MUMBAI: Moving a step closer to form the country’s biggest private sector life insurer, the board of HDFC today approved the merger of Max Life and Max Financial Services with its insurance arm HDFC Standard Life Insurance Company.
The total premium of the merged entity is expected to be nearly Rs 26,000 crore and assets under management will top Rs 1 lakh crore. In the private life insurance space, only ICICI Prudential Life Insurance had reported AUM of Rs 1 lakh crore.
“We wish to inform you that a committee of the board of directors of the corporation has at its meeting held today approved the entering into definitive agreements for an amalgamation of business…through a composite scheme of arrangement,” Housing Development Finance CorporationBSE -1.46 % (HDFC) said in a filing to the BSE.
“As part of the proposed transaction, the non-life insurance business of Max Financial, currently held through Max Life, would be finally amalgamated into Max IndiaBSE -0.91 % Ltd,” it added.
HDFC also said that post-merger it’s shareholding in HDFC Standard Life would be 42.5 per cent and consequently the insurance firm would cease to be a subsidiary.
Edinburgh-based Standard Life Plc holds 35 per cent stake in HDFC Life, in which HDFC owns 61.63 per cent.
The shares of HDFC Life are proposed to be listed on BSE and the National Stock Exchange of India as a consequence of the scheme, it said.
For HDFC, this will be the second merger announcement this month after HDFC Ergo General Insurance announced the takeover of 100 per cent stake in L&T General Insurance.
Owing to the Max deal, which would involve a swap of shares without any cash changing hands, HDFC Life has put on hold its proposed IPO.
Max Life is a joint venture with Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance Company. Max Financial owns 68 per cent stake in Max Life, while Mitsui Sumitomo owns 26 per cent.