Holding 17 per cent of the over Rs 80.7 lakh crore dated government securities, maturing by 2061, the Reserve Bank is the second largest holder of government debt, while led by public sector banks, commercial banks collectively own around 40 percent. Other insurers cumulatively own only 5 percent.
LIC’s ownership of G-secs peaked in March 2019 when it held 20.6 per cent and 20.5 per cent in March 2020, according to Swiss brokerage UBS Securities.
With USD 520 billion of total assets under management (AUM), LIC is the largest institutional investor in the around USD 3 trillion domestic equities market.
With 29 per cent share or USD 130 billion in AUM, LIC also has the largest share of domestic institutional equity AUM, which is a shade more than half of all equity mutual funds in the country, as per an analysis by the brokerage.
LIC has about 4 per cent stake in equities, making it the single-largest stakeholder after the government (promoter stake), but this is down from its 2017 peak when it held 4.7 per cent of the market.
LIC also has a disproportionately higher share in state-owned stocks with around 9 per cent share.
As of December, it owns 10 per cent of RIL, 5 per cent each in TCS, Infosys and ITC, and 4 per cent each in ICICI Bank, L&T and SBI.
After the listing, LIC would be the largest investment in the government’s portfolio of listed equities — 43 per cent of USD 377 billion in AUM.
This is important from the point of view of government budget financing through divestment and it will also be the third largest company in terms of marker cap of USD 172 billion after Reliance Industries (USD 214 billion) and TCS (USD 182 billion).
With 28 crore policyholders, LIC has the maximum share of household savings.
The report said nearly Rs 10 out of every Rs 100 saved by households each year goes to LIC, making it larger than even the perceived staple of household savings — SBI, which gets around 8 per cent of the bank deposits.
It will also be the 32nd-largest based on free float market cap as the government is selling only 5 per cent stake through the IPO. Again RIL leads the free-float market with USD 108.7 billion, followed by HDFC Bank at USD 88.2 billion, Infosys (USD84.7 billion), ICICI Bank (USD72.8 billion, HDFC (USD 58.2 billion) and TCS (USD 50.8 billion).
But among the state-owned companies, LIC will be the third largest in terms of free-float value at USD 8.6 billion, after SBI’s USD 27 billion and PowerGrid’s USD 9.4 billion.
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