Saturday, September 19, 2009

ICICI Pru MF to launch Gold ETF; files offer document with SEBI

ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund has filed an offer document with securities and exchange board of India (SEBI) to launch ICICI Prudential Gold Exchange Traded Fund (ETF), an open-ended exchange traded fund. The new fund offer (NFO) price for the scheme is Rs 100 each plus premium equivalent to the difference between the allotment price and the face value during the NFO.

Investment objective:
ICICI Prudential Gold Exchange Traded Fund seeks to provide investment returns that, before expenses, closely track the performance of domestic prices of gold derived from the LBMA AM fixing prices. However, the performance of the scheme may differ from that of the underlying gold due to tracking error.

Asset allocation:
The scheme would invest 90-100% of asset in gold bullion and instruments with gold as underlying asset. 0-10% in debt and money market instruments (including cash& cash equivalent).

Minimum application amount:
The minimum application for issue of units shall be made for a minimum of Rs 5,000 plus in multiples of Re 1 in cash (by way of demand draft and cheque) during the NFO. After the NFO, units will be created in a minimum size of 1000 gold units through Authorised Participants and Large Investors.

Target amount:
During the NFO period of the plans under the scheme, each Plan seeks to raise a minimum subscription of Rs 1 Lakh.

Benchmark index:
ICICI Prudential Gold Exchange Traded Fund will be benchmarked against the domestic price of gold as derived from the LBMA AM fixing prices.

Fund manager:
The scheme will be managed by Chaitanya Pande.

Govt may halve time bar for insurance IPOs

Listing lock-in may be eased to five years, Reliance Life may be the first beneficiary.
The government is likely to allow insurance companies to list after five years of operations against the 10 years prescribed at present.

The move follows a proposal from Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group’s Reliance Life Insurance, which is planning an initial public offer by March to raise resources and fund its expansion plan. Reliance Life will complete four years of operation and would have to wait for another six to meet the present stipulation. Reliance Capital had acquired AMP Sanmar in 2005, which started operations in 2002. So, the two companies put together have completed seven years.

Citing the guidelines, Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (Irda) had turned down a proposal from Reliance Life to list this year and referred the case to the finance ministry. The finance ministry, in turn, had sought the law ministry’s opinion on the rules.

A ministry official said the government wanted to understand if the10-year period was the minimum stipulation or if it meant the company had to list by the time it completed 10 years of operations.

“There is one insurance company that has had discussion with the Irda on whether we will permit them to disinvest now. We said it is only the government that can reduce the tenure. Then they approached the government. The government is thinking of reducing it to five years. Therefore, they have written to us, saying we propose to make rules like this and sought our suggestions We have no particular issue,” Irda Chairman J Hari Narayan told Business Standard in an interview.

None of the private players have completed 10 years of operation, with the first licence issued to HDFC Standard Life in October 2000. If the rules are amended, of the 22 private players, at least 10 insurance companies can raise funds from the public market. Apart from Reliance and HDFC Standard Life, the list includes ICICI Prudential Life Insurance, SBI Life, Max New York Life, Kotak Mahindra Old Mutual Fund, Birla Sun Life, Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance, Metlife, ING Vysya Life Insurance Company and Tata AIG Life Insurance.

The companies would, however, be able to tap the markets only after the insurance regulator finalised its IPO guidelines, which are expected later this month. Hari Narayan said the promoters would have to reduce their stake proportionately. So, in the case of a 10 per cent dilution, the Indian partner, which has, say, a 74 per cent stake, would have to pare its holdings by 7.4 per cent, while the foreign partner’s stake would fall by 2.6 per cent.

The stipulation could, however, create complications for the foreign partner since it could lose the power to block a board resolution, which requires a minimum 26 per cent holding. The regulator is expected to address these issues in the guidelines.

Apart from the guidelines, some life insurance companies are also waiting to turn profitable to tap the markets. Barring a few players such as SBI Life, Metlife and Sahara Life, most insurance players make losses.

“Under general rules only profit making companies are allowed to go public but the Securities and Exchange Board of India has, in certain situations, allowed loss-making companies to go public but only through the book-building procedure. But it will be subject to Sebi’s guidelines,” Hari Narayan said.