India’s LIC posts higher first-quarter profit on transfer of money to shareholder fund

Illustration shows Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) logo

Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) logo is seen displayed behind figurines in this illustration taken February 20, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

BENGALURU, Aug 10 (Reuters) – Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIFI.NS) reported a surge in first-quarter profit on Thursday as the company moved money to a shareholders’ fund and income from its investments jumped.

The life insurer posted a profit after tax of 95.44 billion Indian rupees ($1.16 billion) for the quarter ended June 30, compared with 6.83 billion rupees a year earlier.

State-owned Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) has been transferring money from its non-participating fund to a shareholders’ fund to boost its profitability.

Reuters reported last year that the life insurer was planning to transfer 1.8 trillion rupees from policyholders’ funds into a fund earmarked to pay dividends or issue bonus shares.

LIC’s income from investments jumped nearly 30% to 903.1 billion rupees in the first quarter.

The company’s value of new business (VNB), which measures expected profit from new premiums and is a key gauge for growth, fell 6.8% to 13.02 billion rupees. VNB margins increased slightly to 13.7% from 13.6%.

LIC’s net premium income was mostly flat in the first quarter at 983.63 billion rupees, the company said in an exchange filing.

The company’s annualised premium equivalent for non-participating products, where the insurer does not share profits or surplus with the policy holder, rose 21.6%.

LIC, largely reliant on an army of sales agents, said policy sales dropped 12.6% in the quarter.

The life insurer raised the minimum ticket size of policies and focused more on margin oriented non-participating products, Chairperson Siddhartha Mohanty said on a media call.

LIC’s solvency ratio, the measure of an insurer’s ability to meet its long-term debt obligations, improved marginally to 1.89 compared with 1.88 last year.

The company’s shares closed down 0.4% ahead of the results, and have been down 6% so far this year.

($1 = 82.6110 Indian rupees)

Reporting by Sethuraman NR, Nikunj Ohri and Siddhi Nayak; Editing by Varun H K, Janane Venkatraman and Shounak Dasgupta

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *