HDFC Life Insurance Company Limited (NSE:HDFCLIFE)
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May 12, 2026, 3:29 PM IST
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Q1 22/23

Jul 19, 2022

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to the HDFC Life Insurance Company Limited Q1 FY 2023 Earnings Conference Call. 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 the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touchtone telephone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Ms. Vibha Padalkar, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, HDFC Life Insurance Company Limited. Thank you, and over to you, ma'am.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Thank you, Faizan. Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us for the discussion on our results for the quarter ended June 30, 2022. Our results, including the investor presentation, press release, and regulatory disclosures are already available on our website as well as that of the stock exchanges. I have with me Suresh Badami, Executive Director, Niraj Shah, Chief Financial Officer, Srinivasan Parthasarathy , Chief Actuary, Eshwari Murugan, our Appointed Actuary, and Kunal Jain from Investor Relations. I will take you through the key highlights of our Q1 FY 2023 results and would be happy to take questions post that. Starting with the business update. We continue to maintain a consistent growth trajectory, growing by 22% in terms of total APE in quarter one, FY 2023. This has enabled us to maintain our market leadership as top three life insurer across individual and group businesses.

Our product mix remains balanced with non-par savings at 35%, participating products at 30%, ULIPs at 25%, individual protection at 5%, and annuity at 6% based on individual APE. On a total APE basis, our non-par savings segment has grown by 29%, protection by 31%, annuities by 39%, par by 23%, and unit linked by 10%. Within the non-par segment, our shorter tenor product, Sanchay FMP, continues to grow well and now contributes almost a fourth of our non-par individual APE. The prevailing high interest rate scenario augurs well for demand across our traditional savings products. While elevated inflation has not materially impacted savings products, premium flow into retail protection has remained tepid for the quarter, possibly due to postponement of expenditure on account of tight household budgets.

However, we see this as a temporary phenomenon, and with resolution of the ongoing global conflict and consequent easing off of macroeconomic stress, we expect to see traction in the second half of this year. We continue to steadily improve our individual protection policy conversion ratios and will adhere to a risk-based approach to underwriting. Our Credit Protect business has registered strong growth of 96% on the back of rise in disbursements across most of our partners. We continue to look at overall protection growth across individual and group platforms in an agnostic manner since we assess risk as well as serviced members covered under the group platform at an individual level. Our protection share based on APE has improved from 15.7% last year to 16.9% during quarter one, FY 2023.

On the retirement front, our annuity business has grown by 10% on received premium basis compared to a 9% degrowth for the industry in the quarter. Growth of annuity on an APE basis was 39%. The regular premium variant of our recently launched annuity product, Systematic Retirement Plan, has been well received across channels and is almost a fourth of our annuity in APE terms. We have also launched a new product, Systematic Pension Plan, which is a participating pension plan. This product adds to the existing suite of pension products being offered to customers. Moving on to key operating and financial metrics. Renewal premiums have grown by 19%, supported by improving persistency.

Our 13th and 61st month persistency for limited and regular pay policies is at 88% and 54% respectively, which is an expansion of 2 and 3 percentage points, respectively. I beg your pardon. New business margin for quarter one was 26.8%, up from 26.2% in quarter one of the previous year on the back of profitable product mix and growth in protection business. Value of new business has consequently grown by 25% and is at INR 510 crore for the quarter. Over the past several years, we have seen a distinct seasonality in quarter-on-quarter new business volumes and therefore a steady uptick in new business margins. We expect this trend to continue.

Our standalone embedded value as on June 30th, 2022 was INR 29,709 crore with an operating return on embedded value of 16.5% in quarter one, FY 2023. The drop in embedded value since March end is primarily on account of dividend payout and anticipated adverse economic variances caused by interest rate movements and fall in equities. We expect the latter to reverse as macroeconomic volatility subsides. The profit after tax for quarter one, FY 2023 was INR 365 crore, an increase of 21% over quarter one, FY 2022. As highlighted in our last earnings call, we completed raising sub-debt worth INR 350 crore during this quarter. Post the dividend payout of INR 1.70 per share, which was approved by our shareholders in the AGM, our solvency stands at 178%.

In order to further strengthen solvency to fuel growth, we will continue to evaluate raising equity capital as needed. Next on channel performance. Our bancassurance channel grew by 18% in quarter one, FY 2023, based on individual APE. While HDFC Bank continues to grow steadily, we are seeing strong growth momentum across our newer relationships such as Yes Bank, Bandhan Bank, IDFC Bank, among others. Agency channel grew by 26% based on individual APE. We added about 9,500 agents in quarter one and continue to focus on improving activation and productivity across our base of financial consultants. We are also taking multiple initiatives to augment our direct channel, including geo-based lead management for increasing efficiency, AI-based incentivization for promoting productivity and cloud telephony for simplified sales process.

With these tech-enabled initiatives coupled with capability building programs, we aim to build a robust, agile and empowered proprietary distribution. Moving on to tech and innovation. Post the successful implementation of the initial rollout of our in-house automated underwriting engine, we continue to expand its scope across a larger range of businesses. Tools such as Medieasy enable customers to schedule real-time video medicals and get assistance for financial underwriting. Innovative solutions such as enabling cardiac risk assessment at the customer's residence for medical underwriting furthers our motive of simplifying customer journey and provide best-in-class service. Now for an update on our subsidiaries. Subsidiary number one: We are delighted to share that our pension subsidiary, HDFC Pension, crossed the INR 30,000 crore AUM mark and has almost doubled its AUM in just 15 months.

As of June 30th, 2022, HDFC Pension had a market share of 38%, maintaining its leadership position in the private pension fund manager space in terms of NPS AUM. Subsidiary number two: HDFC International, our overseas subsidiary, has received an in-principle approval from International Financial Services Centres Authority ( IFSCA) to set up a global in-house center at Gift City. This entity will pool and optimize all processing activities of our international business. This is an important step for us towards eventually setting up an IFSC Insurance Office, IIO, at Gift City, which can cater to the overseas insurance needs of the Indian diaspora. Subsidiary number three: Exide Life witnessed strong growth of 34% based on individual WRP in quarter one FY 2023 and continues to enjoy a healthy product mix and growth across channels. The integration of Exide Life is on track.

We have received the initial NCLT approval for triggering the merger process, including intimations to various regulatory authorities and related NOCs. Subsequent to receipt of the NOCs from various regulatory authorities, we can expect to receive the final NCLT approval. We expect to receive the final nod from IRDAI and to be able to merge the subsidiary in the second half of FY 2023. On the regulatory front, we have been in regular dialogue with IRDAI and working on charting a roadmap to deepen life insurance penetration in India and welcome the initiatives taken by the regulator in this direction. Moving on to the impending merger of our promoter HDFC Limited with HDFC Bank. As you're aware, an in-principle approval was received from the RBI on July 4th, 2022, on the merger application.

We look forward to a further strengthening of our relationship with HDFC Bank, with our largest partner also becoming our promoter, subject to all regulatory approvals. To conclude, our objective remains to empower individuals to provide financial protection to their loved ones and widen insurance coverage through a mix of innovative products and diversified distribution. The detailed disclosure on our results is available in our investor presentation. Wishing everyone success as we embark on a new financial year. We are happy to take questions now.

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 one on their touch-tone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and 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. Reminder to the participants, anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one at this time. The first question is from the line of Avinash Singh from Emkay Global. Please go ahead.

Avinash Singh
Senior Research Analyst and Deputy Head of Research, Emkay Global Financial Services

Yeah. Hi. Good afternoon. Two questions. Firstly, on the margins, I mean, yeah, retail protection continues to I mean, I think appear to be struggling, yet overall protection mix has improved. Even non-par has increased. All in all, ULIP has gone down. With this and also improving scale, we could have expected a better margin expansion. But it seems that the operating leverage is actually, I mean, somehow missing and then margin improvement as compared to product mix looks a bit, I would say, on the disappointing side. That's number one.

Second, on your EV walk or the economic variance, if I look at your kind of interest rate to EV sensitivity, that's like 2% for every 100 bps, and also consider some bit, you know, equity market-related sensitivity, yet you know, close to 3.5% kind of a negative economic variance looks a bit on the higher side. Can you please also explain this? Thank you.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. Hi, Avinash. I'll take the first question, and maybe the second one, I'll pass it on to Srini. The first one, you're right. However, just keep in mind that our margins are mark to market in terms of costs. So whatever we incur here and now, so there's no straight lining of that. Sequentially, you should see the throughput of fixed costs coming through. As you know, every quarter is sequentially higher, ending up typically quarter four is the highest. You'll see that coming through. Some of it is back to business on COVID receding and so on. A lot of activity, travel, investments that perhaps were somewhat on the back burner, you'll see a fair bit of that coming through.

That's why you'll see in the walk the expense impact having a 0.6% drag on the margins. Srini, you want to take the

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. On the economic variance, the negative economic variance, there is equity fall that's contributing to about INR 400 crores of the total INR 1,200 crores of negative variance. The remaining, you know, seven hundred odd crores is on account of rise in interest rates. If you look at the sensitivity separated for equity and interest rates, it will broadly tie in with the overall impact that we see on the economic.

Avinash Singh
Senior Research Analyst and Deputy Head of Research, Emkay Global Financial Services

Okay. I mean, we are looking from March to June. If you broadly say INR 700 crore, that is kind of, you know, 2.5% broadly or 2.4% of your March 2022 EV. That is a sensitivity more than 100 basis points or 1% in movement in interest rates. That, I mean, from March to June.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

2% positive, right? The expected returns for the year roughly is around 8%, right? For the quarter, you'll expect a positive 2% for one quarter. As against that, we actually seen an equity fall. You have to relate it with the + 2% as expected and the actual drop that we've seen in the equity markets.

Avinash Singh
Senior Research Analyst and Deputy Head of Research, Emkay Global Financial Services

No, no. Equity is fine. I am talking of that, you know, the yield lead. Yield lead, you are saying INR 700 crore, the balance. That is like almost reflecting more than 100 basis points move in yield curve. I mean, from March to June, more than 100 basis points looks a bit, I mean, unlikely move. I mean, the yield curve would have moved like.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It is a shorter end of the curve that's risen a little bit more. You know, as we are holding, say, shareholder funds, it has got no liabilities. There are some excess assets in the VIF, the value of in-force. Those ones are exposed more to the shorter end of the yield curve. They've risen by 130 basis points during the quarter.

Avinash Singh
Senior Research Analyst and Deputy Head of Research, Emkay Global Financial Services

That makes it clear. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Hitesh Gulati from Haitong. Please go ahead.

Hitesh Gulati
Managing Director, Haitong Securities

Yeah, thank you for giving me the opportunity. I just wanted to check on the operating assumption change in the VNB walk that we have shown. Also on what is our view on unwind rates at this year, given that risk-free rates are generally expected to be higher?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Hitesh, on the first question, we are fairly pleased that right from inception, from when we started disclosing our embedded value and the walk, our operating assumptions have been positive. We continue to do that even against. I'm of course excluding the COVID impact that we have seen. Barring that, it has been positive and we continue to show that. On your second question, Srini, you want to take?

Hitesh Gulati
Managing Director, Haitong Securities

Sorry, ma'am, if I can just interrupt. On the VNB margin also there is some change in operating assumption. Can you talk about that also?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

VNB.

Hitesh Gulati
Managing Director, Haitong Securities

Yeah.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

These are changes in assumptions versus the assumptions that we put in last year, right? In the month of March typically that we put in, this has come through, which is an annual exercise that is. This is really a strengthening of assumptions that we do annually.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

That's right. Primarily, say, mortality assumptions on the protection book that we strengthened in March. That's the impact that we captured in this slide. As far as your unwind rate is concerned, we are not very gung-ho on the equities, equity markets for this year. That's reflected in our lower unwind compared to last year.

Hitesh Gulati
Managing Director, Haitong Securities

Should we expect this kind of a rate for the full year as well? Because last year's rate was about 8.6%.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We can expect the same 8.1%. We basically set the unwind rate at the start of the fiscal year, and we keep it flat throughout the fiscal year. Next time it'll change will be in the next fiscal year.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Any change from this today should be reflected in the investment variance through the rest of the year till we reset this rate at the beginning of next year.

Hitesh Gulati
Managing Director, Haitong Securities

Okay. Okay. Thank you. That's it from my side.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Adarsh from CLSA. Please go ahead.

Adarsh Parasrampuria
Equity Research Analyst, CLSA

My question is, Vibha and team. My question is relating to protection, right? Term life. Both you and your peer group has seen a 30%-40% drop. Just wanted to understand, you know, the tightening of norms has been there for about six months, so looks a little awkward. Just want to understand, from a little more medium-term perspective, do you all see this, some of the tightening in underwriting and norms, to really affect the population set of, you know, at least over the next two, three years as to how much protection could have been underwritten earlier versus what you can do now?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Adarsh, I'll give you a background to this. Our industry was hardly writing any term insurance just before the pandemic. Couple of years before the pandemic, maybe overall, typically it was 1% or 2% in APE terms, individual APE terms. I'm leaving out credit life. Then suddenly to expect us to ratchet up for the sector, we just need to put it into context. Yes, there was an uptick that we saw during the pandemic, and we don't want to lose that, and we've been a believer in this story. However, again, it's been a continued perfect storm. There was COVID that happened, then reinsurers like you mentioned.

Now there's inflation and we think and like I said in my opening comments, like in the basket of goods in terms of disposable income, we are sensing that either either there is a pullback to say, "This is my outlay that I can afford, and then let me pare down on my summer shirts," or else, "Let me defer it a little bit," or, "I'm taking a loan, let me cover it through credit life at least, so at least I have some cover." Or, you know, "I want to lock in a higher, you know, the more attractive interest rates that we're seeing currently, so that will anyway give me 10x to 20x cover depending on which product," and so on. These are various things that are going on in people's minds.

Relative to what we saw last year, first quarter, again, which was in the thick of the pandemic, it appears that it is muted. What we are certainly no longer seeing is that, why do I need insurance or why do I need, your protection? I don't think that question is coming up very much right now. That's a good, progression in the minds of people, but it will take time, I think. Another aspect is that if you look at, IRDAI's annual report, and if you see each company and how they are retaining risk on their balance sheet, you will find that some of the smaller companies have shown a fairly steep rise in what they are retaining on their balance sheet. Now, we always maintain that this has to be somewhat, calibrated.

We will do, you know, we will triangulate between top line, whether it's of retail protection or anything else, top line as well as bottom line risk management persistency, and this will grow steadily. We still expect second half if there's some tempering on inflation for retail protection to come back. Suresh, you want to add anything?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

No. I think Vibha has probably covered it. If I can add, you know, the overall demand in the market for the sector has also come down a little bit for all industries. Secondly, from a risk perspective, we are also looking at whether that's improving. There's a fair amount of products we are not letting go through management also. How the journey is more on that we'll expect. You know, not to take away the story that the gap in our country is very large.

Operator

Sorry to interrupt you, sir. You're not clear from the line.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We are getting a lot of disturbance.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Disturbance, actually it's the line itself.

Operator

Yes, sir. I am hearing, sir.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It's clear now?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yes.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. Okay. You know, I mean, not to take away the story of the overall protection gap and the opportunity, I think there is enough opportunity for us to be able to grow protection. Yeah, for the next 6-7 months, given, you know, that there are certain good products in the market, even for the field teams and the channel to look at return on effort on some of the other products, and all the factors that Vibha mentioned, you may probably see a little tepid growth. Again, this is on the back of a fair amount of demand which came in last year.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

The last point I'll add, Suresh has touched upon it, is on the Google search trends. While they have come down, whatever searches are happening, HDFC Life continues to remain right up there.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

You know, to actually look at how the protection journey has evolved, the developed markets.

Operator

Sir Adarsh, sorry to interrupt you, sir. The audio is not clear from your line. There's a disturbance coming. Please check.

Adarsh Parasrampuria
Equity Research Analyst, CLSA

Yes, try to mute the line and things.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. I mean, when we're looking at the current environment, interest rates going up and it's about, you know, starting to maybe pinch, household budgets and disposable income, there are, you know, a couple of these things, you know, to look at. One is if you look at some of the surveys that have come up recently in terms of, how are people feeling about their prospects, job prospects and, you know, pay hikes in the current environment, a lot of people are optimistic. Two-thirds of the people surveyed are optimistic about that, which basically means people are not worried about disposable, you know, income coming through. At the same time, savings is something that is, this is what is going to give a tailwind to the savings.

On the expenditure side, anything that is seen as a discretionary expense, people do start looking at, you know, what is really coming for the same rupee that was spent earlier. These are trends that you will see for some more time, in, you know, a fairly low middle income country like India. That is something that we should not be too surprised with. We've always maintained that retail protection will grow over a period of time in India. This is something that we'll have to, you know, be comfortable with, so that we continue to balance growth with profitability and risk management. That's how we are thinking about it.

Adarsh Parasrampuria
Equity Research Analyst, CLSA

Just to follow up here, majority of the reasoning looks to be more like discretionary power of spending going down. Just wanted to just reflect on how much do you think is it caused by the tightening, right? Like, what kind of population set it cuts off, at least for the near term, in terms of processes becoming onerous or the ask rate of processes going up, including medicals?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I think people start getting used to whatever is prevalent in the industry. Yes, there are looser and then on the other spectrum tighter guidelines. Largely people do start getting quite accustomed to the new normal. My hunch would be, it's always difficult to exactly pinpoint, but my hunch would be that it's more to do with the inflationary aspects rather than the process per se. I think largely companies have stabilized in their process, we have and so have others, to the new normal. That these documents are required because your reinsurer requires it, or we have tried to triangulate who's this customer through other means, and so on.

Whether it's 50-50 or 30-70, difficult to know, but the new aspect certainly is inflation.

Adarsh Parasrampuria
Equity Research Analyst, CLSA

Got it. Thanks, Vibha. Thanks, Niraj.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Thank you.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

That's it from myself.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management is able to address questions from all participants in the conference, please limit your questions to two per participant. Should you have a follow-up question, we would request you to rejoin the question queue. The next question is from the line of Sanketh Godha from Spark Capital. Please go ahead.

Sanketh Godha
Equity Research Analyst, Spark Institutional Equities

Thank you for the opportunity. If you look at the Credit Protect business in the current quarter around INR 250-260 crore is back to pre-pandemic levels. On a lower base, but almost a doubling of the business has happened. So just wanted to understand the sustenance of this particular business in immediate quarters, Q2, Q3, Q4 because we have got to the trend rate of 200%-230% of its core numbers even in second quarter, third quarter, and fourth quarter of last year. Just wondering, do you think that this growth to moderate going ahead, given the low base effect is over? That's just one question.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

You take this.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. You know, from what we have seen most of our partners and we have a fair spread across banks, NBFCs, small finance banks, who we work with in this space. The growth has really come in from the loan disbursements, year-on-year growth that they have seen which range anywhere between 70%-90%. Even the larger players have grown fairly fast. Now, at our end, you know, we look at higher value penetration, we look at rider attachment, we look at a little bit of a price increase based on that. That has led to a faster growth for us, even above the loan disbursement which is happening for our partner. I would assume that the loan growth would continue at a certain rate.

It may not be as high as this given that last year the base effect started coming into place between Q2, Q3, Q4. A significant growth on the partner loan disbursement and a slightly higher growth on our CP business can be expected for the rest of the year.

Sanketh Godha
Equity Research Analyst, Spark Institutional Equities

Got it. Sir, within the products probably is it still because you're the market leader in MFI segment. It's largely led by MFI segment or it's mortgage which is driving the growth?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

No, we are very well diversified now across almost all the verticals. If you really look at it across the partnerships that we have got, we are present across mortgage, we are present across MFI, we are present across each of the segments. You know, it's not just we have housing, we have lab, we have MFIs, we have others, and each one of them has grown. While some of the other ones have grown by almost 70%-75% also. MFIs have grown slightly higher. If you look at HDFC Bank itself, the growth in terms of their overall has been 70%. Some of the NBFC large partners have grown at anywhere between 60%-150%.

Sanketh Godha
Equity Research Analyst, Spark Institutional Equities

Um-

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

NBFCs across most of the verticals.

Sanketh Godha
Equity Research Analyst, Spark Institutional Equities

Yeah. Got it. Sir, the second question is just wanted to understand on the part of protection itself. So we have almost 15 months, or more than 15 months we have launched six quarters we have launched the ROP plan. So sir just wanted to understand any traction there, whether it still continues to contribute around 16%-18% of the total protection business. Because the entire pie has, or the absolute amount has some of, whether ROP somehow has supported or you don't see that trend, ROP supporting the growth of the protection business.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It continues to. You know, we are present in all offerings and all parts of our, you know, possibilities. ROP continues to become more and more meaningful. Today it's about a third of our business in the retail, just on a standalone quarter basis. It was about a fourth, it is about a third. Could vary here and there, but we don't really drive a product, Sanket. It depends on which channel, what is the preference of the customer, but it is there as an offering.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

If I can add, I think as a trend, as we go more into tier two, tier three in some of these markets, the ROP product share in some of those markets will be fairly high.

Sanketh Godha
Equity Research Analyst, Spark Institutional Equities

You know, coming back to the earlier discussion in terms of the impact of higher interest rates on both savings and, you know, spends. ROP is seen as a hybrid in terms of, you know, buying protection, but yes, if nothing happens then money comes back. In some sense a bit of a hybrid between protection and savings. That does address the current sentiment as well. Perfect. Last one from my side. Sir, just from a data keeping point, what is our market share right now in HDFC Bank, compared to what it was probably for the same quarter last year or full year last year, or FY 2022 in total?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We're not really giving out numbers like that because each partner is, you know, it changes quarter-on-quarter. Suffice to say that at HDFC Bank, we will continue to write business that makes sense. Accretive on VNB, we will look at what is our persistency because often just taking one lever will not make sense because we might say no to some business because we either don't believe philosophically in some kind of a product or the persistency we might not be very convinced about and be okay to say no to. On term, there might be a price war in a particular quarter.

I think we'll have to say typically we've been about two-thirds of their business, and like I mentioned in the opening comments, as the merger fructifies, we are hoping to that this strengthens further.

Sanketh Godha
Equity Research Analyst, Spark Institutional Equities

Got it. That is commented. Thank you.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Shyam Srinivasan from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Shyam Srinivasan
Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Thanks for the opportunity, and good afternoon, everyone. Just the first question on solvency margins. 176% went to 178%. You did some sub-debt raise during the quarter as well. Are we now full up in terms of capacity to do any more incremental sub-debt? I think Vibha, you made comment that you could look at equity as well. Just want to understand what is the comfort level on where solvency is. Let's assume it is at this level. How much, how many years of growth can we do without having to raise equity? If you can help us understand some of the dynamics around solvency, please.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Right. The straightforward answer is that today our growth is not getting impacted, our retail growth because of the solvency. Our stated objective has been around 180. We've been in the 180%-190% odd range. Sometimes been above 200%, but anywhere between 180%-200% or thereabout. Slightly shy because of the Exide Life merger. Now, in terms of looking at raising equity, we might look at it depending on whether if there are growth opportunities or we perceive prolonged stress in the system so that we feel a little bit more comfortable with strengthening our solvency, we might do that. It should not be a very large amount, but back into the kind of zone that I just mentioned.

Shyam Srinivasan
Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Got it. You are at the lower end, so you think once you cross 182 you should be okay from a growth perspective?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. I mean, anything 200%-220%, something like that would, you know, ensure that we don't have to keep tapping the markets again and again. We are still in the process of evaluating and seeing how prolonged some of the global tensions are and are they receding, some of the largely macroeconomic factors.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. Maybe just to add to, you know, what Vibha mentioned, if you recollect before the Exide transaction, we've, like Vibha mentioned, operated in the 180%-190% band, and we've been fairly comfortable that this will, you know, support organic growth for the 3- to 5-year period. Two things have happened since then. Exide Life transaction, yes, and also the environment has become a lot more volatile compared to, you know, where we were talking about this maybe a couple of years back. That pushes up our threshold marginally from say 190% odd to maybe a little over 200%. But that's about it really.

Shyam Srinivasan
Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Got it. That's helpful. Just back onto retail protection. I'm just looking at your slide 19 to understand where the weakness in terms of this is most exemplified, right? Seems to be at least some bit in agency and some bit online seems to be the biggest drop. So is the whole push thesis around this coming off because, or am I reading this kind of table or chart wrong? You know, I would assume online people have higher incomes, right? So just trying to understand even from a demand perspective, what's happening across these channels on retail term.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

You want to take this?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. Let me just address the online first. You know, like Vibha mentioned earlier, the Google searches really have started coming off as compared to the previous year. You're also right that in our online channel as well as overall for HDFC Life, the profile of customers is slightly higher on the affluent side. We remain the number one brand when it comes to search. We remain there, but the numbers are coming down a bit in terms of the total online conversion that is happening. There has been a dip, which you've seen, and we assume it probably holds true for the full industry because the same trending in terms of Google searches seems to be happening on keywords either on term or in terms of the specific brands which are there in the market.

There has been a little bit of a slowdown on online, but we are putting in our efforts in terms of, you know, digital marketing and all of that, and we expect that to pick up over a period of time. Agency, like we mentioned earlier, I think, you know, yes, it's probably a little lower than what it was, but there again, there are a combination of factors, what we explained in the previous question.

I think a little bit of inflation, a little bit of push on the ground where people are being able, the agents are able to sell a non-par kind of a product at much easier return on effort, as well as the fact that, you know, some of the customers are waiting for this whole thing to go through before they come back and take term maybe at easier processes or better pricing. Frankly for us, you know, it's broadly in the range in terms of how we expect agency business and product mix to happen. We should be able to push the pedal in terms of agency production as we go forward.

Shyam Srinivasan
Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Got it. Last data point, I know you share this for every 100 applications that come through. I remember fiscal 2022 was 60 for retail term in terms of what we were able to close. Is that number changed at all?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yes. That has started improving for us now. It is around 3 basis points improvement in terms of the conversion, 3 percentage points, which has improved in terms of what we are. It is a combination again, in terms of what personas and profiles we are sourcing on the ground, what are the, you know, underwriting criteria easing that we have done, as well as a little bit of analytics at the back end that we are able to push some of these down. We have moved up a bit in terms of the conversion throughput.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Also, you would have picked up during the, you know, last month we had mentioned about how we are doing cardiac risk assessment. This is one of the things that would help. This is something we've been solving for the past 24 months at least because getting people to go to a hospital or nursing home to do their stress test during COVID and so on was just becoming a roadblock. Now with this, and it's there in our investor presentation. With this now we're able to use a stepper, go to the individual's home, be able to assess cardiac risk and so on. This would have been a bottleneck earlier, for example.

Just systematically working through each one of these bottlenecks to be able to, one, give ease to the customer, and equally important, not take on risks on our balance sheet just because somebody else is willing to do it.

Shyam Srinivasan
Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Fair enough. Thank you and all the best. Thank you.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, please limit your questions to one per participant. Should you have a follow-up question, we would request you to rejoin the question queue. The next question is from the line of Akshen Thakkar from Fidelity. Please go ahead.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Yeah. Hi. Just a question on the EV walk on the investment variance. Could you just maybe help us understand on how much of the hit was due to interest rate and how much of it was due to you know, equity markets? Just if you could take that up. Thanks.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Srini, you want to.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Equity is around INR 400 odd crore and the balance is from interest rates. Out of the total INR 1,200.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Okay. Because I was just looking at the sensitivity that you had published in FY 2022, which called for a roughly 2% hit on EV for a 1% move in interest rates. Interest rate movement has been slightly lower than that, if I'm just looking at year-end or average, maybe 80-90 basis points, and then the sensitivity to EV seems to be a little higher than that. Could you just sort of help us understand that?

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

The shorter end of the curve has actually gone up by 130 basis points.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Okay.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

During the quarter.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Sure. Okay.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It's more than 100 basis points.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

It's more sensitive to shorter end like we just use this 10-year as a proxy, but you're saying we should look more at the shorter end of the.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

You need to look at the full curve because different assets are sitting at different ends of the curve. You know, what we discussed a little while back as well, at the shorter end, the steep, the hardening has been a lot more, 130 odd basis points. At the longer end, it has been, say 50-60 basis points. Basically wherever the assets are sitting at the shorter end, that's where the impact is. To give you an example, shareholder assets and also the excess assets sit at the shorter end of the curve. The non-par assets, for example, backing the 15, 20, 25 year products or annuity products sit at the longer end.

The effect is different at different parts of the portfolio and wherever the assets are being held. Collectively, you will see that this is the impact of about INR 700 odd crores in debt, about, like Srini mentioned, INR 450 odd crore in equity.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Niraj, assuming interest rates remain steady here on and markets remain flat here on, incrementally there wouldn't be any negative investment variance, right?

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Take a base scenario of, let's say, the yield curve going up parallel. If the yield curve is going up parallelly, then you will have absolute, you'll be able to then correlate, one-to-one with the sensitivity table that you see.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Mm-hmm.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Like you started off with a 1% sensitivity, that's basically a parallel shift. If there is a slope change that happens, which has happened in the past few quarters, this is the result of that. A parallel shift upwards or downwards will have the linear impact that you see in the sensitivity table.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Got it. No, my question, Niraj, was that assuming that thirtieth June rates, yield curve and market levels hold, incremental investment variance wouldn't be there, right?

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

On account of interest rate.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Yeah.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It would not.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Mm-hmm.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Equity would have the other aspect of it. That's your question, right? Your interest rate nothing changes.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Yeah. Okay. All right.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah, we are basically expecting around, you know, 7, 8 point whatever percentage unwind is what we are expecting to earn on the assets. You know, if you are saying there is no further shock, we assume that it will earn 8%. The assets will earn around 8%. If there is no, you know, variance against that expected, then you will not see any further investment variance.

Akshen Thakkar
Analyst, Fidelity

Okay. That's it for now. I'll come back in the queue for another question. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Surya Kumar from Aditya Birla Sun Life Insurance. Please go ahead. Surya Kumar, your line is in talk mode. Please go ahead with your question. Mr. Kumar, please unmute your line from your side if muted. As there is no response from the current participant, we'll move on to the next question from the line of Prakash Kapadia from Anived Portfolio Managers. Please go ahead.

Prakash Kapadia
Principal Officer and CIO, Anived Portfolio Managers

Just one question from my end. You know, recently the regulators come out with, you know, risk-based capital adequacy norms and, you know, the idea of the regulator is to increase penetration, so they've set growth targets. You know, how does this change the dynamics for the industry and for us, if you could comment on that?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We're still awaiting in terms of some clarity on RBC, and we're hopeful that they take into account some of the asks of the industry. Say eight committees have been formed and, at least in a couple of committees this has been an ask. Yes, they have rolled out targets to insurers, and we appreciate that the regulator is equally focused on developing as much as it is on regulating. That is welcome. Having said that, I think I'm sure all the life insurers would, whether the regulator is directing them to focus on top line or not, they would anyway want to solve for low penetrations and so on, more of that will continue.

Prakash Kapadia
Principal Officer and CIO, Anived Portfolio Managers

this wouldn't, Vibha, in a sense lead to, you know, margin erosion or profitability being compromised, in lieu of higher growth or it's too early to?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I think it's too early, because I would hope that it is more in terms of cajoling life insurers to continue with their attempts at insurance penetration rather than mandating.

Prakash Kapadia
Principal Officer and CIO, Anived Portfolio Managers

Sure.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Even today, it's, you know, there are companies that perhaps the persistency is a lot lower than the listed players. There is next to no disclosure on their margins. There is next to no disclosure on their operating variance on embedded value or embedded value itself. All of that is there. In the absence of apart from the listed players disclosing these numbers, it's very difficult to say what are companies operating at today and where, and in a post the drive on top line, where are they, where have they ended? Everything is fairly difficult. We'll have to wait and see I think.

Directionally it's welcome, but personally, I would hope that it's calibrated because especially life insurance is a very long tail product, and risk management and quality of business, right selling, customer mis-sale complaints, claims, settlement ratios, all of those aspects are equally important and that happens post-sale. I would and I'm sure regulator is very cognizant of all of those aspects, so would like to see this holistic ask from us as a sector.

Prakash Kapadia
Principal Officer and CIO, Anived Portfolio Managers

Sure. Thank you.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Sure.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nitin Aggarwal from Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.

Nitin Aggarwal
Banking Analyst, Motilal Oswal Financial Services

Yeah, hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Vibha, one question around the competitive intensity. How do you see it in the non-par savings business? With the recent increase in product IRRs, how do you see the margins trending in this line of business?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Given, I'll answer from towards the end of your question on margins. Given our upward trajectory continued smooth upward curve on margins quarter on quarter, year on year, doubling in four years in terms of VNB, all of that will continue to happen. No change in that. Yes, some quarter here and there. What we do find is more the mid-tier, apart from the listed players, a lot of competitive intensity. But again, there's very little disclosure or next to none on any of their metrics. That is expected, I guess. If you extend the horizon a little bit, things do normalize. The things do tend to normalize, and that too will happen.

There is a trade-off in the mind of the customer between a market leader, for example, a Sanchay Plus has been our innovation. Sanchay Par Advantage has been our innovation. There is a premium that customers are willing to pay for that. Yes, we have to stay in the zone. If you were to look at annuity, we have grown by about 10% when market is de-grown by 9%. This is on NBP terms. And there too, there is competitive intensity. I think that is par for course.

Nitin Aggarwal
Banking Analyst, Motilal Oswal Financial Services

Okay. One clarification regarding the shareholding of HDFC Limited. I just want to know like how easy or difficult it is to do a direct issue to HDFC Limited and will there be any regulatory hindrances in that?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

See, they are a promoter. It is every promoter's obligation and, you know, for them to extend support to the life insurer. They've always expressed that. I don't see there to be any issues per se because the capital that we might want to raise and might feel comfortable about, like I talked earlier, depending on market volatility, is not going to be huge. It's going to, like I said, put us in the zone of maybe 200-220% or somewhere along that line. None of that should take it above the currently permitted regulatory norms.

Nitin Aggarwal
Banking Analyst, Motilal Oswal Financial Services

Right. No, I'm asking this question not from your perspective, but from HDFC Limited's angle. Can it like go up?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

From their angle only, they are permitted to hold up to 50% today. Had the Exide Life transaction not happened, they would have been there.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

They're currently at 47.8, Nitin.

Nitin Aggarwal
Banking Analyst, Motilal Oswal Financial Services

Yeah. No, the question was like if they now want to increase, then is it easy to like do a pref issue and get this done or will it be quite a task?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

From what angle? From a funding angle or a regulatory angle?

Nitin Aggarwal
Banking Analyst, Motilal Oswal Financial Services

From the regulatory angle, yeah.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

That's what I'm saying. What is the extent of the regulatory requirement that they should not exceed, 50%, right? What Niraj just mentioned, the kind of capital we might want to look at will not take it above 50%. There is no regulatory issue here per se, apart from, yes, we are in the midst of a merger. Yes, all regulatory, you know, people will be kept in the loop. But it is when you look at underlying that your subsidiary would feel more comfortable against a volatile situation on having a little bit more of capital. You know, the current extent of regulatory norms will not get violated.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It'll be a normal course of business, Nitin.

Nitin Aggarwal
Banking Analyst, Motilal Oswal Financial Services

Right. Sure. Thanks so much, and wish you all the best.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Atul Mehra from Motilal Oswal Asset Management. Please go ahead.

Atul Mehra
Analyst, Fidelity

Yeah, yeah. Good afternoon, and thanks for the opportunity. Just one follow-up on the previous question. The current regulation says that if maybe you were to imply NBFC's shareholding and NBFC bank shareholding in the life insurance company, then they are at 47%, and the regulator basically says that either you be at 30% or you be at 50%. There have been some instances where there has been some confusion around this. Just to reconfirm, what we are saying is, going from 47.5%- 50%, that doesn't require any kind of regulatory approval, in the current scheme of things?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

No, I wanna make it clear here that existing regulatory guidelines. This is when HDFC ERGO bought Apollo Munich. That's when HDFC was asked to bring down the stake to 50%, right?

Atul Mehra
Analyst, Fidelity

Mm-hmm.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We would have stayed there had it not been for the Exide Life merger. Right? That still holds. This capital we're looking for is within what already holds.

Atul Mehra
Analyst, Fidelity

Right. Ma'am, is there any timeline to this fundraise?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

No, we've not said that there's gonna be a fundraise. All we're saying is that we will evaluate all options in front of us and also whether we need to have more. Given extended volatility, it's something that we might feel comfortable about, but it's an evolving situation, as you know, on the macroeconomic front.

Atul Mehra
Analyst, Fidelity

Right. Right. Ma'am, just one more clarification on the same point. I just seen one more instance in case of, say, ICICI Lombard, where even they went M&A and-

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Sorry, boss. Not very clear.

Atul Mehra
Analyst, Fidelity

Is it better now?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Slightly.

Atul Mehra
Analyst, Fidelity

Yeah. Sorry. I was just saying that there was another parallel in the industry around ICICI Lombard, where they went through an M&A and it's not perhaps too clear now what's happening there, where ICICI Bank shareholding has to be got down to, say, 30% or they'd be allowed to get it back to 50%. From our perspective, do we see that as a parallel at all or not at all?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Boss, you are selectively picking an example. What about at least five examples wherein there is 100% or 60% or 50%, 55% and so on. All the similar companies, and I think this is a point that has been mentioned by HDFC Bank leadership, HDFC Limited leadership, to say we would welcome parity. This is not a new application. This is an existing application. We were the first ones to get an insurance license, life insurance license. And there are enough examples wherein it is more than 50%. The example that you give, in that particular scenario, the other insurance entity under the bank was not asked to bring that down.

Atul Mehra
Analyst, Fidelity

Correct.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I'm sure this is well-known reason, so and has been said this by our current promoters and new promoters. Really very little that I can add here, given that the regulators are looking at it.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Just another, you know, fact here really is that if you look at HDFC's shareholding in HDFC Life, it was 50% before the Exide Life transaction. Exide Life transaction is not undertaken by HDFC Limited or HDFC Bank. It was an HDFC Life transaction, which resulted in HDFC Limited's holding falling from 50% - 47.8%. That's the other difference, you know, between this and the ICICI Lombard transaction.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Final point is, I think HDFC Bank leadership have also clarified that in their minds, whether it's 50% or 30%, it is going to be there and it is a material investment, and they see it, and they will be the promoter, subject to regulatory approvals.

Operator

Thank you. Mr. Mehra, may we request that you return to the question queue for follow-up questions. The next question is from the line of Rohit Jain from Carnelian Capital. Please go ahead.

Rohit Jain
Equity Research Analyst, Carnelian Asset Management

Thank you. I had two questions. One is on the EV. I heard Srini say impact of INR 700 crore on the shareholder value and the excess of risk assets. I would guess the change in long-term interest rates and the size of our book wouldn't that be much higher impact on the debt portfolio? That's point one. Point two, if my interest rates rise, ideally I'm able to invest at a higher rate while my savings rate or offered rate is similar. Wouldn't my VNB margin increase? Thank you.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. This is on the back book. On the VNB will increase for the new policies that will be written at a higher interest rate. You're right. Also, bear in mind that we hedge as and when we write any new policies, we immediately hedge the book as well. What we are actually exposed to when interest rates rise is to the extent of the shareholders' assets where there is no corresponding liability, and also the excess assets on the non-par book as well. Those are the ones that are sensitive to the interest rates going up. Like we explained earlier, the shorter end of the curve where these shareholder assets and the VIF assets, excess assets in the VIF, so those are the ones who get exposed.

In the short end of the curve, the yields have gone up by 130 basis points during the quarter. That's why you see this INR 700 crores on the interest rates, interest rate sensitivity. On the new business, like you rightly pointed out, on the new policies as and when we write it, you'll be able to write it at higher interest rates and, you know, all things being equal, we'll be able to get a higher margin as well.

Rohit Jain
Equity Research Analyst, Carnelian Asset Management

Sure. Thank you. Our margins in Q1 have not increased materially, right?

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Corresponding to the same quarter of last year, it has gone up. Because you understand there is a little bit of a seasonality to our business. It's gone up by 60 basis points compared to the first quarter of last year.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. Typically in quarter one you'll see about, give or take 15 odd percent of the year's business coming in Q1. Expenses typically get front-ended, in terms of things like manpower, technology, et cetera. You see that effect, you know, unwinding through the rest of the year.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Also our expenses are reflected in our VNB margins. We don't normalize it throughout the year, so it's as and when it gets incurred, we reflect in the margin for the quarter.

Rohit Jain
Equity Research Analyst, Carnelian Asset Management

I understand. Thank you.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nischint Chawathe from Kotak Securities. Please go ahead.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak Securities

Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. I'm just looking at margins on a year-on-year basis, which is essentially 1Q to 1Q. Trying to understand if there was you know, if there were any changes in at the product level margins. I do understand that I think there were some higher expenses because of travel and you know, new investments, et cetera, kicking in. But at a product level, have you seen any pressure on margins given the fact that probably the cost of hedges would have gone up or maybe you know, even on the protection side, you would have seen the reinsurer rates going up?

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Nischint, if you look at the Q-on-Q product mix, you'll find that the changes are fairly small. You'll find that unit linked has come down marginally. Par is at a similar level. Term has gone down, you know, Q1 to Q1. You know, we've discussed that. On the non-par side, it's gone up, but the profile of the non-par products have changed. We've discussed, so we have Sanchay FMP, which is a significant part of this business. Annuities have gone up. There have been a fair number of compensating effects in terms of what's happening in the product mix itself. Product level margins may not have moved too much.

There could be instances in the period where the spreads may have gone up to some extent, you know, on some of the products like annuities and maybe non-par. That again depends on, you know, what the rate is at a particular point in time, how are we reacting to competition, you know, within the quarter. A lot of these effects are kind of canceling out each other. The key really is 60 basis points in expansion and basically the smallest quarter of the year. Expenses are not necessarily, you know, in that sense to that extent. Expenses are more front-ended compared to what you will see in terms of the revenue play out over the rest of the year.

It's all of these effects which are, you know, creating this net effect of 60 basis points expansion.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

On the expenses, Nischint, for example, HDFC Bank added about 700 branches in Q4 of last year. Some of our other partners, the newer partners, I mentioned quite a few names in my opening remarks. There is a lag in terms of us having manpower, feet on the street versus beginning to see business. That is also a bit of a COVID impact. We had reined in quite a bit of these sorts of investments, and now it is full throttle. Also some of the activities that we have in order to kickstart sales, that's also front-ended. You'll see this evening out as a percentage as we go through the year. But like Srini said, we mark to market every quarter.

We don't straight line our NBMs.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak Securities

Yeah, that's right. Thanks. Just the second one is on the term business. Do you see, I mean, I understand that, you know, at this point of time, probably the return on effort for the team was, you know, to sell some other products versus term, et cetera. But do you see that changing in the second half of the year or should we kind of remain in negative for the entire year in term?

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. Look, I think it's a combination of multiple things that we will need to do. One is, of course, like we said, that the overall customer sentiment has to improve. Two, in terms of the overall awareness and what kind of ease of journey we'll be able to provide to the customer. There is a little bit of effort on our side in terms of ensuring that all channels, all frontline is activated in terms of being able to convince and, you know, customers in terms of term being available for them. A little bit of innovation is also possible in terms of the product and the features that we can do. Frankly, you know, there are a few positives also. Customers are now more willing to go for medicals.

You know, some of those trends we have started seeing. As we go into quarter three, quarter four, a little bit of push in terms of how do we activate all the channels, the product proposition and the journey is becoming easier, will lead to, we believe, an increase in terms of the terms. We've still budgeted higher numbers in term, but we'll have to wait and watch as to how the overall industry grows over quarter three and quarter four. These are trends that we see across the industry. We can easily do it by changing pricing, but really that is not what you know, the end objective is.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak Securities

Perfect. I think, that's very insightful. Thank you very much, and all the best.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nidhesh from Investec. Please go ahead.

Nidhesh Jain
Research Analyst, Investec

Thanks for the opportunity. Two questions. First is, with this inflationary expectation going up and interest rates going up, how do we see the growth for non-par savings business for us, through the year? That is the first question. Secondly, how do we think about the sustainable operating ROEV, for our business? I think it has declined from 18%-1 6.5%. Is the 16%-17% the new normal or we expect to go back to 18%-19% in future?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I'll answer the first one and then hand it over to Niraj. The first one, we continue to see very robust demand for non-par, and that will continue. We are even versus bank fixed deposits, even on the shorter end, the Sanchay FMP, we are at least 100 to 130 basis points more attractive. This is at the highest marginal tax bracket and even lower tax brackets we come out meaningfully more attractive than just parking it in fixed deposits. I think that's well understood. Apart from that, the longer tenored non-par also, the category has been booming.

Now, we've launched this about four years ago and people understand reinvestment risk and no longer confuse a debt mutual fund or parking it into fixed deposits with long tenured Sanchay Plus and so on, because locking in and getting assured returns until you're alive, all of that is now well understood. No issues on that front. We also reprice fairly swiftly, so taking advantage of what we are able to earn, we look at it on a dynamic manner. Really, no major concerns on that front. On ROEV, Niraj, you want to take this?

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah. In terms of ROEV, if you look at the key, you know, deconstruct ROEV, you will look at the two key aspects of unwind and the VNB accretion. In terms of unwind, we already discussed. We are expecting our assets to earn a little over 8% in this year. Anything over and above that will get, or rather different from that will get reflected in the investment variance. VNB accretion has started on a, you know, strong footing in Q1. We expect that to continue with gradual, you know, steady margin expansion as we have delivered in the past couple of years. With that, you will look at an ROEV which, so last year, if you look at the ROEV, it was about 16.5%.

This is, you know, after normalizing the impact of COVID. Prior to that, it has been in the 17-18% range. That band of 17-18% is something that we believe is possible to achieve. Of course, this will depend on the interest rate environment over the years as we go forward. Given our philosophy, we expect operating variances to be in a fairly small territory in the neutral to positive territory. These two blocks of unwind and NBP accretion is what would dictate this number. We would expect this to, you know, gradually inch upwards as the year progresses.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Also, I hope you're not comparing the first quarter ROEV with the full year ROEV because there is a fairly large uptick in terms of seasonality.

Nidhesh Jain
Research Analyst, Investec

Sure, sure. Lastly, just one question on the reported profitability.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Sorry. Just in terms of numbers, because it is important that we compare quarter with quarter one with every quarter one of the previous years. It has been in the range of about between 14%-16%, somewhere in that zone over the last 3 years. On the Q1 to Q1 basis.

Nidhesh Jain
Research Analyst, Investec

Sure. Just lastly on the reported profitability, how should we think about that given that last year in Q1 there was a major disruption because of COVID and COVID claims would have hit our P&L. Despite that, the YoY growth in PAT is not that significant. Any light on that?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

If you deconstruct it further and we do give what is the shareholder versus policyholder. Last year, because of the market being good, there was a profit booking that we did on the shareholder. When you look at what the policyholder back book generation has been, that has been extremely robust.

Nidhesh Jain
Research Analyst, Investec

50% growth.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

About a 50% growth, which you will agree is a fairly decent growth.

Nidhesh Jain
Research Analyst, Investec

Sure. Thank you. That's it from my side.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Sure.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Deepanjan Ghosh from Citi. Please go ahead.

Dipanjan Ghosh
Assistant VP and Lead Institutional Equities, Citi

Hi, good evening. Two questions from my side. First is, you have highlighted that some of the new banker channels have demonstrated strong growth. If you can just quantify something on that, what is the mix or what has been the year-over-year growth? Second is, if you can qualitatively mention your counter share or how it varies between HDFC Bank's branches with vintage of less than five years and vintage more than five years, more qualitatively. Third, I think one point you have discussed, on the non-par side, we have seen [inaudible] of the Sanchay Plus product, increasing significantly during the quarter. Does that reflect competitive intensity? Do we still hold up the spreads or the margins that we are doing in the business? Again, if you can give some color on that.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I'll answer the last one on the spreads. Margins have not been impacted any significantly. Yeah, more or less the spreads have been. Spreads, it's not just a spread business, there's expenses in there as well, how we underwrite. All of that goes in. Into that melting pot, we have been able to hold our margins on non-par. Suresh, you want to take-

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Your first question was on term growth across three channels or was on overall growth across three channels?

Dipanjan Ghosh
Assistant VP and Lead Institutional Equities, Citi

Overall growth across the non-HDFC Bank channels and also what is the mix today on the overall of this non-HDFC Bank channels in your overall mix?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We have seen fair growth firstly on our proprietary channels, you know, which was in line with our overall strategy. We have been investing both on our agency as well as the direct. You know, I think point to note that Exide on the other hand, while we run as a subsidiary on the agency, has also grown in the first quarter. You will find that strategy in terms of being able to grow agency and direct. In broking, we continue to maintain our market share and, you know, the growth there has also been much higher than what we are seeing at an overall growth level. The other banker relationships is other than HDFC Bank.

In most of our other partnerships, whether it's Yes Bank, Bandhan Bank, IDFC FIRST Bank, we are seeing significant growth, almost, you know, 90%-100% growth which has come from overall other banca relationships. If you were to leave aside HDFC Bank, which has also grown at a fairly decent rate in Q1, given that they've always had a large base, and there we have a different pressure on multiplier. We have seen growth across proprietary, which is agency direct. The only cause of concern, which like I had mentioned earlier, right now is online business, where, you know, there's a little bit of a pricing war which is happening as well as a lower sentiment on the direct. Those are the two probably channels which we probably need to focus on.

Other bancassurance, broker and proprietary own agency and direct have been growing reasonably fast.

Dipanjan Ghosh
Assistant VP and Lead Institutional Equities, Citi

Sure. On the vintage market share at HDFC Bank based on branch vintage?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

You know, typically some of the larger banks, so HDFC Bank obviously now has the huge number of branches and they've been growing 700 branches. We do track branches based on city categories as well as, you know, they have A, B, C, D, E to I categorization which is happening. Their presence in terms of the large branches in the metro Tier 1, Tier 2 is obviously very large. The productivity of these branches is huge because, one, they have a very large customer base in most of these A and B category branches. There of course, again, you know, we have more or less similar market share across each of these type of branches. Probably the presence for HDFC Life in some of the upcountry markets is higher.

Now more or less that has evened out after 3-4 years of multi-site. Obviously, the productivity of the larger branches as well as the growth has been fairly similar across. I think some of the tier 2, tier 3 branches have been growing faster. It is not a huge deviation in terms of how the greater than 5-year and less than 5-year vintage branches are. I don't have the exact specifics in terms of how they are. I would assume that the growth would be on similar lines.

Dipanjan Ghosh
Assistant VP and Lead Institutional Equities, Citi

Sure. Just one data keeping question. Can you quantify the non-HDFC Bank, the other bancassurance channels, what is their proportion in the, in your overall individual business today?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Approximately 15%-20% is the kind of number, but they are growing very, very rapidly.

Dipanjan Ghosh
Assistant VP and Lead Institutional Equities, Citi

Sure. Thank you and all the best.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Reminder to the participants, please limit your questions to one per participant. Should you have a follow-up question, we would request you to rejoin the question queue. The next question is from the line of Jayant from Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

Jayant Kharote
Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Thank you for the opportunity. Just one question. This change in assumptions of mortality strengthening, is this across the protection book or specific to any segment like CP or individual?

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Both.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It's both.

Jayant Kharote
Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

It's both. After this change, are we provided for FY 2023 or this will be an evolving situation?

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We don't provide anything. We just, like you said, we set the assumptions at the sort of start of the year. That goes through, so next revision, if at all, depending on the experience, would be in next February, March of next year, 2023.

Jayant Kharote
Equity Research Analyst, Credit Suisse

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Rishi Jhunjhunwala from IIFL Institutional Equities. Please go ahead.

Rishi Jhunjhunwala
SVP, IIFL Capital Services

Yeah, thanks. Most of the questions have been answered. Just one quick thing. You mentioned about a decline in the term protection business on the online channel. Is that trend similar between your own online website versus web aggregators? Because, you know, it seems like the largest aggregator is still doing reasonably well there.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah, they are along similar lines. I think, look, for us, we needed to ensure that there is parity on our pricing between our own sourcing as well as what we have on the largest aggregator. There is a little bit of a price differential which you can see on the web aggregator level, which is one of the reasons, you know, we have, like Vibha had mentioned earlier, any kind of pricing which we have on any particular is what we would like to maintain across all our partners and all our channels. The trending is similar. You know, we also try to ensure that we have the right product mix even with the large aggregators overall we are playing with.

Shyam Srinivasan
Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Understood. Just, you know, you mentioned in your PPT about, you know, new product Click 2 Protect Optima Secure being launched in FY 2023. Just wanted to understand here the health cover is something that again, it's a benefit-only or is it something that you're doing with your general insurance, HDFC ERGO?

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We have been doing this Click2Protect Optima for some time. It's HDFC ERGO which has launched a new health indemnity product called Optima Secure. They had Optima Restore earlier, so now they got Optima Secure. This Combi product is to reflect their new product.

Shyam Srinivasan
Research Analyst, Goldman Sachs

Understood. Okay. Thank you. All the best.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Dhaval Gera from DSP Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.

Dhaval Gada
Assitant VP of Investment, DSP Mutual Fund

Oh, yeah. Hi. Thanks. So just one question relating to the GTI business. If you would just comment around, you know, sort of prospects there and, you know, profitability around that business. Yeah. Thanks.

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

GTI is now coming to some sort of, you know, normalcy now in, you know, more recently. We believe that the pricing is more, you know, reasonable now. Therefore, we have also seen some uptick in our business, and we believe that at these prices it will make some money for us.

Dhaval Gada
Assitant VP of Investment, DSP Mutual Fund

So-

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It'll be a fairly relatively tactical kind of a business because it's bid out every year, right? It really depends on how the pricing kind of works for the risk that we take and that's how we look at this business.

Dhaval Gada
Assitant VP of Investment, DSP Mutual Fund

Got it. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Prateek from Nippon India Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.

Prateek Jain
CFO, Nippon India Mutual Fund

Yeah. Hi. If I were to look at individual protection and compare it to 1Q FY 2020, the absolute amount is the same, but there is a pricing element sitting over here, plus this quarter you had ROP, which was not there in 1Q FY 2020. Adjusted for that on volume terms, the degrowth seems substantial to the extent of 30%-40%. Is only consumer discretionary the reason for it, or is there something more to this?

Srinivasan Parthasarathy
Chief Actuary and Head of Products, HDFC Life Insurance Company

There is also tightening of the underwriting norms, right? When you look at FY 20, we are talking about a couple of years ago, and in the last two years you've seen, there's a lot of stringency in the underwriting norms. That's also sort of contributing to the drop in the new NBPs.

Prateek Jain
CFO, Nippon India Mutual Fund

It looks like that I think someone was asking also there is a cutoff, right? With higher pricing the size of opportunity has reduced, right? Is that a fair understanding for protection?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

It's either that or people are saying that I will reduce the sum assured. Either they reduce the premium or they reduce the sum assured. These are the two levers that are there or they will postpone.

Prateek Jain
CFO, Nippon India Mutual Fund

When I look at your number of individual policies sold, on a three-year basis, the CAGR is just 1%. The lives insured is -6%, whereas our total individual AP has grown by 15%. Can you help me reconcile this in the sense, is there an element of volume degrowth happening and only average ticket size increasing? I'm asking on a global basis.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I mean, given some of the products that we have launched on the non-par and par side, the average ticket size of some of these products has been significantly higher. It's also been, like I mentioned earlier, an ease of, you know, sale for some of these products, given the high demand which has been there for these products. The NOPs on the term have actually de-grown. That is right. Like Vibha mentioned, there were a few reasons in terms of whether the customer postponing or, you know, not taking it up based on the pricing, and we are also tightening our underwriting norms. If you were to look at it without the term, you know, our growth on NOPs has been there.

Overall, the industry has been struggling with NOP growth, which is really where the challenge is for the industry in terms of the number of lives which we need to cover. We have grown if we exclude, you know, this cohort, we have over a greater than three-year CAGR of almost 10% in terms of NOP.

Prateek Jain
CFO, Nippon India Mutual Fund

Srini, if you can give me a number of

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Sorry.

Prateek Jain
CFO, Nippon India Mutual Fund

Sure. No, no, go ahead. Sorry, sir.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

No, I just mentioned that there are certain cohorts on the low ticket size that we have exited because we found the quality of the business either in terms of persistency or in terms of claims or mortality being higher.

Prateek Jain
CFO, Nippon India Mutual Fund

Okay. Srini, can you give me some rough idea of number of unique customers which you would have and the growth of this, let's say over FY 2020 versus 2022?

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We might feed that in subsequently. Don't have it handy.

Prateek Jain
CFO, Nippon India Mutual Fund

Okay. Surely. Thanks. Looking forward to that. Thank you. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will take last two questions. The next question is from the line of Avinash Singh from MK Global. Please go ahead.

Avinash Singh
Senior Research Analyst and Deputy Head of Research, Emkay Global Financial Services

Yeah. Hi. Quickly, you know, one thing on, you know, for retail protection. I mean, is that again, in terms of the volume, all entirely led by the subdued demand or is it that, I mean, if you can quantify that, okay, how much, you know, subdued demand is contributing and how much of it is because I mean your acceptance rate from proposal coming to acceptance had gone down. That's one. Second, if you are able, if you are already able to launch this combination product with your HDFC ERGO, if at all regulatory allows you to distribute a health product, what does it change really? Thank you.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I'll take the second question and, maybe Suresh can answer the first one. We have been at the forefront of nudging the regulator to allow us to sell. This is something that we have been selling in the past until about 2015. What this will do is, I mean, it'll depend on what form or shape we're allowed to. The ideal would be right from manufacturing to distribution, we can do both. Otherwise it'll just be distribution, which is what we have, given what we were allowed to recommend. Distribution is an ask that is there in the report that has been submitted. First is that it'll depend on the form or shape. If we're allowed to manufacture, great.

What this will do is not just offer mediclaim products. That's fine, but it'll allow us a lot of product innovation, which today that's a missing piece. While we can collaborate with and we do collaborate with companies like HDFC ERGO, it is at best a force fit, and it's somewhat clunky from the customer's point of view. This will allow us to give a feature and build in a feature into our existing product offerings, wherein it becomes very customer centric as a one-stop shop for everything from mortality to wellness to morbidity, everything in between, right? For us to ratchet up, down, to be able to add riders similar to what we see in some of the other geographies. I talked about wellness as well.

It'll allow us to do that. We'll have to see what we're allowed to do and then do the best that we can under that new regulatory regime. Over to you, Suresh.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

I'll add first to Vibha's second point. I think the overall value proposition and the improvement in productivity that we can see at a customer touch point or engagement, you know, especially when we have a combination product like that, I think can significantly add value both in terms of the customer coverage that they will get, as well as the total sales that we can generate or the additional sale that we can generate at every engagement. On your first question, you know, look, frankly, Neeraj had mentioned this in one of the earlier questions. If you really look at it, our product mix has more or less remained stable across par, non-par, UL, and term. There is a slight dip of 1% in term. The par has more or less remained. We mentioned this earlier.

I think, look, we do tend to balance our product mix based on, you know, what the overall market scenario is like. We have been managing to do that across each of the channels. While on the term side there has been a we do see a little bit of a customer sentiment slowdown in terms of searches. We see that happening like we had mentioned, and there is maybe the impact of inflation or a delay in postponing. There has been a little bit of a tightening at our end because we are looking at all product lines across all channels to help us deliver on both the risk side as well as the quality of business. If you've noticed, our persistency continues to remain top in class. Our product mix remains the same.

If for a certain quarter we see a little bit of terms slowing down, we have tried to make sure that the overall sum assured or the protection that we grow has helped us from the Credit Protect business. Both protection and annuity combined together are going up. Our Credit Protect business is leading to the overall protection in terms of both number of lives as well as the sum assured that we are covering. Depending on you know how we find the overall market evolving, we'll be able to change the product mix as we go forward.

Avinash Singh
Senior Research Analyst and Deputy Head of Research, Emkay Global Financial Services

I mean, any sort of quantification in terms of your acceptance rates from proposal origination to your issuing a policy, I mean, if there is some metrics. I mean, how much sort of it has become, you know, stricter from your side rather. Earlier if you were like kind of, you know, issuing eight out of ten proposal hypothetically, where is the number again I'd say?

Operator

Thank you. Mr. Singh, the audio is not with you.

Suresh Badami
Executive Director, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Yeah, again, there is a little bit of a disturbance. Yeah, now it's improved a bit. Look, I think there's a fair amount of effort in terms of understanding which persona, which profile, which markets we want to source and where we want to push the channels to source. While our throughput has increased, like I mentioned earlier, almost 3-4 basis or 3-4 percentage points our throughput has increased. What we have tried to do also is to ensure that we are getting the right profile. In today's underwriting norms, like we had mentioned earlier, there were certain cohorts where we saw the risks higher or the persistency lower. We've tried to go back and say that we probably don't want to source those profiles. There has been an improvement in terms of our throughput.

We are looking at that, but it is very closely balanced with the risk that we would want to take on these kind of profiles.

Operator

Thank you. Mr. Singh, may we request that you return to the question queue for follow-up questions? The next question is from the line of Madhukar Ladha from Elara Capital. Please go ahead.

Madhukar Ladha
Equity Research Analyst, Elara Capital

Hi. Thank you for taking my question. You mentioned that, you know, the shorter end of the yield curve has risen more than the longer end of the yield curve, which obviously implies the yield curve is flattening a little bit. So the question is, you know, if this trend continues and if we go back to a yield curve which was probably prevailing two or three years back, which was very much more flatter than what we have right now, how would you see that to impact the supply of FRAs? Then would it be that easy to sort of construct the non-par products that the market seems to be doing now? Your comments on this would be helpful.

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

See, we don't expect the shape of the curve to change the supply of FRAs. More and more banks are coming into this. The banks are increasing their capacity and more banks, both domestic and foreign, are coming into this. We don't expect the supply of FRAs to get impacted by the slope of the curve. What can change is in terms of the economics, in terms of what happens to the spread. That gets dictated by the difference between the spot and the OIS yields. That is something that can change from time to time. Ultimately, from our perspective, it's about managing the spread, right? We've discussed we were doing on par using our internal capacity before FRAs were allowed. FRAs were allowed, and we started using that.

Even today, when we look at our entire risk management approach, it's not, you know, disproportionately dependent on FRAs. What we are doing today, if you look at our FRA numbers for the last couple of years, you'll find a INR 10,000 crore odd number in FY 2021. We brought that down to INR 8,000 crore in FY 2022, in spite of business having gone up. As such, dependence on FRAs is, you know, it is a good instrument. We use it for risk management, but we are not only dependent on it. The economics of it, we will try and manage by managing our spreads. If we're getting a positive spread on that, some of it can, you know, be reflected in the rates given to the customer.

Some of it can get reflected in terms of the spreads that we get. That's how we look at it, Madhav.

Madhukar Ladha
Equity Research Analyst, Elara Capital

Right. Just a follow-up on this. From the bank's perspective, obviously, a flattening, a more flatter interest rate curve would mean lower spreads for them. Don't you think that would then disincentivize them from sort of writing more FRAs?

Niraj Shah
Executive Director and CFO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

Again, you can of course talk to the counterparties, but actually, if you look at the way this business works, it's really the bank is using the balance sheet to earn this spread themselves. Now, unless that balance sheet is being used to write some other business at higher levels, it's very different. Also in terms of, you see the economics of global banks, the kind of returns that they may have in their own, you know, global balance sheets. What you get in India is still very attractive, no matter how flat the curve gets, just because of the level of the interest rates itself.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question for today. I now hand the conference over to Ms. Vibha Padalkar for closing comments.

Vibha Padalkar
Managing Director and CEO, HDFC Life Insurance Company

We would like to thank all of you for participating in today's results call. Good evening.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of HDFC Life Insurance Company Limited, that concludes this conference call. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines.

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