India’s parliament has approved raising the foreign ownership cap in Indian insurance companies from 74% to 100%.
The move marks a historic financial-sector liberalisation.
The Lok Sabha passed the bill on Tuesday, followed by Rajya Sabha approval on Wednesday, clearing the way for global insurers to establish fully owned operations in India without needing domestic partners.
The development signals India’s determination to attract overseas capital and accelerate insurance penetration toward its 2047 vision of universal coverage.
The reform opens India’s insurance market, valued at over $300 billion and growing at double-digit rates, to unprecedented foreign participation.
This represents the most significant liberalisation of India’s financial services in over a decade.
Since the sector first opened to foreign investment in 2001, the FDI cap has climbed from 26% to 49%, then 74% in 2021.
The jump to full foreign ownership reflects a deliberate strategy by New Delhi to harness overseas capital for infrastructure and growth, particularly given India’s insurance penetration of just 3.7% of GDP.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman emphasised that competition would drive down premiums and expand access.
What this means for the market and foreign players
The immediate commercial impact will be substantial.
Global insurance giants have already signalled a strong appetite with Zurich Insurance’s $670 million acquisition of a 70% stake in Kotak General Insurance in 2024 foreshadowing this broader opening.
Allowing complete foreign ownership eliminates the mammoth effort of finding suitable Indian partners to hold residual equity, according to Sitharaman.
Expect a wave of greenfield entries and accelerated M&A as groups like Allianz, AXA, and others move to establish majority control or wholly owned entities rather than pursue partnerships.
The market fundamentals are compelling. India’s insurance sector attracted $82,000 crore in FDI through 2024 but remains capital-hungry.
Growth projections show the market expanding at 10–12% annually through 2033, reaching roughly $600 billion by 2034.
This trajectory outpaces mature markets where insurers struggle to deploy capital.
The bill also permits mergers between insurance and non-insurance entities, opening structural flexibility for acquisitions and consolidation.
Globally, insurers will gain access to India’s emerging middle class, now 580 million strong and projected to expand further.
Moreover, the vast rural and semi-urban populations underserved by existing players will also remain the target customers for the new players.
IRDAI rules key to insurance overhaul
Regulatory safeguards remain intact. The bill mandates that at least one of the chairperson, managing director, or CEO must be an Indian citizen, preserving governance oversight.
The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDAI) gained new teeth, including powers to recover “wrongful gains” from insurers and intermediaries, tools comparable to SEBI’s enforcement arsenal.
A one-time registration system for intermediaries streamlines compliance, while the threshold for IRDAI approval of equity transfers rises from 1% to 5%.
The regulatory roadmap is now critical. IRDAI must issue draft rules on capital adequacy, solvency margins, and distribution networks to operationalise the reform.
The broader goal of Insurance for All by 2047 now hinges on executing this historic liberalisation without compromising policyholder protection or local employment.
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