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Explained: How life insurance policies invest your premiums

Life insurance policies have to adhere to IRDAI-mandated norms on deploying the collected premiums. Insurance policies cannot take credit risk

October 29, 2020 / 13:55 IST
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Many life insurance policyholders often buy covers after looking at returns promised by insurance agents. Rarely do they delve deeper to find out how their premiums will be deployed. This is especially the case with endowment policies. These are relatively opaque as they do not disclose their portfolios or their NAVs (net asset values) daily unlike unit-linked insurance policies (ULIPs) or mutual funds. The reality is, insurance covers such as moneyback or endowment policies also invest the premiums that they collect from you.

The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) has put in place regulations on how your money can be invested by life insurers.

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In what kind of instruments do life insurers invest my premiums?

In the case of investment-cum-insurance products, it would depend on the type of product you choose. With Ulips, which offer market-linked returns, you have the freedom to take calls on how and where to invest – in equities, debt or a mix of both. “So, a large-cap or a mid-cap equity fund would have asset allocations in line with their filings in different categories of equity. Similarly, a debt fund would invest in government securities, corporate bonds and the money market as per its approved asset allocation. A balanced or hybrid fund would invest in debt and equity,” says Sandeep Nanda, Chief Investment Officer, Bharti AXA Life Insurance.