Cholamandalam Financial Holdings Limited (NSE:CHOLAHLDNG)
India flag India · Delayed Price · Currency is INR
1,785.00
+30.00 (1.71%)
May 8, 2026, 3:29 PM IST
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Q3 25/26

Feb 9, 2026

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Q3 FY26 Cholamandalam Financial Holdings earnings conference call hosted by DAM Capital Advisors Limited. As a reminder, all participants will be in listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star, then zero, on your dashboard phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Parth Jariwala from DAM Capital Advisors Limited. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Parth Jariwala
Equity Research Associate, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Cholamandalam Financial Holdings Limited Q3 FY26 earnings call. From the management, we have Mr. Sridharan Rangarajan, Non-Executive Director, Cholamandalam Financial Holdings Limited. Mr. N. Ganesh, Manager and CFO, Cholamandalam Financial Holdings Limited. Mr. V. Suryanarayanan, Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance. Mr. Santosh Pandey, CFO, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance. I'll now hand over the call to the management for their opening remarks, post which we can open the floor for Q&A. Over to you, sir. Thank you.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Thanks. Good afternoon to all of you who joined the earnings conference call. I welcome Santosh Pandey to the call, who has joined us as the Chief Financial Officer. He's taken over from Mr. Venugopalan, who retired as of 30th November 2025. Santosh joined us in the month of August 2025 and comes with prior experience with the Aditya Birla Group. I shall now proceed with the overview of the performance of Chola MS for the quarter and nine months ended December 2025. In line with the 1:1 method of accounting and reporting of GDPI with respect to long-term non-motor business, Chola MS recorded a GDPI of INR 2,067 crores for Q3 and INR 5,714 crores for the nine-month period. Chola MS suffered the loss of crop insurance business consequent to the retender, which impacted the quarter's GDPI by about INR 84 crores and cumulatively by INR 467 crores for the nine months.

With the base effect of 1:1 reporting coming to an end as at the end of Q2, the growth in non-crop business is visible from Q3. The premium received in advance on long-term non-motor products was INR 103 crores for quarter 3 and INR 306 crores for the 9-month period. Together with the reinsurance inward business, the GWP for Q3 was INR 2,338 crores and INR 6,555 crores for the 9-month period. In motor, the principal line of business, the market share stood at 5.25%. Within motor, the company had a composition of 51% in cars, 38% in CVs, and 11% in two-wheelers. The company secured about 25% of its total motor premium from new vehicles in quarter 3.

The company has adopted a cautious stance with respect to growing the two-wheeler book, particularly new vehicles, in the context of the absence of motor third-party premium increases over the last four years. The EOM for Chola MS for Q3 stood at 30.63, which measured without 1:1 works out to 29.27 and is lower than the glide path plan approved by the board and presented to the regulator. The EOM for the corresponding quarter of previous year was 33.76. The claims ratio for the quarter and year to date were at 80.5 and 81.1, which is higher than the levels in the corresponding periods of previous year. Motor OD claims ratio has been higher and also reflects the competitive intensity in the industry.

Chola MS continues to be prudent and conservative in its provisioning for motor TP losses, with the level of provisioning a good 12% higher than many of its peers. Recognizing the rising severity in motor third-party claims and the continued absence of increase in motor third-party premium for the last 3-4 years, Chola MS tipped up its motor third-party reserving in the year. This has rendered the overall claims ratio higher than the corresponding period by about 3.05%. Consequently, the combined ratio for 9 months was at 116.2, which is 113 without the 1:1 effect. The combined ratio of 113 includes the impact of motor third-party reserving, which is 3.05%. The investment corpus as at December was over INR 18,700 crore, and the company had marked-to-market gains of INR 162 crore in debt and INR 294 crore in the equity portfolio.

The profit before tax for the 9-month period was at INR 346 crore after absorbing the labor code-related gratuity provisioning impact, which was about INR 7 crore. The ROE for the 9 months was at 7.9, not annualized. Solvency was at 2.04 times as at December. We'll now be happy to take any questions that you may have.

Operator

Thank you very much. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and 1 on the touchscreen telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from question queue, you may press star and 2. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. Participants may press star and 1 to ask the question. The first question is from the line of Ratna from SCIL Ventures. Please go ahead.

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Hello. Thank you for the opportunity. Am I audible?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Yes, please.

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Sir, we had discussed earlier our ambition to sustain ROEs in the 16-18% range. Given the current non-annualized ROE at 8%, along with some pressures on loss ratios as well as competitive environment, specifically in Motor OD and TP business, could you please share your thoughts on factors that led to decline in ROE and our plans to improve returns and move back towards the guided 16-18% range over the medium-long term?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

I think clearly the Motor OD loss ratios is one aspect which has been going north for the industry. Of course, the numbers of some of the listed entities and others are already available in public domain. One can notice that over a period to period, 9 months to 9 months, or even if one were to compare with the corresponding quarter, we can see that numbers have gone up by 6-7% in the Motor OD loss ratios for almost all players. For us, it's been a tad higher. When it is 6-7%, for others, we have had a 8-9% increase in ours. So that is something which we are working at restoring back efficiencies across the operating paradigm. This is the overhang in which the industry is operating at this point in time.

While that is on the OD loss side with respect to the motor third party, our provisioning, as I had mentioned even in the initial remarks, is clearly about even 14% higher than what competition has been providing. And that differential is what is reflected in the overall combined ratio as well as ultimately even the return on equity. So this is broadly the situation. And of course, in motor third party, these are provisions at this point in time. And these are not actual cash outflows or an actual incurred loss, but what we have been providing based on the actuarial estimates and the view of our appointed actuary on this subject.

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Sir, our plans to improve ROEs, if you could elaborate on the efforts we are taking?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

See, this has also been a year where we have been converging to the expense of management glide path. You would notice that even from the initial remarks as well as the data that is put out in page 46, you will find that the EOM is now at about 30.6, even at a very extended method of reckoning and on a full premium basis, which is how we used to measure previously. It has come down to about 29.3. So now, therefore, with the passing of this year, we should be able to get back to our normal growth path. Plus, this year, we were also impacted by the loss of crop business, which was operating at a combined ratio of about 95. So the loss of that business, which is, as I mentioned, about INR 470 crore up to the 9 months, is also impacted.

But now, next year, we will have a new season tender, which will be across the country. And for a three-year tender, the company will be participating and hopes to be back in the crop business in its framework next year, which should bring back the profitability related thereto and bring the Combined Ratio under control with obvious improvements in the ROE as well.

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Thank you. One more question. This is a data-related question. If I look at the profit before tax numbers for Chola MS, it is for Q3 FY26, it's around INR 79 crore if I refer to the report of Chola MS. But the.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Sorry, we missed you. We are missing you.

Operator

Hello, Ms. Ratna?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Yeah. We are missing you. Yeah.

Operator

If there is no response from the participant, we'll move to the next. The next question is from the line of Sanket Godha from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Yeah. Thank you for the opportunity. Sir, honestly, it's the same question probably on the combined ratio. If I look at your numbers 9 months to 9 months, even if I assume that your motor TP you have been conservative, there is a possibility of reversal going ahead. Then the two segments which gave the most pain is OD and health and PA on delta change compared to last year to current year. So motor OD, you already told in the call that you took a corrective action with respect to not chasing two-wheelers. Despite not chasing two-wheelers or taking corrective actions, still our OD loss ratios are higher. So is it fair to say that if the competitive intensity remains the way it is, then are we seeing any respite to happen? Because one leg of corrective action you have already taken.

That's the way I wanted to understand whether there is any room left over further to take any corrective actions. And honestly, maybe I asked this question last time also. On health, maybe that loss ratio being 14% is higher compared to the last year. Any way to improve it? Maybe in EOM compliance, we probably do a little more group health. We probably ended up with more combined rather than improving the combined. Any thoughts you have how to change it or? I mean, honestly, if these three products are fixed, I think combined might come back. So I just wanted to understand this part a little better.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Yeah. So I think I would draw your attention more to page 55 first and then come back to page 53. So page 55, no, the waterfall chart, please. 51. Sorry, sorry. Yeah, 51. See, this waterfall chart highlights as to how the profits have moved from last year to current year. Obviously, the green ones are self-explanatory. So what we have achieved in terms of EOM reduction or what has come by way of investment income, there was not there. The effect of the TP-linked provisioning, Pisavi, last year is about INR 150 crore. And that essentially is the difference between the ultimate numbers of this year and last year. So if we are at 346 + 150 is 496 crore, so we should have kept it there.

If you were to look at increase in LR, which is the non-motor TP LR, which is largely impacted by the motor OD component there, which is where we do expect improvements to come in because of the corrective steps taken. The decrease in RA commission for the full year is at 60 because the effect of 1:1 means that we are not ceding future premiums, and therefore, the commission will come, but it will come in the subsequent years and not get upfronted in the current period's income. That is where the position is. The impact of RA invert arrangements, which has incidentally brought our EOM structure down, but it has had its effect on cost, which is what is reflecting.

So I also mentioned about the loss of crop business, which was running at a 95 COR, which the impact of that is also included in that INR 76 crore of increase in LR non-motor TP. So apparently, it's a combination of two, three things. But the single large effect is what we have been providing is the increase in TP-linked provisioning, which is INR 150 crore for the 9 months. And as we see the improvements actually pan out, on the operational side, the company has been as efficient as ever in terms of its compromise settlement proportion and the actual severity jumps that we have seen in the 9 months as compared to earlier periods. So at an appropriate time in future, we should be able to make a calculated call on what is actually required, and they can then flow back into the P&L in due course.

Now, I will go back to the OD loss ratio slide, which is page 53. Now, you will notice that this is the effect that is causing on the motor TP from 71.3 of last year to 78.9. This is our loss ratio for motor TP. And if you were to compare with the published numbers of motor TP of competition, even making allowances for geography mix that we may have and others may have, we certainly see that what we are carrying is a conservative stance that we have taken at this point in time. We will wait to see as to how this actually pans out. And when it comes to the motor OD, I certainly see a reduction of at least 3-5% over the next two quarters.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood. But sir, within the motor part, given you scaled down the two-wheeler business, the pain is more in CV segment or car segment, which is leading to these little elevated numbers? Hypothetically, I don't.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Two-wheeler, actually, to clarify, Sanket, the two-wheeler perspective is more from a TP perspective rather than an OD perspective. Because the OD is invariably only 1 + 5. It is only 1 year's OD. And technically, the OD loss ratios in two-wheeler is much, much lower. But the call is that if you are writing for 4, 5 years for the future now and at the price that you are collecting today, the accident may happen next year, and in each of those 4 years, it can happen. And based on the accident year, there will be year-on-year increase in severity. Plus, the view that comes out in the minimum wages, already the central government is talking of a revision in central minimum wages to 25,000. Then the compensation levels will certainly go up.

So unless there is a fundamental shift in the Motor TP pricing that one makes for two-wheelers, our call is that it may languish and it may plague the future if you were to ride that business now. We could have run it. We would have had a good accretion in the investment corpus. We would have had an investment income. But the liability that you will have to provide in the respective four years of the future would certainly have gone up. And that is the call that we have taken with respect to pruning or slowing down on the two-wheeler book now. It is not so much on the OD side, but with the view to protecting the TP of the future is where we have taken this call.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood. But sir, in OD, then the pain is more predominantly sitting into cars or private vehicles?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

The pressure is more in cars. The pressure actually is more in cars. That is where, in fact, as we even talk to competitors and we ourselves are fairly large in the space, and even when we talk to peers and players bigger than us, and that's where the pain is seen. These are reflected even in the published numbers of competition, as you see.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Yes. Yes. Sir, but sir, given you said OD will improve back in a couple of quarters' time, then if the competitive intensity is largely there, then any measures like geographic or vehicle models, I don't know. They're just asking you which can lead to that improvement in 3-4 percentage points, what you just told on OD side?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

It is actually, yeah, some calls with respect to the particular make models that we are playing and to an extent in geography. So that is where the corrections are happening. And we are seeing those changes in the sourcing. It is not reflected for you in the LRs now, but we have the confidence that it will show up in the OD LRs because the sourcing mix and pattern is changing.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood, sir. Maybe on the health and PA part, again, that was also a pain point in my view, given other segments actually did not be that much pain related.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

So I did show you in page 51 on account of the impact by way of some RA arrangements, which includes in health. And that is what is impacting this LR, which is what even in this page 53, we have indicated that includes effect of reinsurance invert transactions.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood, sir. And then, sir, given now we are largely year-on-year compliant even on 1:1 basis, is it fair to say that you will probably revisit your decision to do a little more long-term health or PA in general, which probably, I think, in the current year slowed down a bit from a year-on-year perspective?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Yes, we should be looking at such opportunities again now that we are closer to the regulatory requirement of the EOM levels. We should be looking at.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood, sir. And given our current experience in RI invert has been not as great, given we reported a loss there or it was a drag on the profitability, will we continue to do that business, say, next year, or we will revisit in the strategy which we adopted in the current year to do RI invert business?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

So we will be more careful on the choices of business lines where we do it when that change will happen. So that change will happen. And then fundamentally, see, as I said, we've lost overall about INR 590 crore of crop business this year. INR 467 crore is already digested in the nine months, and INR 124 crore, we will take that reduction in Q4. So there has to be some rearguard action which we have to take. And hopefully, when the new tender cycle opens, we can probably get more crop business under their skin, which can help bring back a whole lot of reasonable loss to the entire number. So it's actually a heady mix of three, four different factors all operating together. One is the crop business loss, yeah.

Second is the stance that the provisioning that we have done for Motor Third Party, which is significantly higher than what many others have opted to do. Three is the Motor OD effect which has happened in the industry. So I think these three have combined together to leave us with this impact.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

So sir, then suppose next year you win crop and you end up with that same 95 combined in crop incrementally, and your motor OD, I mean to say, improves by 4-5 percentage next year compared to what you are reporting today. Then is it fair to say that even if you continue to provide the TP at 78-79 kind of a number, still a 4-5% delta improvement in the loss ratio compared to 81, what you are reporting, can happen next year, sir?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

No, see, the proportion you will have. See, the OD proportion to the total. For us, because of motor heavy focus, the TP component weight will be there. But you can expect that a good portion to come back into the overall loss ratio. Certainly, I think no reason why from an 81.1 it can't go back to, say, a 77, 77.5 at least. That is very much certainly possible.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood, sir. And sir, on considering, just a minute, Sanket, so without even considering the possible effect of the surplus provisioning that we may be making at this point in time, when we have a good measure of that, I'm sure it will again come back into the payment. Yeah, understood, sir. Understood. And sir, maybe it's a million-dollar question. On likelihood of TP price, I'm not sure whether you'll be in a position to answer it or you intend to answer it.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

We have been guessing and then talking of this. The industry itself has been talking of this for now almost 3-4 years. But the only, I don't know, the positive element that we see is that in the proposed Motor vehicle amendment bill, the government is thinking of giving the power back to the regulator for making the pricing correction. So it is there in the draft amendment bill. Hopefully, if that comes through, then probably the regulator may take a sympathetic look on this.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood. Sir, again, maybe because TP has been a pain, if tomorrow, hypothetically, there is no price hike, given we are seeing too many complaints regarding the expenses what insurance companies do to procure the business, and regulator probably ask you to cut the commissions, i.e., the better save there rather than asking for a price hike, then is it fair to say that your TP loss issues will remain at the current levels or it can further increase?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

See, at least because we have taken this provisioning, which is higher now, so we are probably, I would tend to think that we will be in a better position. So because we would have then advanced that absorption, so we would probably be in a better position there. That's how I would tend to look at it.

Sanket Godha
Director and Research Analyst, Avendus Spark

Understood, sir. Understood. Then I think most of my questions are answered. Thanks for your answers. Yeah.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Thank you.

Moderator

Thank you. A reminder to all the participants, you may press star and one to ask question. The next question is from the line of Ratna from SCIL Ventures. Please go ahead. Yes, Miss Ratna, go ahead with the question, please. Hello, Miss Ratna?

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Hello.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

She was the one who had earlier asked, yes.

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Hello. Am I audible?

Moderator

Yes, yes.

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Yes. Just a data-related question. Why is there a difference in profit before tax for Chola MS General Insurance? See, if the PBT reported in Chola MS report is for Q3 FY26, it is around INR 79 crore. And the PBT reported for the insurance business in our parent company, Chola Holdings, is INR 123 crore. So I just wanted to understand the reason between the difference between these two numbers. If you could please help me understand.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Yeah, yeah. Santosh, 10 minutes.

Santosh Pandey
CFO, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Hi. So for insurance companies, the standalone books are prepared based on the IGAAP norms. We are, I mean, insurance companies are not under the IFRS. However, the holding company is on the IFRS, so their profit is computed as per the IFRS, I mean, in their accounting standard. That's the reason you are seeing a difference in terms of the profitability shown in Chola's statutory book versus the holding company financials. So both follow the two different accounting regimes. In theirs, most of the mark-to-market of investment value, everything goes through the P&L, especially relating to the equity. That's the reason there's the higher profit. Also, the acquisition costs differed because of DAC and DOF. So there's a different accounting regime for Ind AS versus IGAAP. That's the reason profit is different.

Rajshekar Iyer
Analyst, SCIL Ventures

Okay. Understood.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Manish Valia from Saswat Vitti LLP. Please go ahead.

Manish Valia
Investment Professional / Partner, Saswat Vitti LLP

Hi there. Good afternoon there. I just wanted to check in case there is a price hike in the third party. And since you have done more provisioning right now, so is it fair a lot of this provisioning will come back? It will be reversed? This is the first question. The second question is on the equity proportion of the investment book. Probably, we are single-digit. So is there a chance in the medium term, can we increase it to, let's say, 15% or something like that?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Yeah. So the first question first, yes, the TP provisioning can go down in the future based on the way our portfolio actually behaves. So while today, it is more precautionary provisioning. And of course, if the price goes up, certainly, I think it will come back. So that's the first part. Second, today, we are equity at about 7%, yeah, 6.7%, and yeah, of the portfolio. Our first stop would be to take it up to 10% of the portfolio. And then we'll have to see as to where it can go from there. But you will notice that in fact, less than two years, it's doubled from 3.5 to close to about 7%, which is where we have done.

Manish Valia
Investment Professional / Partner, Saswat Vitti LLP

Okay. And the third one is probably just trying to think that insurance companies are trying to list now, I mean. So obviously, we are not that profitable right now, but let's say in two, three years, probably become more profitable. So then is there a chance that we want to list this company, General Insurance MS?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Sorry. This, I think, we have been taking this call, and our view is that I think the board of CFSL will take an appropriate call closer to the time. We have not considered anything at this point in time.

Manish Valia
Investment Professional / Partner, Saswat Vitti LLP

Okay. Yeah. Understood. Yeah. Thanks for answering my questions.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Ravi Purohit from Securities Investment Management. Please go ahead.

Ravi Purohit
Principal Officer and Chief Investment Officer, Securities Investment Management

Yeah. Hi. Most of my questions have been answered. Just one bookkeeping question to understand the numbers better, right? One of the previous participants had asked about this reported numbers, difference between what Chola MS reports and what we report under the holding company, right? So when we report in the presentation, the ROEs of our business, which is a more representative number that we should be or you also are kind of when you kind of evaluate business performance on a day-to-day basis, which numbers does the team there follow? Because a lot of general insurance companies have started reporting two sets of numbers, IFRS, non-IFRS. So they want everyone to get anchored to IFRS numbers because of allowance of costs spread out over a long period of time, etc., etc.

If you could kind of help us and guide us to saying which numbers should we focus on and what is really the true ROE of our business and what's our long-term view on that?

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

See, the governing framework for insurance company today is only IGAAP. IFRS, while there is the transition that is going to happen, it is not yet mandated. We are only doing an asset for an IFRS translation. Where will the big changes in IFRS come through? Broadly, in three areas when it comes to discounting of liabilities. Given our motor TP provisioning that we are doing, these are all at the full ULRs. The positive impact that can come for us from a discounting of such liability, which is time-indexed, can be quite large for our Chola MS part. Second is DAC. We are absorbing all costs upfront today, including those that we pay for long-term policies where the business risk is not even commenced. When that, again, is going to be a positive as in when it comes through.

To an extent that, yes, the RA commissions could also get deferred. But then there also, we have adopted only a conservative stance with the 1:1, so you're not even seeding anything that is pertaining to the future, even though costs have been incurred upfront. So these are two large positives. Third is on the investment side where we are not recognizing any mark-to-market benefit and seeing volatility in it. So whichever way you see the numbers, what the company is reporting under IGAAP is conservative. Utmost conservative is what we would see. But then we would like the regulations to actually come through before we start talking about the IFRS numbers, which has been our stance. Of course, for the purpose of holding company consolidation, summary workings have been done, which Santosh can explain to you.

Santosh Pandey
CFO, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

See, so just adding to it, currently, also, a few players who are doing, I mean, a few reportings on the like in Ind AS, they are not doing the full proof. They are just doing, I mean, basically, the investment mark-to-market and DAC/DOF from 1:1 perspective so that acquisition cost is also deferred and the premium also deferred. So they wanted to present like that. If somebody wants to really, I mean, make a full IFRS-compliant numbers want to present, then also need to consider that as a liability discounting and everything. So coming back to our numbers, see, Chola MS General published all its numbers as per the IGAAP, which is like an accounting standard prescribed by the ICAI for the general insurance company. Ind AS adoption has not yet been done for the insurance company in India.

However, holding company is already with the Ind AS, and all the numbers reported for the holding company are as per Ind AS. So we have computed for the Chola MS as per the IGAAP, and for the holding company, we have computed as per the Ind AS accounting standards. That's the reason you are seeing the number difference. Answering to your question, which number is better? At this point of time, we feel that since all the companies are reporting their numbers as per IGAAP, so we feel that will be the right number because that's as per the regulatory requirement and the statutory book. So that number should be considered.

Ravi Purohit
Principal Officer and Chief Investment Officer, Securities Investment Management

Yeah. So thanks a lot for the clarification. What I really wanted to know is how do you assess internally, right, in the sense whether let's say, I think we have long back repeatedly said that we would like to be around that 17-18% ROE mark or 16-18% ROE mark. So now when we see ROEs, we see two ROEs between the two companies, right? So one is, let's say, what the holding company reports based on those numbers, and one is what Chola MS reports, right? So which is a true economic ROE, so to speak, right, whether regulation allows you to report certain things or not. But from your point of view, if you have to analyze your business and you are saying that this is my economic ROE, which number would that be?

If you could kind of just throw some light on that, it would be great.

Santosh Pandey
CFO, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

So for us, if you ask economic purpose, we always consider the regulatory number to be a final number because there's no number till the final regulation on the liability side comes by the IRD guidelines. Basically, the guidelines come. Till that time, we cannot consider that as a final number, yes. But for the holding company consideration, you have to consider the Ind AS number because they are under the different accounting regime.

Ravi Purohit
Principal Officer and Chief Investment Officer, Securities Investment Management

Okay. So let me ask this differently. When we have mentioned in the previous calls that we would like to be in the 16-18% ROE, are we talking about 16-18% ROE as per IRDA calculated numbers?

Santosh Pandey
CFO, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Exactly. Yes, which is where we were. Even last year, where we were at 18.3, it was only under the same framework. Even now, as at nine months, we were at 8.2 at this point in time, not annualized.

Ravi Purohit
Principal Officer and Chief Investment Officer, Securities Investment Management

Okay. So is it fair to assume that once the transition happens, the true economic ROE of the business is probably closer to 19-20% if those positives that you alluded to earlier get added back to the profit numbers?

Santosh Pandey
CFO, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Definitely, it should be higher only. It can be only higher.

Ravi Purohit
Principal Officer and Chief Investment Officer, Securities Investment Management

Okay. Okay. Okay. Great, sir. Thanks a lot, and all the best.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. A reminder to all the participants who will press star and one to ask question. Participants will press star and one to ask question. Is there no further questions? I will hand the conference over to the management for the closing comments.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Thanks once again to each one of you who have participated in the earnings conference call. Certainly, this has been a difficult year so far for the company, but the management is fairly confident that changes will happen, which will put numbers much better in the ensuing quarters. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. On behalf of DAM Capital Advisors Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.

V. Suryanarayanan
Managing Director, Cholamandalam MS General Insurance

Thank you.

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