Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Go Digit General Insurance Company Limited Q4 FY 2026 earnings conference call hosted by ICICI Securities. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during your conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touchtone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Rushad Kapadia from ICICI Securities. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you. Good day, ladies and gentlemen. On behalf of ICICI Securities, I would like to warmly welcome you to the Go Digit General Insurance Limited Q4 and FY 2026 results conference call. We have with us Mr. Kamesh Goyal, Founder and Chairman of the company, along with his team. Without further ado, I would now like to hand over the floor to Mr. Goyal. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thanks, Rushad, and good evening, everyone, and thanks for joining the call. I have with me Jasleen, our CEO, Ravi, our CFO, Piyush, our head of investor relations, and Divya and Sanskar, who are part of our investor relations and finance controlling team. Moving to slide first. This is a slide you all are familiar with. The gross written premium was close to INR 11,300 crore. Market share in both overall and motor has increased slightly over the last year. Partner network continues to be to grow. Our assets under management now are close to about INR 23,000 crore, and our customer satisfaction score continues to be very strong. If we go to the second slide, and I think I'll spend a bit of our time here.
As all of you know that IRDAI came out with guidelines that Indian Accounting Standards, which are essentially based on IFRS standards, would be applicable from April 1, 2026. What we have done this year is that we have actually got our results of 2025-2026 prepared and audited as per the new Accounting Standards. The idea is that as we go forward, the comparisons of this year versus last year becomes better. Till now, as you know, we were declaring our IFRS results, but now this has been aligned completely with Indian Accounting Standards, and these results have also been audited. You are here seeing slightly more details in terms of what the results are, and I will quickly take you through. There are obviously no difference in the premium. Gross Direct Premium, we saw good growth.
Gross written premium, the growth has been slightly less, and I'll cover that later. When we look at the loss ratio, there is actually no difference in loss ratio between Indian accounting standards and IGAAP. I think last time somebody had asked a question, if I remember correctly. For some companies, they seem to be having a difference in the loss ratio also. Our understanding is loss ratio should not be different. When we look at Indian accounting standards basis, our profit for the whole year, and in profit, what we are showing here is, which we had explained last year, Indian accounting profit plus DAC. DAC is something which we know is a profit which has been expensed out already, and this will flow into the profit.
We have not included in this profit the benefit of either a discounting of reserves or change in mark to market. We have prepared our results based on that also later, and we'll take you through. Here we are focusing on what we have always said is the KPI we look at, which is IFRS and in profitability we are looking at Indian GAAP plus DAC. Just to repeat, in case of Indian accounting standards now, like, you cannot upfront book a reinsurance commission for future premium. In case of reinsurance commission also otherwise, you have to defer it over a period of time. Even if you are reinsuring more, the benefit in IFRS will flow in along with the premium you want.
This plays both way, that is why we have always said that that is how we look at results internally. When we see it on this basis, our profit for the quarter 2026 is INR 239 crore profit before tax, which last year was about INR 142 crore. Profit after tax in Indian GAAP after 25% full taxation is INR 179 crore compared to INR 106 crore. When we look at our ROE on this basis, which is fully on post-tax basis, for the quarter ROE is 4%, while on an annual basis it is about 17.7%. Just to repeat, 17.7% ROE, this is on the Indian net worth, which is roughly at the end of the year, about INR 4,600 crore.
If you take an average, this would probably be around INR 4,300 crores. You can actually see our IFRS, or Indian accounting standards, our net worth is actually INR 7,600 crores. When you come below in IGAAP, you can actually see our net worth in Indian accounting standard is INR 3,000 crores more than what it is in the Indian IGAAP basis. Since the solvency is still related to IGAAP basis, we are calculating ROE on that basis. This year or next year, maybe not this year, next year when the risk-based capital norms come, then the chances are that the solvency could go up based on the Indian accounting standards.
We will see at that time, assuming the net worth is treated as IGAAP only, then our solvency margin continues to be strong and we'll look at ROE on that basis. If we actually get some benefit out of Indian accounting standards net worth, then obviously we'll have some excess capital on that basis. I just wanted to put this perspective. If you look at our combined ratio, for the whole year it was 105.7, which is an improvement of 1.2% over previous year. On the quarter, again, it is very similar, 105.8 compared to 106.8%, which is again an improvement of 1%.
The combined ratio you are seeing below this, which is 104, 103, 101 and 99.1, this is after discounting of reserves. Again, just to repeat, we don't look at a combined ratio after discounting of reserves. We look at it IGAAP, everything on NEP basis, plus, DAC. I think this is something which is really important, and I think we are happy that regulator has moved in this direction. I think for all of you analysts and fund managers, making comparisons would also become a lot more easier. Earlier because of this reinsurance influence, up-fronting of commission, et cetera, it was very difficult to figure out performance of one company against the other.
I think our finance team, which has always been publishing our IFRS results, they have taken the lead to get the last year results also audited under the new accounting standards. We already said last year that we this year the whole account, the accumulated losses would go away. This year our tax rate was 13.8%. Next year, the tax rate would move to 25.2% basis. Our long-term premium, as of 31st March 2026, it stands at overall total of about INR 3,200 crore, out of which motor would be roughly about 80%-83%, and rest will be non-motor.
About 1/nth circular which was published in 2024, we have not booked INR 300 crores of premium, INR 303 crores of the premium. As previous quarters, we have already provided for INR 109 crores of acquisition costs already on this unearned premium. This obviously impacts only the Indian accounting standards. It would not have any impact on the in new Indian accounting standards. AUM have grown to about roughly INR 23,000 crores. This was about INR 19,700 crores previous year. Over a period of one year, we have added more than INR 3,200 crores of AUM, which is a growth of about 16.3%. Our solvency is now improved to 2.42. This year, quarter-on-quarter, this has been increasing.
This again is calculated on the Indian GAAP net worth. I think when we cover the piece of investment, I think this as I always say, that for us to move towards a decent allocation, asset allocation, having a solvency is very important. I think we have a very, very strong solvency. As of 31st March 2026, we have accumulated debt, which we had also declared in our previous call, last quarter call. Pre-tax of roughly about INR 2,472 crore. Roughly 65% of this will actually get will unwind in 2026, 2027. Just giving you these numbers so you have even more visibility as to how the Indian accounting standards will look at.
IGAAP, again, I've covered the piece of on the net worth. As I said, as risk-based capital norms come this year, either way, I think we are placed in a very strong solvency position. I think for us the issue is likely to be, we anyway don't need any capital, and even under the new scenario we would not expect any new capital. How much benefit one can get due to IFRS net worth is something which we will see. In fourth quarter, our two-wheeler business had a big growth against INR 365 crore. We ended up doing INR 556 crore. This obviously had a big impact on our AUM of roughly about 3.5%. This is the next slide.
This is where you can see the full reconciliation. Here you can also see what is the fair value change, what is the discounting impact. And we have also declared last year what was the discounting rate and this year what is the discounting rate. There is a slight change in discount rate. There is a well-defined methodology as to how the discounting of reserves would work. When we come to the unrealized gains or losses, that is something which I'll cover in a bit more detail as we come to the investment slide, because I think it is important for us to explain that in a bit more detail on that piece. Moving on, now we are looking at the GDPI growth.
Our GDPI growth continues to be strong at 16.2% for the whole quarter, and this is also for quarter four about 21.3%. Growth, if you actually look at, other than fire in quarter four, where the growth rate was lesser compared to the industry, if you look at for the whole year against industry's growth of 13%, we have actually grown at 34%. Overall growth rate has been fairly been strong. On the other hand, you would recall that our health travel and PA segment where we were actually degrowing or growing in a very lesser way in the previous quarter, especially in the first half. That seems to have changed where we are actually growing strongly in this segment.
Other growth areas are more or less in line with the yearly growth when we look at motor. When we move to the GWP growth, GWP growth in quarter four is overall about 9.8%, while for us the growth rate is quite similar to the industry's growth rate on GDPI. As I had explained in quarter three, we had not done some reinsurance premium in health. The loss was about INR 200 crores at that time. This time also the loss in case of health has been about INR 252 crores. If we remove that itself has had an impact of about 4%-5% on the quarter premium. Actually, more than that, the quarter, the impact would be even more.
If we exclude the health, the overall growth rate on GWP would still be about 18.8%. We did not renew this because we felt that this business would not give us anything in bottom line. Secondly, in case of group health, not only bottom line, it also doesn't help you on the AUM side because the claims start flowing in very, very closely. Moving on, in terms of two-wheeler I have already covered, so some of the other areas we'll be happy to cover during the Q&A. Moving to the next slide. Here we are now looking at the combined ratio. You can actually see that the combined ratio again we have shown on Indian accounting basis.
On the last call, I think we had said that we'll be publishing combined ratio on IFRS basis on a regular basis. Obviously, at that time we did not know about the IRDAI Circular, but this we had already suggested. When we look at profit before tax, only with DAC we have also shown this number. Below on the right side you can also see profit under the Indian GAAP basis, which on a quarter basis as well as on the year basis has grown by Indian GAAP profit by about 49% this year. I think coming in on the investment side, I think here is something I would want to maybe spend a bit more time.
I already spoke about, we have added INR 3,000 crores, INR 3,200 crores through the business in AUM, so fairly strong growth. Our leverage now has increased to 5%. Some of you would remember that after the IPO, when we had looked at leverage as on June 30, 2024, this number had gone down to about 4.7, 4.65. Now this has started again going up to five. Some of you may want to check. We had said that over the next two years we would expect it to be about five.
Again, a point I wanted to just reemphasize is that when we give up some business which is not profitable, that doesn't have any meaningful impact on the AUM, especially if the business is, you know, we start seeing the claims on a regular basis. When we look at our investment performance, our overall yield has been 1.8%. In debt, including capital gains, the yield has been also about 1.9%. When we look at investment yields, excluding capital gains this year, for the whole year in March is about 7.1%. This was about 7.2% in the previous years. Covering this a bit more, in terms of what really happened. Our unrealized loss on the entire investment was about INR 54 crores.
This is about 0.2% of our AUM. Against, I think if you look at companies, some of them have had more than that as a percentage of AUM. Our unrealized gains on equity portfolio is about INR 45 crores as of 31st March 2026. Other than equity, which is fixed income, is about INR 99 crores. When we look at this from a perspective of duration, which I think is really important. When we see it from a perspective of duration in fixed income, and I want to cover this point in a bit more detail because I had seen between, I think somebody saying because our fixed income portfolio is big, the chances of unrealized losses would be very high. As of March 2025, our duration of fixed income portfolio was 5.2.
This was reduced in December 2025 to 4.4. Through passive and some actions we took, we actually reduced the duration by 0.8. In March, we have actually slightly increased the duration to about 4.5. Our reinvestment yield during this period, obviously, when we were passively investing, was a bit lower in the first three quarters, and this picked up in the quarter from January to March. The way we see our fixed income portfolio is that if, and we obviously don't wish it, but if due to what is happening in the Middle East, in the war or the energy prices, et cetera, if the interest rates go up, we have enough leeway for us to increase the duration. If it doesn't go up, it stays in this area, then we'll try and maintain the duration around 4.5.
In fixed income we actually have a fairly, I would say decent situation. When we think in terms of equity, our asset allocation now has moved to roughly about 8.5% towards equity. Some of you would remember that we have always said that 10% is our aim as of now. When we look at our solvency of 242%, the equity asset allocation actually now can be a lot more because even with the 25% drop in the market value, our solvency will still continue to be comfortably be above 200%. Now, on the equity side, I already told you we had a very small loss as of 31st of March.
When we look at this on 22nd of April, we are already sitting at an investment gain of about INR 191 crores on the equity side. When we look at it on the fixed income, fixed income also as of 22nd March, it is about INR 111 crores. Our position, I think on the investment portfolio, we are positioned really, I would say nicely where if, God forbid, equity markets drop substantially, we have runway to now go even above 10. I would say 12.5% is quite comfortable for us. If it doesn't, then I said we already are at 8.5. On fixed income, interest rates stay where they are. We can maintain the duration of 4.5. If they increase, we have enough leg room to increase our duration.
I think this is one piece I wanted to cover in a slightly more detail on investments, because all of you would remember that if you look at our investment yield, compared to major companies, last year average, the difference in yield would easily be from 100 basis points - 150 basis points. If we can reduce that gap by 50 basis points, with our sort of a AUM and leverage, this actually has a very big impact on the profitability. I think that is the point I just wanted to emphasize. Moving to the next slide in terms of loss ratios. Loss ratios, I would say broadly compared to previous quarter, have seen an improvement of 1.3%.
Here the overall period when we look at health and travel has seen a bit of a reduction. Fire we have seen the net loss ratio to go up. Because some two major claims came. When we look at fire on a gross basis, then the loss ratio in 2025, 2026 was 51%, and in 2024, 2025 it was 48%. On a gross basis, loss ratio has not increased. The profitability of commercial portfolio is driven more around on a net basis. Loss ratio, even with the retention of say 20%, because we also have to pay a substantial premium for the catastrophe reinsurance and Risk XoL cover, the so-called non-proportional covers. Net loss ratio will always be substantially more, 20%-25% more than the gross.
The advantage is whatever premium we cede, you get a reinsurance commission on that. The results on fire segment will be very positive even for 2025, 2026 when you will see that. Otherwise, loss ratios more or less stable. Compared to previous year, they have improved slightly. On a year-over-year basis, loss ratios are stable at 72.8, 72.9. I think, moving to the next slide, which is on the triangle. I would say maybe before I come to the triangles, let me quickly cover our reinsurance, because there were some questions in the last quarter on how the reinsurance would happen. We have renewed our reinsurance program for 2026, 2027. Our treaties, the leader continues to be the same. Most of the followers continue to be the same.
As I had said earlier, our philosophy is not to trade reinsurance relationships for 1% or 2% commission. This year we have been able to overall increase our treaty capacity in fire and other lines of business and also improve the economics in the treaty. Marine and liability, there is no real change. What we have introduced this year. Property and engineering capacity is increased and commission terms also improved. Marine and liability, no real change either in capacity or in this. This year we also have a treaty called as miscellaneous, in which we actually put in some different kind of risks. This year, I think our focus is to introduce some new lines of business in commercial. These are more niche areas.
I won't be able to speak in too much detail about them now. Maybe, after end of a year, we can speak about them. We have actually added some new lines of business where we see opportunity in these niche areas. Since our overall portfolio in commercial vehicle, as you already saw, has increased a lot this year, our accumulations were increasing. In India, if we typically look at Gujarat, Maharashtra and National Capital Region, it actually gets most of the accumulation. For us to better manage our rates on CAT and Risk XoL , we have also come out with a small treaty on the whole account, where we will be ceding 11% of the non-motor, non-health premium so that our overall accumulation doesn't go up dramatically.
On the Risk XoL side, we are moving our overall limit from INR 1,600 crore to INR 2,000 crore for earthquakes. Our individual, the deductible, our own retention would actually now increase from INR 36 crore to INR 45 crore in case of net CAT, while in case of Risk XoL , it remains the same at INR 50 crore. I think reinsurance overall in our view has been good. Relationships continue to be very stable. We obviously have decent terms and conditions, and we have now an opportunity to develop some new lines of business which we want to do. Now, moving to the next reserving triangle. If you look at reserving continues overall to be strong. If we go now to TP, where one is scheme.
Here you can see, and we have explained this earlier, the first year was only about four months. Our reserves was about INR 5 crores, and we got a single claim of INR 7.5 crores that year, which is still not settled.
NEP seven.
NEP was only INR 7.5 crores in that year. We got one large claim, two large losses. We have a small surplus of negative of INR 60 lakhs, but the claims have not been settled. After that, you can see our reserves continue to be very, very strong. When we look at year end of 2025, there has obviously not been any revision done yet. This is something for one year we tend not review the results and actually wait for the claims to come. Overall, our reserves continue to be very strong. I think moving further, I think IFRS results I have covered. I think I would say on the EOM, we had already said that because of two-wheeler, EOM went up.
I had said this in the last quarter, and I would repeat. If you put our EOM in with India's largest private company's line of business mix, our overall EOM will be very, very close. A difference of less than 1% between us and them, and we would actually be compliant on that basis. Issue in EOM for us always has been line of business mix and not really the overall expenses. As all of you know, on management expenses, we have been by far the most efficient company. With this, I'll stop so that you have enough opportunities to ask clarifications. Thanks for the patient listening.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question- answer session. Anyone who wish to ask a question may press star one on the touch-tone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. Sir, we have first question from the line of from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity. My first question is largely on the commercial lines because that segment grew the fastest, or rather fire segment which has grown the fastest in the current year, and our loss ratios are deteriorated. You highlighted, Kamesh, that on gross basis it is not that deterioration, but on net basis there is a deterioration. Just wanted to understand, given you have increased your risk cover from INR 1,600 crores to INR 2,000 crores, the premium cost naturally will be still higher in the current year.
Is it fair to say that the profitability of the fire segment might not be as great as it was in 2024, 2025 compared to, given it is deteriorating in 2025, 2026 for the reasons what you said. Probably we are entering into soft market also in the fire segment. Wanted to understand how you will see this business to play out. That's first question. The second question is your outlook on the crop in the current year. Maybe you did that business largely through reinsurance acceptance and it's a new pending cycle. In the current year, how do you approach that business? Do we see you doing more geographies and maybe contributing more directly?
Lastly, one more technical question. On this reverse merger, where we are standing and maybe if whenever the reverse merger goes through, do you think Fairfax will continue to hold the stake what it is holding or they have intention to pare the stake given it will become more liquid for them to sell? Yeah. Those are my three questions.
Thanks, Sanketh. On fire, I think I have already said that we have increased the capacity. On the CAT limit, we have increased the CAT limit, but we have moved from INR 36 crore to INR 40 crore in terms of retention. Overall premium, I don't know offhand, but I don't think that premium has actually gone up on the CAT in absolute amount. Secondly, I also said that our commission terms have become better in fire and engineering. You already saw in Q4 that we can be fairly aggressive if we don't like any business. If the business is not good, our focus would not be on the top line. Our focus will be how do we protect the bottom line.
I think overall on that basis, I would say based on where we are, I would not assume that profitability will go down. We have to also keep in mind that a lot of this business would also get earned this year, and profit commission also plays a role in this. I would say based on where we are, we are fairly comfortable in terms of where the fire business will go. The softer terms we are not really seeing as much in engineering. If you see our growth in engineering also has been even higher compared to the fire business. That is one area I would say. Thirdly, as I said, on specialty lines in commercial business is a focus area.
That is also something which is in our view should provide a cushion both for the top line and the bottom line. On crop, I think, this year we want to also participate on the tenders on the direct side. As of now, the government has not really come out with the schemes, whether it will be a three-year scheme this year or one-year scheme and things like that. I think we'll wait for this, but the capability building for crop has been going on for some time. We would participate in crop on the direct side this year. Because on pricing, et cetera, we have had a decent exposure, but now doing it on the direct side is also something which is on our focus.
On amalgamation, there is no news as such in terms of what the next steps are or the timeframe. As for Fairfax selling or not, I think I have said this. One, I don't really know. I have not spoken to them on this. Secondly, I think they are at 58%. If they decide to go, I am saying below 51, they are below this, then for them to come up and gain a majority would trigger a massive open offer. Fairfax, when we started this game in 2017, Fairfax wanted majority at that time. That is why they got out of the minority shareholding of about 35% to actually start a new venture. As I said, personally, I've not spoken to them.
From a company's perspective, we would want them to stay there. I think, if you ask Fairfax, Prem Watsa would be the first one to say that business is really driven by the management team. I don't foresee them to sell this. I'm not privy to this, and I don't ask any of our investors when you intend to sell or when you intend to buy. I'm not selling. I am committed to building this business for the long term. To me, that is what matters in the end from my own mental perspective.
Understood. Kamesh, just one small thing on fire segment. When we were relatively small in market share, we were maybe much more profitable compared to what we are today. As we keep on gaining market share, is it fair to say that given we'll be less selective or we might not be having to cherry-pick the business, maybe relatively to past our profitability in the fire segment might be lower, but still very profitable, but might be lower compared to what we were achieving initially.
Sanketh, what I'll say that fire market share last year on GW basis is about 3.9%. It's actually more than our overall market share. Secondly, in fire business, the more number of risk, right, more diversified your book becomes. You should actually be getting benefit both on the reinsurance side in terms of net CAT exposure, and secondly, diversified book anyway gives you better results. Third is I think we have heard this story also on the motor side, where I somehow feel that whatever little I know of P&C insurance or insurances, it's an insurance of large numbers. More diversified your portfolio is, bigger your portfolio is, better diversity you will have. For us, like in the fourth quarter, we were hit by a claim of INR 55 crores on a gross basis.
Our fire premium last year, if I remember often, was close to about INR 1,000 crore-INR 1,100 crore. 5% were hit in just one claim of yearly premium. You can imagine things can only get better. We have been hit by a INR 250 crore claim, and our fire premium was about INR 650 crore also. Even then, our gross loss ratios did not exceed 74%-75%. With better diversity, if insurance logic holds, it should actually lead to better loss ratio.
Understood, Kamesh. It's very clear. Thanks for the answers.
Thanks too. Thanks, Sanketh.
Thank you very much. A reminder to all the participants that you may press star one one to ask a question. We have next question from the line of Supratim Datta from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Thanks a lot for the opportunity. I'll start off with, you know, the new ventures that, you know, you plan.
Can you speak a bit louder?
Yeah. Kamesh, is this better now?
Yeah, now better.
Yeah, yeah. What I was asking is on these new ventures on the commercial side that you're planning, I understand that you can't give us a lot of detail, but could you give us a sense about how big these markets could be for you and, you know, so that, you know, we get a sense of, you know, how that feeds into growth? And secondly, you know, based on the commentary coming from you that the treaty capacity is on fire and engineering has increased, you are, you know, planning new ventures on the specialty line side. Is it fair to again, you know, assume that growth for the next, you know, the medium term is going to be more driven by the commercial lines as compared to the retail lines? You know, is that the fair assumption?
Lastly, you know, what are you seeing with respect to competition now in the motor segment? Because most likely, you know, we haven't heard anything on the motor TP price hike this year even. You know, it becomes the fifth year that there is no price hike. How do you see then, you know, competition pan out? You know, those were my questions. Thank you.
Thanks, Supratim. On the new ventures, I would say that this actually we have started based on the feedback we were getting from some specialized brokers. There are about eight - 10 brokers in the market. When we were meeting them, in January, February, we got this feedback to say this is a capacity constraint sort of a market for these lines of business. If you can develop some capacity, it will be good. For us, when we do anything like this, we have to work both on creating technical competence and then also create a capacity. We have been able to do that.
How much et cetera we will do, Supratim, you know that we don't give any sort of a guidance because our experience is that whatever guidance you give, which is based on how the market dynamics would be, I think you are always wrong. We will focus, as I said, always on ROE, on profitability, and we will develop this business from a perspective that in the next two, three years we are able to substantially increase our capacity in these lines of business. The insurer should have that confidence that these guys know what they're doing. What we are making a start, I personally feel over a three to five -year period, this is a specialized line of business are capable of giving Digit about INR 1,000 crore premium in the next 3 - 5 years.
We have to develop this, keeping that in mind. You have seen us even in prop that once we know we are on the right path, we can build the business quickly. If not, then we'll have to take corrections. That is what I can share with you. I think as far as motor goes, only yesterday, I think, I was part of a call, and I think Jasleen Kohli can add if she wants to. I think, we are seeing in the month of April some correction which is happening in the market, both on the price as well as on the commission. I think as the loss ratios, et cetera, of companies will start coming in, we'll actually also see what the impact is.
Our overall sense is that market cannot afford the sort of prices which are there. From a Digit perspective, I would say, we would try and drive ourselves with the loss ratios in a manner that overall motor loss ratio doesn't go up this year compared to last year. How this will translate to growth, the good news is we have a very good renewal base. We have other channels which are doing. I think the present economic situation, I would not want to take a guess as to how the new vehicle sales will look like, which were very strong in H2 of last year. I think that is something we'll have to wait and see.
That's very clear. Thanks a lot. Kamesh, just one last follow-up. Could you give us a breakup of, you know, in the motor insurance, what is the contribution from new vehicles versus older vehicles?
In case of two-wheelers, I would say, first of all, let me give you the breakup between four-wheeler, two-wheeler and commercial vehicle, which we also did in the last call. On a two-year basis, now private car is 44% of our business and two-wheeler is 32. Commercial vehicles, unfortunately is down to 24. And as you know, we were known as a commercial vehicle company, and I feel sad when I see this, that in commercial vehicle it is now lower than two-wheelers. When we look at OD TP mix, our OD TP mix is 38 for OD, while industry is at 41 and TP is 62, industry is 59. I had said this in the last call also that our OD TP mix is moving in that direction.
What I understand is that our two-wheeler mix is substantially higher compared to others as a proportion of business, which obviously impacts the EOM, and that is more a line of business mix change than anything else. We look at two-wheeler business. I would say in case of two-wheeler business, new vehicles would be substantial. As you know, due to 1/n, the business we wrote three years or four years back also flows in. If you look at it only from 1 particular year's perspective, my guess is in 2025, 2026, two-wheeler new business would have contributed maybe about 40% of the total business. I'm again saying my guess. I don't have these numbers. In case of private car, this number again, out of 44%, it would not be more than 25%-30% of new car business.
Renewal for us is now emerging as a fairly decent base. In CV, the new vehicles would be less than 10% contribution in the premium. Our dependence on new vehicles, because of 1/n in case of two-wheeler is actually not that much, because whatever premium we have written the last four years will continue to flow this year.
Understood. That's right. That's right. Yeah. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you very much. We have next question from the line of Nidhesh Jain from Investec. Please go ahead.
Thanks for the opportunity. First question is on motor OD loss ratio. There has been an increase in that, on a year-over-year basis for full year. What is driving that? It is competitive intensity or mix change is also driving that?
Nidhesh, I don't know if my memory serves right whether somebody had asked me this question. Was it you also in the last quarter?
Yes. Yes.
No? Yeah.
Yes, it was I.
that's-
I have the same question. Yeah.
I'm not getting old.
Yeah.
Basically when we look at loss ratio, I had told last time that we consciously delayed taking some corrective action in motor-owned damage loss ratio. One, we wanted to experiment and see whether our premium retention remains high. I think that was one very big area. Second, I would say because new vehicle sales were fairly good in 2024, 2025, we also tried to see, can we focus more on the SAOD business, which comes with a higher loss ratio. In the last quarter, I had said that we have started taking corrective actions in motor-owned damage loss ratio, and from July quarter we should see some impact. If we look at only Q4, we have actually seen reduction in our Q4 loss ratio compared to Q3.
My sense is that we should really see impact of this loss ratio in a way stabilizing first in July to September and then actually reducing. Secondly, we have to keep this in mind that as our renewal base increases, what will happen is that loss ratios will increase while the commission will reduce. On our loss ratio plus commission basis, which is how we always look at any product or any line of business, we should be seeing some improvement anyway.
Sure. Can you share some data on the retention in motor segment? We have been focusing on retention for last, I think, one and a half year.
Yeah, yeah. Retention also last time I had mentioned clearly that our retention in motor has actually reduced this year. Overall retention in motor this year is 89.6% compared to 95.9%. Last quarter I had also mentioned, I don't know whether this was a claim from you or somebody else, that for some segments like scooters and school bus, we are trying to take some reinsurance to ensure that during floods, et cetera, one is not hit badly due to the accumulation. This we started doing after the Calcutta incident. I had also mentioned last time that it actually has no impact on the AUM because this reinsurance has been done on a funds withheld basis.
Investment income continues to come to us. We are paying a small cost for this reinsurance, that is more like a tail sort of a event for which we are protecting ourselves. It doesn't really have any impact on the AUM. Lastly, I would also say under the Indian accounting standards, the new accounting standards, the impact of reinsurance deal would also not flow in into the results because your reinsurance commission also gets deferred along with the unearned premium. This does not in any way change our Indian accounting standards. Slightly longish answer, Nidhesh, to your question on motor retention.
Yeah. On motor actually I wanted to get some data on the renewal rates, so customer retention and renewal rates on the motor side.
Retention rates would differ from channel to channel and product to product. Two-wheeler obviously has much lower renewal ratio because five-year third-party premium comes up front, a lot of owners don't really take Own Damage insurance. Second would be commercial vehicles. The highest is in private car, and within highest, agency normally has very good renewal ratio, agency and retail brokers, and also B2C for us. Last year we would have seen increase in renewal ratio in private car across all channels.
Sure. Last question is on EOM. Though you explained that EOM on a line of business basis is very well placed, but, probably regulator look at on a overall company basis. How are you planning to manage the regulatory requirement on EOM?
Here I think, as we have said, in our previous calls that regulator is also very conscious that EOM objective was to reduce the cost for the end customer. The idea was to reduce the acquisition cost. Even if you see the interview of, say, present DFS Secretary or of Finance Minister or if you read Economic Survey, everywhere I think the focus is on reducing the cost for customers. If you see what some of these very senior people have been saying, they have been saying that the overall cost of insurance is actually going up to the extent where people have even suggested. Say, the DFS Secretary, when I was listening to his interview, he suggested that regulations would come or should come to reduce this.
Finance minister herself has spoken about it. The way we see this is that government and Regulators' intention is to reduce the cost of insurance for the benefit of the customer, and the last year, two-year trend has not gone in that direction. Our expectation is that some sort of regulations will come in the next 2-3 months. Timeframe we obviously don't know. Till that time, we obviously do not want to write any loss-making business to match the EOM because the Regulator's objective was not to reduce the EOM that you actually subsidize more larger business like group health and crop and et cetera, and the cost of the retail customer keeps going up. Regulator's objective, we have always said is very good.
We would expect them that they'll take corrective action so that the objective of government coming directly from the finance minister herself and the regulators is actually achieved.
Sure. The issue of EOM is largely because of the acquisition cost. Do you see that acquisition cost in India is significantly higher than other countries on a like-to-like basis? If that is the case, then there is a room to improve that.
When I look at Europe, et cetera, it is substantially higher. When I was in Asia and I have not followed in recent years, what exactly the acquisition cost is now in recent years. When we look at, and forget about other countries. Just look at what the acquisition cost was just four years back in India and what is it now. We don't have to look at. Let's look at acquisition cost from 2001 till 2019, 2020. For 20 years, what was acquisition cost and what is acquisition cost now? I think, all of us have answers and all these numbers, Nidhesh, have been actually published in the media. I have not tracked them separately. All these numbers are published in the media.
People are also saying that the growth of the industry is actually not going up even during this period based on this basis. Penetration of insurance as a percent of GDP actually has fallen in the last five years compared to where it was. All these macro pictures and all we have to do is maybe read the economic, the financial stability report of RBI, which was published I think in February, March, and the economic survey, which came a day before budget, in 2026. You'll get the drift of this situation. This is the first time in at least my memory where economic survey, RBI financial stability report, finance minister, finance secretary, IRDA regulator. In the last three months, everyone has spoken this language.
My assumption is they are looking at the numbers a lot more seriously than we in the industry are seeing. I also know industry's reaction will be nothing is going to change, and I am sure a lot of analysts also feel that. For the sake of customers, I hope something changes. Again, my personal view, not view of Digit.
Sure, sure. Thank you, Kamesh. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
No questions in accounting standards, IFRS.
We have next question from.
investments. I think the topics are changing compared to pre-previous calls.
We have next question from the line of Prayesh Jain from Motilal Oswal Financial Services. Sir, please go ahead. Mr. Prayesh Jain, your line is invited. Please go ahead with your question.
Yeah. Hi, can you hear me?
Yes, we can, Prayesh. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Just a couple of questions. Firstly, from a strategy perspective, how do you see the product mix shaping up for us in FY 2027? Where are we concentrating on-- Like, two-wheeler was one growth area, focus area for us in FY 2026. How do you see, that, you know, mix across categories changing in FY 2027? Which are the areas that we'll be focusing on? Second question, again, from the motor side, what do you really think that will kind of, bring out a motor TP price hike? Because, you know, across some of the key players, I think motor TP loss ratios have improved in this year. What really can push the regulator to, you know, towards a motor TP price hike? Yeah, those were my questions. Thanks.
Prayesh, I think on the TP price hike, we are not privy to what the regulator is thinking. Secondly, I personally feel if the regulator is thinking for reducing the cost of insurance, then it might be better from their perspective to achieve that objective rather than increase the price. And for the industry also, they should be looking at it seriously to say, which I answered two earlier questions on it as to where we are. On the product mix side, I think we have always said that we actually don't know where things stand. If you go to even 1920, at that time, if I remember offhand, 70% of our business would come from motor, and out of 70%, 2/3 of that was actually coming from CV.
2019-2020, 40% of our business came from CV. Today, as you would have heard me, this number has unfortunately dropped to 13.5%. Somebody would have asked me, a lot of our analysts and fund managers, they'll say Digit is a PCV company. I used to say we see opportunities in CV today. We are doing well. Later on, industry became a lot more aggressive on CV despite no hike in TP premium, despite hike in TP claims, our CV business is reduced so substantially. We were told that fire business you can't do because this is driven by larger insurance companies, et cetera. You see the growth of fire for last year and last two years for Digit.
I think lastly, if I look at, we were also told that in OEM business, very difficult to go and make a mark because it's a small club of six insurers or eight insurers. What will Digit do? You actually see our private car growth in motor has been the highest. Now, I am saying all this is because nobody really knows what will happen in the market. From day one, our focus has been to keep building the distribution, not depend only a few distributors. Secondly, to be agile, so we can actually move where we see opportunity. Now, market changes, we change our view. We don't drive ourselves to a line of business mix because we don't think there is an ideal line of business mix. Similarly for the distribution channels.
Got that. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you very much. We have next question from the line of Dipanjan Ghosh from Citi. Please go ahead, sir.
Hi. Good evening. A few questions from my side. Firstly, if I look at your group health insurance business and also this business has seen some pressure on pricing over the past quite some quarters now. I mean, just wanted to get some sense of how you are seeing the employer-employee business kind of evolving. Second thing is, within the group health business, it would be great if you can split the business between non-employer employee and employer employee, especially, let's say, for the fiscal year 2026 and 2025. Or at least give some color on how the non-employer employee portion is growing. Those are two questions on the group health side. The third question, you know, we have had some discussions on the commission part during this call.
What I read, media articles is that a lot of new companies are interested in entering the non-life space, some backed by private equity, some backed by a strong parent. My understanding is that some of these companies will get a preference on EOM over the next five years when this comes operations. Given the environment, I mean, do you expect the B2C or the more retail businesses to kind of face higher competition, at least from a medium-term perspective?
Dipanjan, I think let me answer this question first. One is, I think there is a discussion already going on. I believe people are representing this to the IRDAI, and maybe regulator is also thinking, I don't have that information, that in EOM, commission and management expenses should be split. Because a new company, whether it is Digit, and we also have a new company, say, on the life side, management expenses are higher in the first few years, so they should get levy on the management expenses, but you don't need a levy on the commission. Under EOM framework, you actually end up getting levy, which is used more for the commission and less from a management expense perspective. My sense is that this would get fixed as and when the regulations come. That is, I think, one.
The second is the way we see competition is that when we started Digit, we started from scratch, from zero, and we were competing against really the big companies. All of you know that the chances of success for a new company, how much success, chances were given even to a company like Digit? Today, when new companies are coming, obviously you have to take competition very seriously. If you could compete when we were nothing against the big boys at that time, I'm sure we will be able to compete with the new companies also. Market, basically decides where the competition is, I think it's survival for the fittest. Our job is to stay fit. Am I losing sleep because of the new competition? Not really.
I would say the opportunities for us to improve are so much that, internally when we discuss and with, I would say on Sunday, Jasleen and I were having a longer conversation. She was saying that people are feeling too much pressure because there is so much one can improve. Just imagine that we feel there is so much more we can improve. I would say on improvement, the competition is within. New players are coming. We wish them a lot of luck. I also hear from some investors that some of them are inspired by Digit. I'm very happy to hear. I hope we inspire many more companies. As for the growth rate in health, this is a great question.
If you look at health, let me try and give numbers roughly. For 2025, 2026, if you look at 100 out of health business, including group, et cetera, our retail, as you know, is less than 6%, 7% out of 100% in health. The employer-employee business in this would roughly be about 73% or so. The non-employer employee business would probably be about 22%. Dipanjan, you know the loss ratios of each of this better than I do. Whatever you think is the best company, you put their loss ratios under these three or whatever your assumption is, you will reach a conclusion whether our loss ratio in health, even with this mix, is it better than the industry or worse than the industry.
If you feel that our loss ratio would be worse than anyone else in the market, we'll be more than happy to learn and put then more pressure on our management team, including Jasleen, to improve. Did I answer your question to your satisfaction?
No, no, absolutely, sir. Just maybe a small follow-up. I mean, you know, given the fact that this is my point, you know, that you're probably operating at underwriting profitability or rather marginal loss on a net earn premium to net earn premium on the group health or overall health business. Obviously, you'll be getting some float income also. Do you see a scope for kind of gaining momentum in this business, let's say the next year or the year after that? I mean, what's the medium-term strategy here?
Definitely, Dipanjan. Again, great question. If you actually think about the narrative, and I'm not saying it's right or wrong, but let's assume the narrative. Motor own damage pre premium rates under severe competition, no hike in TP premium rates, people becoming aggressive in group health and all this business to manage the EOM, fire premium under pressure. Tell me one line of business which is actually seeing strengthening of rates. In this situation, if we are able to manage loss ratios, and I am saying no one is more conscious than us to say areas where we need to improve. Even in health, we are a very small player where the overall market share may be of about 1.3%, 1.4%.
If you look at our loss ratios based on this mix, I don't think we are doing badly. The way we see is that, and I have always said this, if pricing becomes too tight, we don't have to go for that additional 5%, 6% growth, which will destroy profitability. If pricing is good, we'll go substantially more than the market, and we demonstrated that in fire last year, for example. The way we want to drive business is when everything is under pressure and the results have started coming in for companies, we would actually see things improving.
In group health, for example, if pricing improves just by 5%, just by 5%, and we are able to-- through the initiatives we are working on, are able to reduce our loss ratio by 2%, this business can easily grow by 50%, 60%.
Got it, Kamesh. Thanks for this explanation, and all the best.
Thank you so much, Dipanjan.
We have next question from.
Question, yeah.
We have next question from the line of Ananga Rana from A91 Partners. Please go ahead, sir.
Hi. I unfortunately have a couple of questions on the IFRS numbers part. First is how should we think about this claims discount benefit going forward? Is it like a recurring benefit that will keep accruing to us, or is it something that will go away as our growth maybe moderates a bit? Secondly, how should we think about investment yields on IFRS as well? Of course there'll be a lot of quarterly fluctuations due to mark-to-market. On a long-term average basis, will it be like roughly similar to what we were delivering on our IGAAP numbers? Is that how we should think about it?
Great questions, Ananga Rana. First I would say, I think when we look at IFRS or Indian accounting standards now results, we don't look at discounting of results in our KPI. What we look at is combined ratio on a net earned premium basis plus debt. In IGAAP, combined ratio is on net written premium basis. If you take everything on net earned premium basis, plus you are deferring your income on reinsurance along with the unearned premium, that actually gives the best possible KPI. That is how we have been driving ourselves from day one. I would not suggest that you look at discounting. Now, discounting typically would always be there because the results are there.
Now, if the discount rate changes, say by 3%, for example, from one year to another year, then your discounting results will be more. Unless you see abrupt movement in the interest rates, the discounting in results would be fairly stable. I think we showed here, this year it was 7.09, last year was, 6.9. But imagine if this moves from next year to 5%. Now the discounting effect will be a lot less. But if it moves to 8.5, then your discounting would actually become even more. We don't take this into account at all when we drive business. On mark-to-market, I would actually say two things. In fixed income, don't worry about, what the mark-to-market losses are.
I think the way we declare duration, you may be, all of you should push the insurance companies to declare duration also, so that you have a decent idea about the sensitivity to the interest rates. I think when we come to equity, when we reach risk-based capital, whenever it comes. Under Solvency II, for example, in Europe, if I remember correctly, equity investments attract 40% capital. Now, today, they don't attract any additional capital. If somebody is having 20% asset allocation in equity, they would have to provide more capital under this risk-based capital. The way I would look at is not really worry about mark-to-market movement, and I think Warren Buffett had said this, and he has been saying this for 25 years.
Actually start again focusing only on ROE, because if your risk-based capital goes up, your available capital will also have to go up. If it is not resulting in that extra yield, you would actually have a drain on the ROE. The better method which some of the European analysts do is they also try and calculate return on risk-adjusted capital basis, which I think will lead to a similar sort of a solution. I'm sharing with you the way we see the business. You obviously, you know, have your own way to look at, but we would not look at these two things to try and look at or change the way we do business. Obviously, when risk-based capital comes, as I said earlier, we feel that we will actually benefit.
Some other companies which are at more than 17%, 18% in terms of asset allocation towards equity would actually see a bit of capital going up. In that situation, it will also help a company like Digit that on a similar capital basis, the return can actually be seen on that basis. Then it will be more like apple-to-apple comparison, which unfortunately is not possible based on today. Now, equity gains, all of us know, look very good when the markets are sharp. We know what happened as of 31st March with a bit of a market down. We are still not at 10-year average on the Nifty or a 15-year average near Nifty. We are still more than that. If we see it from that perspective, and God forbid, things can go bad.
God forbid, we are not wanting it. Markets drop by 10%, how many companies will actually have the capital and the appetite to put more money? I already said in case of Digit, based on our asset allocation of 8.5% on equity, based on our solvency of to 40%+, we can easily move to 12.5%. I hope, Ananga Rana, I have answered your question.
Yes. Thanks. That was quite clear.
Thank you. There are no further questions from the participants, I now hand conference over to management for closing comments.
Thanks everyone for joining the call. Really appreciate, and I think all these questions also tell us as to where we are. We would be more than happy to publish information which help you understand the results better. I am sure you guys will be able to push the industry to start declaring from first quarter the IGAAP results, the Indian accounting standards, the new IFRS standards results, and also push people to also ask questions that at least qualitatively answer how this capital, et cetera, could change their risk appetite on the investment side. I think we are really looking forward to the next two years because with the new international norms coming and new standardization happening, it will help everyone for better benchmarking.
In case of Digit, we have always looked at NEP-based combined ratio plus DAC. On a post-tax basis, if you see, despite such a tough environment, we have, our team has delivered ROE of 17.3%. As the government and regulators' direction, what they suggest on controlling the acquisition cost, et cetera, bears fruit. I would say, I am personally actually very bullish about the growth of the industry, which something has suffered in the last couple of years. Thanks everyone for joining, and please do connect with Piyush, Divya, and Sansar, if you have any questions relating to our results. Thanks, everyone. Bye.
On behalf of ICICI Securities, that concludes this conference call. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.