Six of the eight private general insurance players in India have posted a net profit within three years of setting up shop, making this possibly the biggest private enterprise success story in the financial sector.
To put this into perspective, when private general insurance companies entered India at the end of 2000, they had reckoned that they would need five years to break even. Private life insurance company executives had then said their break even period was 7-10 years.
The list of profitable general insurance companies this year includes Reliance General Insurance Company, Iffco-Tokio Marine General Insurance Company, Bajaj Allianz, ICICI Lombard, Tata AIG General Insurance Company and Royal Sundaram Alliance Insurance. Other private insurers have yet to post profits are confident of joining their ranks in 2004-2005.
Reliance and Iffco-Tokio broke even in year one. On March 31, 2002, Reliance declared a net profit of Rs 7.35 crore (Rs 73.5 million) By the second year, ICICI Lombard joined the list, posting a profit after tax of Rs 0.7 crore in the first half of 2002-2003.
In 2003-2004, three more private general insurance companies made a net profit: Bajaj Allianz [Rs 32 crore (Rs 320 million)], Tata AIG [Rs 15 crore (Rs 150 million)] and Royal Sundaram Alliance [Rs 8 crore (Rs 80 million)]. ICICI Lombard's net profit for 2003-2004 was Rs 42.2 crore (Rs 422 million). The profitability figures of Reliance and Iffco-Tokio are not available.
Strikingly, the private general insurance companies also raised their market share from 9.46 per cent [Rs 1,349 crore (Rs 13.49 billion) in absolute terms] in 2003 to 14.21 per cent [Rs 2,290.69 crore (Rs 22.91 billion)] in 2003-2004. In the first month of 2004-2005, their market share zoomed to 20.44 per cent.
Three main reasons account for this success story: the customer-orientation of the private general insurance companies (bringing service to the doorstep of retail consumers); their ability to zero in on profitable accounts; and their focus on profitable businesses like fire and property insurance.
The new entrants introduced the concept of undertaking risk management for corporate clients. This enabled them to make inroads into many profitable corporate accounts of state insurers.
"Private insurers have been able to make profits because the volume of policies issued increased, thereby enabling them to leverage management expenses," said Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Company CEO Kamesh Goyal.
Better spreads and reduced claim ratios also contributed to companies making profits far ahead of the five-year time frame, he added.
The new companies introduced facilities like point of sale issuance of policies, cashless settlement of motor repairs (payment is settled directly by the insurance company) and SMS alerts on motor claim status.
They have also tied up with