Chennai:
A favourite war-time strategy of army commanders
through the ages has been to attack the enemy on a different
flank even one of their own has been under attack. This
is precisely what the new chairman and managing director
of Export Credit Guarantee Corporation of India Limited
(ECGC) A V Muralidharan has embarked upon expand
the turf and attack the competition.
With
the opening up of the insurance sector, ECGC''s credit
insurance monopoly has gone. Other insurers like New
India Assurance Company Limited, Tata AIG General Insurance
Company Limited, ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company
Limited and Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Company
Limited have entered this arena. For them credit insurance
is an ideal ''combo'' product for their corporate clients.
Still
commanding a 90-per cent of the credit insurance market
share Muralidharan and his team are not complacent.
The 56-year old Muralidharan, the first insurance professional
to head ECGC, has decided to make inroads in the competition''s
turf by offering marine and transit insurance policies.
This
is largely facilitated by the Insurance Regulatory and
Development Authority''s (IRDA) classification of ECGC
as a non-life insurer. According to Muralidharan, the
company will expand its sphere of activity leveraging
its client relationships.
Not
only that, he plans to sew up a cooperative co-insurance
arrangement with a major non-life insurer so that ECGC
can offer a suite of general insurance products. Similarly
the ECGC''s partner would be at liberty to offer credit
insurance products to its clients.
The
two insurers would share the premium income in a predetermined
ratio as co-insurers of the risk. Though ECGC has National
Insurance Company Limited as its corporate agent, at
the latter''s branch level the awareness about credit
insurance is very negligible.
Co-insurance
arrangement apart, ECGC would start offering domestic
credit insurance in a big way. "This is a low risk
business. With prudent underwriting and with proper
credit limits for the business the risks could be largely
minimised. Further small and medium enterprises these
days go for credit rating and banks are careful while
lending," Muralidharan explains.
While
this is on the domestic front, ECGC is also going global.
"The idea is to have offices in the Middle East,
Africa and London. The last one will serve the European
Union and the reinsurers located in UK. We will recruit
staff with requisite expertise for our new endeavours,"
says Muralidharan.
However
the new plans have to get the sanction of the company''s
board and shareholders, the ministry of commerce, and
also the insurance regulator, IRDA.
As
the buzzword in the domestic non-life insurance world
is ''detariff'' resulting in downward reduction in corporate
premium, is something similar happening at ECGC? "Insurance
is a business of large numbers the losses of
a few spread over many. So unless the insuring base
is enlarged, premium cannot be reduced. For premium
reduction the majority of the exporters have to opt
for credit insurance," he explains.
Adds executive director S Prabhakaran, "ECGC''s
premium rates were always market determined. Compared
to the competition, our rates are far lower while the
policies offer wider cover without any fine print exclusions."
While
the company has not revised its premium rates downwards
directly, it has revised the risk rating of various
countries last December, which in turn has effectively
reduced the premium rates. In the case of export credit
insurance, premium rate differs from country to country
based on their risk profile. ECGC has upgraded several
countries based on their risk profile which in turn
benefits the exporters with a lower premium outgo. (Table
1: Changes in country classification)
Speaking
about the new country risk-rating matrix Muralidharan
says, "We have revised our country risk rating
methodology (CRRM) by developing an objective scoring
method."
The
company revisited the factors under the following parameters:
a) Economic risk rating (b) Political risk rating (c)
ECGC''s experience (d) Economic and political relations
with India (e) Experience of the other insurers and
added certain other important criteria that has a bearing
on a country''s payment capability.
A
new parameter, the sixth so far, on the impact of the
current developments in a country on the future has
been included in the new rating matrix to make the ratings
more comprehensive. "This helps us to avoid situations
of over and under reacting to sovereign ratings of certain
international agencies. Adequate emphasis is laid on
very high growth potential countries or consideration
of countries on a "national approach" towards
any specific country or group of countries," explains
Muralidharan.
Following
the new CRRM, 14 countries have been added to ECGC''s
country risk classification list. The new list includes
certain islands, some of which are independent nations,
while the others are dependencies or external territories
of some larger countries.
"Our
ratings are more liberal in comparison with other international
credit insurance agencies so as to benefit Indian exporters.
However, this is done without compromising the independent
objective assessment of the countries," remarks
Muralidharan.
More
bancassurance tie-ups
Nevertheless the one perennial challenge for ECGC
is not the competition but the exporters who decide
to bear the risk of buyer''s insolvency, non acceptance,
political, protracted default and others. Such an eventuality
would have a catastrophic effect on the Indian exporter.
(Table 2: Cause of loss for
exporters)
It
is here that ECGC expects bankers to play a major role
and profit from the process. ECGC has sewed up 15 bancassurance
deals and more are in the offing. "Similarly we
are also working towards increasing our corporate agents."
To
the question whether ECGC would like to rope in agents
of other non-life insurers to sell its policies Prabhakaran
says, "We will soon approach IRDA for that."
For ECGC there is a precedent and IRDA''s sanction should
not be difficult. The insurance regulator has permitted
Star Health and Allied Insurance Company Limited to
enroll existing non-life agents to sell its health insurance
products on the ground that it is a specialised institution.
Meanwhile
the company closed FY 07 with a premium income of around
Rs620 crore (flash figure) and a claims outgo of around
Rs358 crore as against the previous fiscal''s figures
Rs578 crore and Rs386 crore respectively. The recoveries
from guarantees given and others amount to around Rs132
crore. The income from investments will be in the region
of Rs200 crore on a portfolio of Rs3,000 crore. The
directions of ministry of commerce govern ECGC''s investment
decisions, and the bulk of the investments are in bank
fixed deposits.
Finding
a reinsurer for its risks is one big issue for ECGC.
"We reinsure with General Insurance Corporation
of India (GIC) and New India Assurance. But that is
very minimal as we retain 99 per cent of our premium
and the risk," says Muralidharan. Unlike a couple
of other non-life insurers, the solvency position of
ECGC, which has a Rs800 crore-equity base is also very
comfortable.
Looking
at ECGC''s plan it is clear insurers face interesting
times ahead. And only time will tell whether the company
would achieve Rs1,000-crore premium target in four years..
Table:
Changes in country classification
|
Risk
Rating
|
Risk
Category
|
Number
of countries
|
Change
(Nos.)
|
Change
(in %)
|
|
Old
Classification
|
New
Classification
|
|
A1
(1/7)
|
Insignificant
|
26
|
63
|
37
|
142
|
|
A2
(2/7)
|
Low
|
60
|
34
|
-26
|
-43
|
|
B1
(3/7)
|
Moderately
Low
|
32
|
41
|
9
|
28
|
|
B2
(4/7)
|
Moderate
|
32
|
29
|
-3
|
-9
|
|
C1
(5/7)
|
Moderately
High
|
27
|
52
|
25
|
93
|
|
C2
(6/7)
|
High
|
24
|
10
|
-14
|
-58
|
|
D
(7/7)
|
Very
High
|
22
|
8
|
-14
|
-64
|
|
Total
|
223
|
237
|
14
|
|
Table 2 (a): Cause of loss for exporters
and claims paid data for 2005-06
|
No.of
claims
|
Cause
of Loss
|
Claims
paid
Rs
|
| 64
|
Insolvency
|
230,048,391
|
| 150
|
Non
Acceptance |
94,480,854
|
| 1 |
Others
|
962,473
|
| 1 |
Political
|
497,869
|
| 394
|
Protracted
Default |
684,351,150
|
| 610
|
TOTAL
|
1,010,340,737
|
Table 2 (b) Cause of loss, claims lodged and settled data
April 2006- December 2006
|
No.of
claims
|
Cause
of Loss
|
Claims
Lodged
Rs.
|
Claims
paid
Rs
|
| 30 |
Insolvency |
73,110,544
|
52,775,126
|
| 89 |
Non
Acceptance |
130,798,855
|
67,150,856
|
| 8 |
Others |
2,310,873
|
1,619,471
|
| 314 |
Protracted
Default |
764,278,630
|
468,168,609
|
|