Mumbai:
The Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) has sanctioned a Rs
6,000-crore loan to the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI).
It
has signed a memorandum of understanding with NHAI, under which
the road-builder will get a line of credit for the amount. The
insurance major has also granted a Rs 1,500-crore loan to the
National Thermal Power Corporation.
The investments have
been made under its infrastructure funding obligations, says
LIC managing director and acting chairman A Ramamurthy. For the
fiscal year 2002-03, the insurer has earmarked about Rs 10,000
crore (about 15 per cent of its total investment corpus) for
infrastructure financing.
LICs return on
investment has dropped by at least a percentage point over the
past year-and-half to about 8.5-9 per cent, even as the average
rate of return on its policies came down to about 6 per cent.
The sharp drop in interest rates has hit the countrys top life
insurer, too, and it has either discontinued or restructured
several of its high-return policies over the past fiscal year.
Says Ramamurthy: All the interest assumptions we had last year
are no longer valid. We had to restructure policies because of
falling yields. We would snip returns on policies according to the
interest rate scenario.
In the current fiscal
year, LIC will have about Rs 62,000 crore available for
investments. Of this, about 60 per cent (50 per cent is mandatory)
or close
to Rs 38,000 crore will go into government securities and about 9
per cent (nearly Rs 6,000 crore) will flow into equities.
Investments in the
corporate sector, including equities, will be about Rs 11,000
crore. The amount available after funding infrastructure will be
channelled to social welfare schemes and other projects. In the
past year, the corporations investments amounted to about Rs
50,000 crore. It had gross investments of about Rs 4,400 crore in
equities and about Rs 30,000 crore in government securities.
|