Shares could be sold in tranches and could generate some much needed funds

Also In This Package
IPL: Rajasthan Royals vs Kings XI Punjab in pictures
IPL: Royal Challengers Bangalore vs Mumbai Indians
10 iconic songs to get you in an autumn mood
See: Hong Kong Disneyland opens as city's cases fall
Passengers relive the past in 'last century-style' boat
Watch: Remnants of East Germany, 30 years after its end
New Delhi: India is planning to seek cabinet's approval to sell 25 per cent stake in the nation's largest life insurer, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks resources to plug a widening budget gap. The government plans to amend the act of parliament under which the state-run Life Insurance Corp. of India was set up to prepare for the sale.
The timing of the insurer's initial public offering will be depend on market conditions, and the sale is likely to be done in tranches.
Also Read
Dubai’s five-year Retirement Visa: It just got easier to applyCOVID-19: Wedding, funeral protocols that need to be followed in the UAESet up your UAE business for Dh6,000 per year and get two visasUAE: Can my employer enforce a non-compete clause against me?A stake sale in LIC through a public offering of shares will help the government bolster its finances after the pandemic stalled growth and threatens the fiscal deficit target of 3.5 per cent of gross domestic product set for the year ending March 2021. The administration has raised about 57 billion rupees through asset sales in the fiscal year from April 1, as against a target of 2.1 trillion rupees.
The government has picked Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India Ltd. and SBI Capital Markets Ltd. to help Life Insurance Corp. of India prepare for an initial share sale. The advisers will help evaluate the capital structure of India's biggest insurer as well as aid the company in reworking its financial statement, according to a tender document issued in June.
As part of the proposal, the government will also move an amendment in parliament for an authorized capital of 200 billion rupees which will be divided into 20 billion shares, the people said.
A ministerial panel set up for asset sales will decide on the size of the public offering while the cabinet will consider changes to capital structure of the insurer, the people said. Taking the insurer public will help instill "discipline" and unlock value, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had said in her budget speech in February, without providing details or the time line for the sale
Sign up for the Daily Briefing
Get the latest news and updates straight to your inbox
Network Links
GN StoreDownload our app
© Al Nisr Publishing LLC 2026. All rights reserved.