Business

The government is considering allowing foreign institutional investors to buy up to 20 per cent of state-owned Life Insurance Corporation's initial public offering, a government source said on Wednesday.The listing of LIC is set to be the country's biggest ever initial public offering, with the government aiming to raise up to Rs 90,000 crore ($12.2 billion) from its stake sale.At present, even though foreign institutional investors are allowed to hold up to 74 per cent of private insurance companies and up to 20 per cent of state-owned banks, they are not permitted to own shares in LIC.Enabling this would allow foreign pension funds, insurance companies and mutual funds to participate in the IPO of India's largest life insurer.The government is keen to complete the listing this financial year to help with budgetary constraints and late last month selected 10 merchant banks out of the sixteen that had bid to kick-start the process.In total, the merchant banks will earn a fee of around Rs 10 crore ($1.36 million), higher than the token fee charged on some IPOs of state-owned firms in the past, but still significantly lower than fees for private listings.For instance, food delivery startup Zomato paid $31 million in fees for listing earlier this year, according to Dealogic.The low fee, however, has not been a deterrent, with nearly all the major banks barring Morgan Stanley queuing up."We can't care less about what is the money that is being offered.
It is the biggest IPO in recent times and will be probably the biggest, say for another 5 years," said a merchant banker.





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