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. About three quarters of Chinese companies that listed overseas this year are now trading below their IPO prices.

Meanwhile, deals in smaller markets are attracting outsized demand as investors bet on increasingly internet-savvy populations, growing consumer spending and a new class of tech entrepreneurs.

PT Bukalapak.com, an Indonesian e-commerce firm, raised $1.5 billion around the end of July in the country’s largest ever IPO, far outstripping an early goal of between $300 million and $500 million.

Zomato Ltd., an Indian online food-delivery and restaurant platform, received bids worth 1.5 trillion rupees ($20.2 billion) from large funds for its anchor tranche, making it one of the most popular Indian offerings among institutional investors. The company raised $1.3 billion in July.

KakaoBank Corp., South Korea’s first internet-only lender to go public, sold $2.2 billion of new shares last month and soared more than 70% in its trading debut.

The hurdle for allocating capital to tech companies in China “is now much higher than it was even a month ago,” said Vikas Pershad, a portfolio manager at M&G Investments (Singapore) Pte. “The net exposure to China tech is lower and the net exposure to technology-driven business models outside of China is higher.”

One banker who asked not to be named discussing client information said some Hong Kong-based investors who previously focused on Chinese deals are now participating in tech IPOs elsewhere in the region. U.S. hedge funds are also looking at India more closely, another banker said. Morgan Stanley research analysts recently advised clients to re-balance their internet holdings away from China and into India and Southeast Asia.

“Are investors more interested? Definitely,” said William Smiley, co-head of Asia ex-Japan equity capital markets at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. “Global capital competes among itself and investment opportunities are judged on both an absolute and relative basis.”

Whether the enthusiasm will last is an open question. Bukalapak.com briefly dipped below its offering price this month, though the stock has since rebounded. Zomato and KakaoBank are trading 64% and 115% above their IPO prices, respectively.

A growing pipeline of deals will put investor demand to the test. Paytm — formally called One97 Communications Ltd. — has filed for a 166 billion-rupee IPO that is set to be India’s largest ever. Policybazaar, an online insurance marketplace, is looking to raise as much as 60.18 billion rupees.

GoTo, formed by the merger of Indonesian ride-hailing giant Gojek and e-commerce provider PT Tokopedia, is planning a domestic IPO this year before seeking a U.S. listing. It’s currently raising funds at a valuation of between $25 billion and $30 billion, meaning it could become Indonesia’s biggest-ever debut.

“There are increasingly diverse sources of capital investing in leading Asia-based growth businesses,” said Gregor Feige, co-head of ECM Asia ex-Japan at JPMorgan Chase & Co. “Sovereign wealth funds are more active across the board. They’re leaning in and the global long-only community is also increasingly comfortable with local listings across Asia.”

The flood of tech IPOs in Southeast Asia and India is poised to reshape markets where benchmark indexes have historically focused on “old-economy” sectors like energy and finance.

Favorable demographics and domestic consumption growth in Southeast Asia “have not translated fully into stock market performance of late, as some of the fastest growing businesses were not listed,” said Pauline Ng, a portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management. The growing representation of “new-economy” companies means these markets “can no longer be ignored,” she said.



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Oyo aims for India IPO in 2021, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Oyo Hotels and Homes will soon join the list of startups launching an initial public offering (IPO) in the country.

Internally, the hospitality company has set a timeline of September for filing its IPO prospectus and wants to be a public company before the calendar year ends, people aware of the development said.

Oyo has initiated talks with multiple bankers including JP Morgan, Citi and Kotak Mahindra Capital to manage its public issue, they said.

“Work has begun and some bankers have been finalised,” a person aware of the matter told ET. “They are aiming to file the draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) by September.”

Another person said, “Directionally, they are moving towards an IPO but many details are yet to be finalised, including the offer size.”

A spokesperson of Oyo declined to comment.

Oyo is seeing a revival in business in markets such as India and Europe as the number of Covid-19 cases have been falling and vaccination rate improving. Oyo told ET last month that it was seeing stronger recovery in Europe on the back of higher vaccination rates and that India would also reflect the same once more people are vaccinated, at least once.

Currently, 43% of Oyo’s revenue comes from India and Southeast Asia while 28% comes from Europe and the rest from other global markets. The company was forced to cut down its operations in markets like the US and China amid the virus outbreak. In India, it fired a chunk of its workforce as Covid-19 hit its business hard.

Its IPO plans come at a time when the Indian public market seems to be bullish on startup IPOs following Zomato’s public offer.

Paytm, PolicyBazaar, Nykaa, Mobikwik and CarTrade are in various stages of going public in India after having filed their DRHP over the last few months.

ET had last month reported that Oyo had secured a $660-million debt financing from global institutional investors to service its existing loans. Wall Street investors like Fidelity, Citadel Capital Management and Varde Partners have subscribed to Oyo’s TLB, also referred to as Term B Loan.

The hotel aggregator is also in talks with Microsoft for financing.



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Policybazaar plans IPO to raise up to Rs 6,500 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: PB Fintech, the parent entity of SoftBank-backed online insurance aggregator Policybazaar has approved a resolution to raise up to Rs 6,500 crore, or $870 million, via an initial public offering (IPO), making it the fifth Indian startup this year to initiate proceedings to hit the public markets.

The Policybazaar IPO is expected to be a mix of a fresh issue of shares and an offer for sale (OFS), wherein existing investors can sell their stakes directly through exchanges, according to the regulatory filings.

According to sources, the company is likely to file a Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with markets regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) soon as it eyes going public by December this year.

The online insurance aggregator — like Paytm and Zomato — is also expected to raise a pre-IPO round, which could include a secondary transaction for existing investors to dilute their stakes.

The Gurugram-based firm’s board approved the initial share sale at an extraordinary general meeting that was held on July 5, the regulatory filings showed. The startup has also passed a special resolution to rename as PB Fintech Ltd., converting from private limited to public entity.

A Policybazaar spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to ET’s queries. News website Entrackr was first to report the Policybazaar IPO resolution.

Policybazaar recorded a loss of Rs 218 crore in FY20 against Rs 213 crore in the previous fiscal. The financial results for FY21 are not out yet. The firm recently acquired an insurance broking licence from The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI), which is an upgrade from its status as a web aggregator.

The new licence will allow Policybazaar to set up its physical network while also expanding product and service offerings significantly, which include claims assistance and point-of-sale network.

Yashish Dahiya, Alok Bansal, and Avaneesh Nirjar founded Policybazaar in June 2008. The company’s list of investors includes Japan’s SoftBank Vision Fund, private equity firm True North, Premji Invest, Tiger Global and Temasek, among others.



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Policybazaar gets insurance broking licence from IRDAI

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Web-aggregator Policybazaar on Friday said it has got approval from regulator IRDAI to undertake insurance broking, a development that will help the company augment business and expand bouquet of services.

With this development, the company will surrender its web-aggregator licence to Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) and undertake business including insurance aggregation under the broking umbrella.

“We received our licence to be a broker for which we have been in touch with the regulator for the last three years,” PolicyBazaar.com CEO Yashish Dahiya told PTI.

Venturing into new segments

The broking licence will allow the company to venture into segments which it could not do in the past like claims assistance, offline services, and establish Points of Presence network.

From a revenue perspective, he said, “as a web aggregator we were not paid for life insurance renewals.” As a broker, he said, the company will be entitled for commission as well as fee for web aggregation.

Also read: Serum Institute of India picks up stake in PolicyBazaar

With the help of broking licence, he said, “we will be able to do claims settlement and many other things and we will use this opportunity very wisely.” Policybazaar has a market share of 25 per cent in the life insurance segment while 10 per cent in health insurance.

The parent company PB Fintech also promotes Paisabazaar.com, which is an online credit comparison portal.

PB Fintech had attained the status of a unicorn in 2018 when it raised $200 million in a Series-F round led by Japan’s SoftBank. A company valued at over $1 billion is called a unicorn.

Other investors include the likes of Info Edge, Premji Invest, Temasek, Ribbit Capital, Chiratae, Inventus Capital Partners, True North, Tiger Global, Wellington and Steadview.

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How you can insure yourself from Covid

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With the second wave of Covid raging across the country, many are looking to buy a health cover or enhance the same. According to data from Policybazaar.com, 90 per cent of their customers who have an existing health cover of about ₹5 lakh are porting to a higher sum insured of ₹10-15 lakh. While you must make it a point to follow all Covid protocols to avoid getting infected, here’s how you can financially shield yourself against Covid if you unfortunately fall sick.

 

Date extended for Covid-plans

In addition to taking toll on your health, Covid-19 infection can dent your savings as well.

Keeping this in mind, the insurance regulator, IRDAI has recently extended the validity for sale and renewal of short-term Covid specific health insurance policies – Corona Kavach and Corona Rakshak – till September 30, 2021. This was previously available up to March 31, 2021.

The insurance regulator in July 2020 had mandated that all general and standalone health insurers offer Corona Kavach health policy.

This (Corona Kavach) is an indemnity policy which pays for the hospitalisation of the insured affected due to Covid-19, provided he/she is hospitalised for a minimum period of 24 hours. It also offers cashless facility to its policyholders, provided hospitalisation is from the insurer’s list of network hospitals.

Hospitalisation cover includes expenses such as room rent, boarding, nursing, ICU, ambulance service up to ₹2,000, medical practitioner and consultant fees, operation theatres, PPE kit, gloves, etc.

It covers for home care treatment expenses as well, up to the sum insured (SI) for a maximum period of 14 days. All general and standalone health insurers offer this policy.

There are complaints that some hospitals are not granting cashless facility for treatment of Covid-19 despite policyholders being entitled for the same. The insurance regulator has recently clarified that wherever insurers have an arrangement with the hospitals for providing cashless facility, such hospitals are obligated to provide cashless service for all treatments including treatment for Covid-19. In the event of denial, policyholders can file a complaint with the insurer concerned.

Another plan introduced by IRDAI, but not mandatory to be offered by all insurers, is Corona Rakshak. It is a benefit policy, where the insurer will pay 100 per cent SI upon positive diagnosis and the policy shall terminate thereafter.

As both are standard policies, the coverages and exclusions across insurers will be the same, including the policy name. Both policies can be availed for a period of 105 days (3.5 months), 195 days (6.5 months) and 285 days (9.5 months) and can be renewed to ensure the benefit of the policy continues.

The minimum SI under both policies is ₹50,000; the maximum SI offered under Corona Kavach is ₹5 lakh and for Corona Rakshak ₹2.5 lakh. The minimum and maximum age of entry is 18 and 65 years respectively, and only single premium payment mode is allowed under both policies.

Regular health policies cover hospitalisation due to Corona virus among other diseases/accidents. At the beginning of the outbreak of the pandemic, there were problems over providing cover for associated costs such as personal protection equipment (PPE) kits.

These expenses formed part of consumables which were not usually covered by most insurers. Those who did cover, applied ‘proportionate deduction’ clause based on the type of hospital room availed.

In June last year, to reduce the burden of the policyholders and to standardise the claim settlement, IRDAI, ordered that medical expenses including cost of pharmacy, consumables, implants, medical devices and diagnostics to be covered as part of health policies without being subject to the ‘proportionate deduction’ clause. Covid-related expenses in the above-mentioned heads such as PPE kits will reap the benefit of this move.

Further, if you have a health policy which covers for out-patient (OPD) medical expenses – known as comprehensive cover – you can reimburse your Covid-19 related home treatment medical expenses too, if you are under home quarantine.

Making the choice

Your financial burden is likely to be reduced whether you have Covid-19 specific health covers or a comprehensive health cover. However, if you plan to sign up for one now, do note that all new health insurance policies come with a waiting period of 15 days, only after which your cover will kick in.

Covid specific plans as well as regular health cover have certain exclusions. Any unproven treatment will not be covered.

Coverage under both policies cease if the insured travels (outside the country) to a destination where India restricts travel to or the foreign country restricts entry of travellers from India.

So, if you are looking to buy a plan to protect against Covid, you can skip Corona Kavach if you have a regular health plan covering OPD expenses. Corona Rakshak can be useful if your regular plan does not cover OPD or if you are looking for additional cover. Since Rakshak is a benefit policy, this can come in handy to cover expenses for tests, scans, medicines, etc. for those who are home quarantined.

(This is a free article from the BusinessLine premium Portfolio segment. For more such content, please subscribe to The Hindu BusinessLine online.)

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