The Indian insurance industry has witnessed an interesting decade following its liberalization in 2000 when it was open to foreign players for the first time (with a cap of 26%). Prudential, Allianz, Standard Life, New York, AIG and SunLife were some of the earliest entrants, followed by New York Life, Metlife, Aviva, AXA, etc.
Since most of the private-sector entrants are joint ventures with foreign partners, all references to "private-sector insurers" are meant to be synonymous with the JVs co-owned by foreign players.
The private players gained traction since 2000, with rapid growth in market share, penetration and density in both life and non-life segments. Demand was fuelled by the growing economic base, disposable income/purchasing power and increasing awareness. In fact, its growth has been among the fastest witnessed in the industry globally.
The Industry’s premium size was INR 3.4 trillion in 2012, a CAGR of 20% between 2001 and 2012. Market share of the private players picked up rapidly to 31% by 2012. Despite the onset of the Indian economic story from 1992 itself, the growth in both insurance penetration and density was actually sluggish during 1990s. It picked up rapidly during the 2000s, coinciding with the entry of the foreign players and indicating the incremental benefit achieved by their influx. However, India’s penetration level still lags most Asian and developed markets - indicating potential headroom for growth.
While the economic story created a platform for initial volume growth, the industry is at an interesting juncture. Volume focus and high spending on distribution channels took a toll on companies’ profitability. The focus in the last decade was on setting up a base. Many insurers, including public sector ones, often resorted to reckless underwriting to build volumes at the cost of underwriting losses.
While investment income was a savior, the industry is now feeling the pain of accumulated losses. While this situation does not in any manner reduce the long-term prospects of the industry, nevertheless companies need to rejig their operating models to achieve the next stage of development.
The high cost of developing physical networks and retaining quality agents is putting the emphasis on technology for sales reach and operational processes. Cost of customer acquisition has become high. High operating expenditures ate away bottom line profits in the chase for top line revenue.
There is now a visible strategic shift from top line to bottom line to create a sustainable sector. Cost control and operational efficiencies are now in focus. Companies are monitoring physical expansion closely. Technology across the value chain is now a key differentiator. Online marketing tools are penetrating the retail market further. The regulator, IRDA, has promoted technology usage by several measures.
Investments have gone into technology related to internal processes and marketing/distribution capabilities to reduce overheads and commissions, though agent network still holds importance in regions where online penetration is low. Firms are exploring tie-ups with shopping malls, housing societies, office complexes for temporary POS as a low-cost delivery mechanism.
Insurers realize that a shift in product approach is imminent. Insurance is still a push-product here. Most people, including educated ones, view it as necessary for tax-saving or high returns, rather than for protection/social security as per life stage needs.
While this shows a lack of customer maturity, the private-sector life insurers were also enjoying the advantage of pitching high/guaranteed returns of ULIP products, a reason for the disproportionate share of ULIPs in private insurers’ product portfolio. However, private insurers are now focusing on traditional products, with many new products introduced in the last few months.
FOREIGN VALUE
Foreign players have helped bring in valuable capital, an established brand name as well as global expertise in developing the business. They bring in strategic expertise gained from their experiences globally, and this is invaluable in growing the Indian insurance pie further.
Going forward, they can play a key role in bringing in know-how on innovative product development, technology initiatives and client servicing tools which are relevant to this stage of the industry. Foreign players have made the product market more dynamic since they have been in this industry.
The objective of making products as per specific life stage-needs has started gaining ground. Insurers are exploring options in products targeting specific people, ages, needs, conveniences and pricing. This is where the expertise of foreign players can hold key.
Inflation of hospitalization costs, a plethora of lifestyle diseases and medical advancements will continue to boost demand for health insurance. Some product types firms are keen to explore in health insurance include outpatient treatments, emergency services, increasing riders, insurance with health/wellness programs, health savings accounts, rural health products, products for lower income groups etc.
The other major component of non-life insurance, motor insurance, is expected to grow in line with auto sales. Possible product innovations here that global firms might bring in include "pay as you drive" or "behavior-based pricing."
Growth in rural income following employment programs, higher minimum support prices of agri-produce and better monsoon can enhance opportunities for micro-insurance. Insurers need to build capabilities to manage channels for this, like self-help groups, business correspondents and microfinance institutions.
ULIP (unit-linked insurance plan) as a product is not dead despite the cut in commissions. These might still be relevant for higher-income clients. However, some of these might be relatively complicated products, and the need to increase investor awareness is to use simpler products which they can easily understand.
Private insurers have played a pivotal role in bringing into focus the practice areas for technology. While the focus initially has been on developing the physical network, the high cost of customer acquisition is making this increasingly prohibitive.
Technology is a focus area that can bring in differentiation going forward. Some initiatives widely implemented globally, and which have been/are been studied here are: online sales channels (financial portals, links to websites of specific events to establish a Point of Sale, price aggregator websites), customer servicing methods (online policy issuance, online claims registration/monitoring, online portfolio), operations (business lead sourcing, automation of functions).
E-distribution platforms will help reduce the effort and time required to scale up a physical network, deepening the online sale of policies will help save commission costs, and automating administration processes can enable faster turnarounds. Ability to develop such initiatives on-ground can help enhance the customer experience and build value-differentiators.
Another feature that may emerge is the ability to break up the value-chain and outsource functions. Most insurers perform tasks themselves - product development, administration, investments, processing and distribution.
As overheads exert pressure and technology enables outsourcing, insurers may explore that option. This is already being seen globally, with INEAS in Europe and GeneralLife in USA already using an e-business, outsourcing model with cost advantages.
The FDI limit of 26% has remained a contentious issue. An opinion against the entry of foreign capital has been that insurers can instead look at domestic markets for capital, as foreign ownership would lead to forex outflows due to profit repatriation. However, the entry of further foreign players by increasing the FDI limit would bring in capital inflows.
Even an influx of foreign players at existing FDI limit would give exit opportunities to existing promoters who might be looking to make a return on the investments they made so far. The point to stress is that, short-term concerns notwithstanding, the long-term potential of the industry remains intact.
Improvement in the economy, disposable incomes and awareness levels should yield healthy growth rates in volumes. The current demographic profile and increase in life expectancy of the current generation of young Indians will be a key growth driver.
In favor of liberalization, the industry has grown further than what it would have otherwise done. But it still remains under-penetrated. There is an opportunity to garner profitable growth by bringing in innovative products as per specific needs, realigning distribution strategies and leveraging technology. Foreign players who can specifically bring in tested strategies in these areas might still smell an opportunity.
Sourajit Aiyer works with a leading capital markets company in India. Views expressed are entirely personal. This article is for information purposes only, and does not construe to be an investment advice or solicitation. Any action taken by you is your responsibility alone.