{"id":1222,"date":"2012-11-21T12:15:46","date_gmt":"2012-11-21T06:45:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/teekhapan.wordpress.com\/?p=1222"},"modified":"2012-11-21T12:15:46","modified_gmt":"2012-11-21T06:45:46","slug":"govt-will-use-your-lic-money-to-offload-psu-shares-again","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/vivekkaul.com\/2012\/11\/21\/govt-will-use-your-lic-money-to-offload-psu-shares-again\/","title":{"rendered":"Govt will use your LIC money to offload PSU shares \u2013 again"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/a>
\nVivek Kaul<\/strong>
\nWhen the going gets tough, the government gets desperate.
\nThe recent auction of the 2G telecom spectrum was supposed to raise Rs 40,000 crore. It hardly raised anything close to that amount.
\nThe disinvestment process which is supposed to raise Rs 30,000 crore during the course of the year has not raised a single rupee nearly eight months into the year.
\nAlso what does not help is the fact that the amount of tax collected seems to be slowing down.\u00a0
As economist Shankar Acharya recently wrote in the\u00a0Business Standard<\/em><\/a>:\u201cBy end September the government\u2019s tax receipts amounted to less than 40 percent of the year\u2019s Budget target.\u201d
\nDuring the first half of the financial year (i.e. between April 1 and September 30) the fiscal deficit was at Rs 3,36,000 crore or 65.6% of the targeted fiscal deficit of Rs 5,13,590 crore. Fiscal deficit is essentially the difference between what the government earns and what it spends.
\nWhat all this tells us is that the government of India is spending more and more money and is not earning enough of it. Also it is not in a position to control it expenditure.
\nAnd that has made it desperate enough to bend its own rules.
The Economic Times<\/a> reports that the finance ministry has allowed Life Insurance Corporation of India to own upto 25% of a listed company. The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority(Irda) of India, the insurance regulator, allows insurance companies to own up to 10% stake in a listed company.
\nIrda has blasted the government for going ahead with this decision. As The Economic Times<\/i> reports \u201cThe Insurance Regulatory & Developmental Authority, which had in 2008 amended investment norms to prohibit an insurer from holding more than a 10% stake in a company, openly criticised the government\u2019s decision,\u00a0with Chairman J Hari Narayan saying it was against prudence. \u201cIt is against the (Irda) Act and against any prudence,\u201d he said.\u201d
\nAnd for once I agree with Irda. There are multiple reasons for the same. \u00a0As George Orwell wrote in Animal Farm <\/i>\u201cAll animals are equal,\u00a0but some animals are more equal than others.<\/b>\u201d The government is working on this principle by allowing LIC of India to own up to 25% of a listed company when the other insurance companies can own only up to 10% of a listed company. There can\u2019t be two separate rules for companies in the same line of business, which is insurance in this case.
\nAlso what happens in a situation when LIC ends up investing in a company which turns out to be a dud? Imagine what would happen when LIC decides to get out of the shares of such a company. The stock price of the company will fall impacting returns of investors who have bought insurance plans from LIC. As the old saying goes \u201cputting all eggs in one basket\u201d is a pretty risky proposition and goes against the basic principles of investing.
\nSo the question is why is the government going ahead with a move which is fundamentally so wrong? As Hari Narayan toldThe Economic Times <\/em>\u201c<\/em>They have to understand the gravity of the issue and the potential danger\u2026I do not agree with the government.\u201d
\nBut the thing is that the government is desperate to raise money one way or another. Its attempts at selling the 2G telecom spectrum have flopped miserably. It also knows that with all the scams its credibility is at an all time low. And if it tries to sell shares of public sector companies in the open market, the process might flop in the same way that the recent 2G spectrum auction did.
\nHence, in this scenario the biggest hope for the government is LIC. The trouble of course is that in some of the companies that the government wants to sell shares of, LIC may already have a stake which is close to the mandated 10%. So to get around this the government has raised it to 25%.
\nAs The Economic Times<\/i> put it \u201cThe enhanced limit could herald good news for the struggling disinvestment programme as the finance ministry could lean on state-run LIC, the largest insurer, to deploy its funds to buy hefty stakes in public sector companies that the government may find hard to sell in the open market.\u201d
\nSo the government is getting ready to dump its stake in various public sector units to LIC. Money is being moved from one arm of the government (LIC) to another(the central government\u2019s annual budget).
\nAs I had written in
another piece<\/a> recently when it comes to LIC it is best placed to carry out such operations in the last three months of the financial year (i.e. between January and March). At that point of the year people start seriously thinking about their tax saving investments and in large parts of the country that means buying a new LIC policy or paying the premium for the existing ones. And that\u2019s when the insurance behemoth has a lot of cash which can be used to rescue the government by picking up shares of companies that it decides to disinvest. Given this, the change from 10% to 25% has been made just at the right time.
\nThe only loser in the process is the individual who puts up his hard earned money into insurance plans of LIC and ends up financing the fiscal deficit of the government. This is nothing but another form of \u201cfinancial repression\u201d where the premium that Indians pay towards their LIC insurance policies will end up financing the fiscal deficit of the government.
\nHence, don\u2019t be surprised if you LIC agents aggressively marketing unit linked insurance plans (Ulips) which invest in stocks very aggressively for the remaining part of the year. They will have no other option. The instructions will come from right at the top.
\nAlso what this does not do anything about the basic problem which is that the Indian government is spending much more than what it can write cheques for.
\nThe
article<\/a> originally appeared on www.firstpost.com<\/a> on November 21, 2012.
\n(Vivek Kaul is a writer. He can be reached at
vivek.kaul@gmail.com<\/a>)
\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

Vivek Kaul When the going gets tough, the government gets desperate. The recent auction of the 2G telecom spectrum was supposed to raise Rs 40,000 crore. It hardly raised anything close to that amount. The disinvestment process which is supposed to raise Rs 30,000 crore during the course of the year has not raised a … <\/p>\n

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