Showing posts with label SBI Cards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SBI Cards. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

LIC in the time of coronavirus: A question mark now on the mega IPO

We have seen the market impact of coronavirus on SBI Cards’ listing and there will be a question mark now on the other mega initial public offering (IPO) which is in the works — that of the Life Insurance Corporation (LIC).

The listing of LIC is being thought when it is still a pre-dominant player in the sector. This is just like in the case of the State Bank of India in 1993. Soon after, new private bank licenses were issued. We have seen that government decision-making wasn’t as astute in the case of both Mahanagar Telephone Nigam (MTNL), and Bharat Sanchar Nigam. These weren’t monetised at the right time, and don’t have much value left today except for their real-estate assets.

LIC’s maiden float, given the scale of its business and spread, provides an interesting opportunity for investors, but we have to see how the business gets defined once it is corporatised. It will have a bearing on the valuation to be derived thereafter, but it will be one of the mega-caps for sure.

In December 2003, China Life’s IPO of $2.5 billion attracted $80 billion of capital (or 20 per cent of the Chinese listed market capital). It had a huge impact on the capital markets— within a year, MSCI’s weighting for China doubled to 15 per cent.

It is expected that LIC’s IPO will face a push-back from all sides as in the case of Air India’s (AI) disinvestment. But unlike AI, which is a difficult equity story to sell, LIC will turn out to be a game-changer.
Ajay GargAjay Garg, Founder & MD, Equirus Capital
The state-run insurer’s franchise and unique customer-acquisition model is hard to replicate. It is the predominant reason for its dominant market share, two decades after the sector was thrown open to private players. No other state-run entity — AI, Doordarshan or MTNL — has been able to retain market domination post opening up of a sector to private players.

The magnitude of LIC’s dominance is demonstrated by the fact that it manages upwards of Rs 25 trillion of policy-holder assets. This accounts for almost 80 per cent of the assets under management in the sector — roughly 12 per cent of India’s GDP. High policyholder trust with a claim-settlement ratio of 98 per cent has resulted in every three out of four policies sold in the country belonging to the state-run insurer.

This dominance is further strengthened by a strong distribution franchise of nearly 1.1 million active agents accounting for 50 per cent of the life insurance industry’s agency force — one of the largest on the globally. While the top five private insurers have cumulatively registered flat profitability over the period FY14-19, LIC has managed to consistently grow its profits. This can be attributed to its focus on traditional products which insulates it from volatile capital market cycles unlike top private players which focuses more on easy-to-sell unit-linked insurance plans.

Healthy premium growth led by a steady rise in awareness, innovative products, an evolving underwriting and aggressive distribution strategy has resulted in stellar performance by listed insurance companies in the past one year (HDFC Life: 48 per cent, SBI Life: 47 per cent and ICICI Prudential: 38 per cent). This has improved the attractiveness quotient of the sector from investors’ perspective. Also, the recent outperformance of differentiated state-run stories such as the Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation post-listing, should provide a strong backdrop for LIC’s IPO.

Saturday, February 29, 2020

SBI Cards allots shares worth nearly Rs 2,800 crore to anchor investors

SBI Cards and Payment Services (SBI Cards), a subsidiary of State Bank of India (SBI), has allotted nearly Rs 2,800 crore worth of shares to anchor investors. These are institutional investors that commit to subscribe to the shares in the initial public offering (IPO) ahead of its opening. Many other investors look at the demand and quality of the anchor book to decide whether to apply in the IPO.

A total of 36.7 million shares have been allotted to 75 anchor investors at Rs 755 apiece, the top-end of the IPO price band. Some of the investors that have been allotted include sovereign funds belonging to the Singapore and Kuwait government, Fidelity, Nomura, BNP Paribas, GMO and Blackrock.

A total of 12 mutual fund houses also have got allotment for 48 schemes. Some of the fund houses include ICICI Prudential MF, Birla MF, Axis MF and Kotak MF.

Investment bankers said there was more demand than shares on offer in the anchor category. Market players said the anchor demand came on a day when the domestic markets saw one of its worst-ever crash would bode well for the IPO.

SBI Cards IPO opens on Monday and closes on Thursday. The company has set a price band of Rs 750-755 per share for its initial public offering (IPO).

At the top end, the issue size works out to Rs 10,355 crore ($1.4 billion), making it the largest Asian IPO in 2020 and fourth-biggest domestic IPO.

The IPO will comprise Rs 500 crore worth of fresh equity issuance, which will be used to strengthen the country’s second-largest credit card company’s capital base. The bulk of the IPO will be a secondary share sale by parent State Bank of India and private equity (PE) major Carlyle.

The largest public sector bank is offloading a 4 per cent stake in the IPO, while Carlyle will sell a 10 per cent stake.

After the issue, SBI’s stake will drop from 74 per cent at present to 70 per cent, while Carlyle will see its holding come down from 26 per cent to 16 per cent. The PE had bought the stake in 2017 from the lending arm of General Electric for about Rs 2,000 crore. The value of the stake has jumped to Rs 18,400 crore.

The public shareholding in SBI Cards will be 14 per cent post listing which will have to be enhanced to 25 per cent within three years.

SBI Cards will be the first credit card company to list in the domestic markets. The company will command a market capitalisation of nearly Rs 71,000 crore, making it India’s 38th most valuable company.

SBI Cards’ valuation could even exceed the Rs 1 trillion-mark going by the grey market premium. According to market operators, the stock is changing hands at a premium of 45 per cent (Rs 1,100 per share) in the unofficial market.

The SBI Cards IPO will be a test for investor appetite, which has been battered by the coronavirus outbreak.