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IRDA issues draft guidelines for life insurers' IPO


Insurance companies which have completed 10 years of operations are now eligible to go for initial public offer (IPO).
Prior to filing of the draft document for issue of share capital or making public offer with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the insurance company should take a “formal approval” from the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA).
For approval, the insurer should have maintained a satisfactory regulatory record, J Hari Narayan, Chairman, IRDA, said in the draft guidelines on Issues of Capital and Disclosure Requirements (ICDR) for life insurance companies announced on Tuesday.
The objective of the public issue could be to augment solvency requirement and general corporate purposes.
Financial statements for a period of last five years should be provided along with gross premium, cross-selling, operating expenses ratio, investment yield, liability of future policy benefits and manner of arriving at unrealised gain/loss.
In addition to meeting the disclosure norms laid down by SEBI in ICDR regulations, any insurance company should also disclose risk factors specific to the insurance companies.
An overview of insurance industry, disclosure of financial statements, particulars about the issue and insurers should also be provided.
The risk factors to be mentioned in the offer documents should cover risks arising out of insurance risk (mis-estimation and fluctuations in the frequency of claims) besides market, credit, liquidity and operational risks, the guidelines said.
The guidelines would come into force after their notification in the Gazette, IRDA added.
At present, there are 24 life insurance companies approved by IRDA while about four/five of them would have completed 10 years of operations..

India to Get Below-Normal Rains, Eroding Prospects for Food Grain, Lentils


Monsoon rain in India will be below normal for the second time in three years, the weather office said, potentially lowering farm output and accelerating inflation which is the highest among Asia’s major economies.
Rainfall will be 95 percent of the 50-year average in the June-September season, Science and Technology Minister Pawan Kumar Bansal told reporters in New Delhi today. That compares with 98 percent predicted by the India Meteorological Department in April. The bureau defines normal precipitation as 96 percent to 104 percent of the long-term average.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is betting on adequate rainfall to harvest record quantities of food grain and lentils for a second year and cool inflation, which has led the central bank to raise rates for a 10th time in 15 months. Agriculture makes up almost 14 percent of the economy and a reduced harvest can lower rural incomes, hurting sales of tractors and cars.
“A subnormal monsoon can very easily put pressure on inflation,” Dharmakirti Joshi, a Mumbai-based economist at Crisil Ltd., the local unit of Standard & Poor’s, said by phone. “Expectations of food price increases will accentuate” if the monsoon rains aren’t adequate, he said.
The wholesale price index in India accelerated 9.06 percent in May after having increased 8.66 percent a month earlier, according to official data released on June 14. An index measuring wholesale prices of farm products including milk and lentils rose 8.96 percent in the week ended June 4 from a year earlier, according to the commerce ministry.

Food Prices

Global food prices will remain higher in the next decade than in the past 10 years as agricultural production slows and demand increases, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization said in a joint report June 17.
India imported record quantities of sugar, lentils and oilseeds in 2009 following the weakest monsoon since 1972. A below normal monsoon this year may prompt the government to keep a ban on exports of wheat and rice, and extend curbs on shipments of sugar.
The South Asian nation, the world’s second-biggest grower of wheat and rice, may need as much as 70 million metric tons of grains to supply to its citizens at subsidized rates after the parliament approves a food security bill, Food Minister K.V. Thomas said in an interview last week. The government will keep a ban on exports of the food grain, he said.

Export Bans

India banned shipments of wheat in early 2007 and non- basmati rice in April 2008 to bolster domestic supplies amid a global food crisis. State reserves of food grains totaled 65.6 million tons on June 1, almost triple the quantity five years ago, according to the Food Corp. of India.
The forecast for below-average rains may further pressure India’s stocks, the worst performer in Asia this year, said Arun Kejriwal, a director at Mumbai-based Kejriwal Research & Investment Services Pvt.
“The market tone is currently bearish and confused. A comment like this will affect sentiments and only add to the pressure on stocks,” he said by phone today.
The Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index rebounded from its lowest close in four months today, gaining 0.3 percent to 17,560.30. The gauge has lost 14 percent of its value in 2011.
Rainfall in July, the wettest month of the monsoon season, may be 93 percent of the long-period average as a weakening of La Nina weather conditions causes less precipitation, the forecaster said today. Showers in August are forecast at 94 percent, it said.

Cotton Region

Rains over northwest India, the nation’s main cane, cotton and rice-growing region, may be 97 percent of the 50-year average, the forecaster said. Central India, which includes the top soybean-producing areas, may receive 95 percent rainfall, while showers over the southern peninsula will be 94 percent, the weather office said. Showers over northeastern states, the top tea-growing region, may be 95 percent of the average.
Rains will be “well distributed” and won’t hurt crops, Ajit Tyagi, director general of the bureau told reporters.
India’s 235 million farmers depend on rain for irrigating crops from rice to cotton and sowing of monsoon crops begins in June and harvesting starts in September. The rains typically start over the southern Kerala state by the first week of June, before blanketing the entire nation by July 15..

ONGC plans to invest $7.7 bn in India gas block: Report


Indian state explorer Oil and Natural Gas Corp plans to invest USD 7.7 billion to develop a gas field in an east coast block and produce up to 30 million cubic meters a day in five years, the Economic Times reported on Tuesday.
The company plans to drill eight additional wells in the block to maximize output from the deep-sea field and has sought approval for the plan from the Directorate General of Hydrocarbons and the petroleum ministry, the newspaper said citing an emailed response from ONGC.
ONGC could not immediately be reached for comment.
Last week, the Business Standard newspaper had reported that ONGC was in talks with the Indian unit of BG Group and Italian oil major ENI to sell up to a 30% stake in an east coast block.
In February, BP agreed to buy a 30% stake in 23 oil and gas blocks owned by Reliance Industries, India's most valuable listed conglomerate, for USD 7.2 billion..

Nifty moves higher; oil & gas, banks, auto gain

MUMBAI: Indian markets bounced back after a sharp fall in the last session on concerns of renewal of tax treaty between India and Mauritius. Oil&gas and rate sensitives like banks and auto stocks led the pull-back while realty, power and capital goods stocks were down on profit booking. 

"After Monday's Mauritius blues, a recovery appears in sight. A review of the tax treaty with Mauritius appears to be on the cards though no timeline has been fixed for negotiations. 

Even if talks were to start, their duration and outcome is uncertain. What is also heartening to note is that there was no major sell-off from FIIs (net sales Rs 5 billion). The domestic funds pumped in over Rs 8.6 billion. 

So, the start will be positive and a bounce back is a given. Global cues are also supportive. Stock indices in the US and Europe closed higher amid hope of a resolution to the Greek's debt woes. Most Asian markets are up this morning. 

The euro has recovered while the dollar index is down slightly. Nymex crude is hovering around $93 a barrel while the Brent is around US$112. 

The Nifty could find resistance around 5300. It is likely to find support around 5200. Overall, the market could remain jittery in the short term. One must stick to a 'wait-and-see' approach and be vigilant given the high degree of volatility," said IIFL report. 

At 10:20 am; National Stock Exchange's Nifty was at 5283.65, up 25.75 points or 0.49 per cent. The broader index touched a high of 5297.25 and low of 5257 in trade so far. 

Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensex was at 17595.65, up 89.02 points or 0.51 per cent. The 30-share index hit a high of 17642.77 and low of 17504.27 intraday. 

BSE Midcap Index was up 0.22 per cent and BSE Smallcap Index moved 0.23 per cent higher. 

Amongst sectoral indices, BSE Oil&gas Index was up 0.69 per cent, BSE Bankex gained 0.56 per cent and BSE Auto Index moved 0.53 per cent higher. 

BSE Realty Index was down 0.94 per cent, BSE Power Index slipped 0.22 per cent and BSE Capital Goods Index declined 0.13 per cent. 

Sun Pharma (1.84%), Bharti Airtel (1.67%), Reliance Industries (1.59%), Tata Motors (1.57%) and TCS (1.52%) were the major Nifty gainers. 

HCL Tech (-2.39%), Jaiprakash Associates (-1.52%), ONGC (-1.37%), BHEL (-1.32%) and DLF (-1.12%) were the major Nifty losers. 

Market breadth was positive on the NSE with 1068 gainers against 976 losers. 

Meanwhile, the Asian markets were moved higher. Nikkei 225 was up 0.43 per cent, Strait Times moved 0.63 per cent higher and Hang Seng edged 0.32 per cent higher..