Anirudh Laskar / Mumbai December 06, 2008, 0:25 IST

At a time when companies are finding it tough to raise funds, the country's
largest insurer, Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC), has stepped up
investment in non-convertible debentures (NCDs), commercial papers (CPs) and
certificates of deposits (CDs).

 Against an investment of around Rs 200 crore in CPs and CDs last year, the
insurer has already put in Rs 1,000 crore so far in 2008-09 and hopes to
invest another Rs 500 crore to Rs 600 crore over the remaining months.

Similarly, the state-owned corporation has subscribed to NCDs worth around
Rs 20,000 crore this year, with nearly Rs 12,000 crore flowing into these
instruments over the last three months when the global credit crisis
intensified.

Managing Director Thomas Mathew T said, by March another Rs 15,000 crore to
Rs 20,000 crore will be invested in NCDs. Last year, LIC's investment in
NCDs was roughly Rs 30,000 crore in 60 companies.

So far in 2008-09, LIC has invested in almost 100 companies, 25 of them in
the last three months. So far, LIC has invested in CPs and CDs issued by 30
companies.

Mathew said the company was inundated with proposals soliciting investments
in NCDs, but LIC would be cautious. "We strictly follow Irda (Insurance
Regulatory & Development Authority) investment guidelines. We invest only in
the highest-yielding NCDs with adequate asset cover and AAA rating," Mathew
added.

According to the investment norms, LIC has to invest at least 50 per cent of
its total premium in government securities, 15 per cent into the
infrastructure sector and the remaining 35 per cent in equity and other
instruments.

Better returns partly explain LIC's higher NCD investment. Against
annualised returns of 10 to 11 per cent last year, the instruments now offer
11 to 12.5 per cent. "Even a 100 basis point increase in returns makes a lot
of difference when you consider a large investment," Mathew said.

NCDs are debt instruments issued for a fixed tenure and no part is converted
into equity. The face value can be redeemed in one instalment (a bullet
payment) or in tranches. The redemption period can stretch up to 10 years.

CPs and CDs, in contrast, are short-term debt papers with a tenure of less
than one year and offer 8 to 10 per cent returns.

Though Mathew declined to discuss company-related details, he said LIC's
biggest NCD investment this year was roughly Rs 1,000 crore.

The company is looking at an investment corpus of over Rs 1,50,000 crore and
if things go to plan Rs 35,000 and Rs 40,000 crore will flow into NCDs, CPs
and CDs.


-- 
ekamber

One of the keys to happiness is a bad memory

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