The value of insurer's holdings in listed companies at the end of December 2019 quarter stood at Rs 6.02 trillion.
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30 per cent drop in the S&P BSE Sensex and the Nifty 50 thus far
in the calendar year 2020 (CY20) has weighed heavily on the fortunes
of state-owned life insurer, Life Insurance Corporation of India
(LIC), which has suffered a notional loss of about Rs 1.9 trillion in
the past two-and-half months. The insurer, known for making large
equity investments, has substantial holdings in many listed
companies. The dent comes at a time when the government is drawing up
plans of listing LIC
at the bourses, subject to legislative changes and regulatory
approvals.
The
value of insurer’s holdings in listed companies at the end of
December 2019 quarter stood at Rs 6.02 trillion, which is valued at
Rs 4.14 trillion now, translating into a mark-to-market hit of Rs
1.88 trillion, or 31 per cent. The study is based on 209 companies
from the S&P BSE 500 index where LIC held over 1 percentage point
stake in the December 2019 quarter. These companies accounted 65 per
cent of total market capitalisation of BSE-listed companies.
Among
sectors, financials including banks, non-banking financial companies
(NBFCs) and insurance companies, the top value destroyers, accounted
30 per cent or Rs 56,810 crore of total LIC value erosion during the
period. Oil & Gas (Rs 36,020 crore), cigarettes makers (Rs 17,374
crore), information technology (Rs 15,826 crore), metals (Rs 12,045
crore), automobiles (Rs 11,329 crore) and infrastructure (Rs 10,669
crore) are other sectors, in which LIC lost a more than Rs 10,000
crore values during the period.
“Services-related
sectors will be the worst hit due to Covid-19.
Agri will largely remain unaffected, while manufacturing will be hit
to the extent that there will be a supply-side issue. Within the
services, too, there are sub-divisions for the impact. While telecom
may largely remain unaffected, hotels, travel & tourism will bear
the brunt. All this will continue to impact investors’ fortunes,
including LIC. This is a systemic issue,” explains G Chokkalingam,
founder and managing director at Equinomics Research.
Over
the next few months – at least till there is clarity on the impact
of Covid-19 on the economy and the fortunes of India Inc – analysts
at Credit Suisse Wealth Management expect fund flows into equities –
both domestic and foreign – to taper off, which again will put the
Indian markets under pressure.
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