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New India Assurance:₹372 Cr PAT. 117.98% COR. Insurance’s Wage Bomb & Underwriting Mess

New India Assurance Q3 FY26 | EduInvesting
Q3 FY26 Results · Quarterly Reporting (Oct–Dec)

New India Assurance:
₹372 Cr PAT. 117.98% COR.
Insurance’s Wage Bomb & Underwriting Mess

Biggest general insurer in India. ₹86,718 crore investment book. 85.4% owned by GoI. But underwriting losses hit ₹7,046 crore in 9 months, masked by ₹2,300 crore in investment gains. Meet NIACL: where claims inflation eats margins for breakfast.

Market Cap₹22,602 Cr
CMP₹137
P/E Ratio18.9x
Dividend Yield1.32%
ROCE3.59%

The Government Insurance Monopoly That Profits on Paper Only

  • 52-Week High / Low₹215 / ₹132
  • Q3 FY26 Revenue (GWP)₹12,069 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 PAT₹372 Cr
  • 9M FY26 PAT₹826 Cr
  • Q3 EPS (₹)2.31
  • Book Value (₹)175
  • Price to Book0.79x
  • Dividend Yield1.32%
  • Q3 Combined Ratio117.98%
  • Market Share (Q3)13.4%
The Insurance Auditor’s Burning Question: New India Assurance closed Q3 FY26 with ₹12,069 crore in gross written premium (+12.8% YoY), ₹372 crore PAT, but a 117.98% combined ratio — meaning they paid out ₹1.18 for every rupee of premium collected. Underwriting loss of ₹1,736 crore in Q3 alone. Yet the stock sits at ₹137 with a P/B of 0.79x. Why? Because ₹1,080 crore in investment gains in Q3 patched every hole. Welcome to insurance: where your losses are your neighbour’s capital gains.

The Monopoly That Keeps Losing Money While Pretending to Make It

New India Assurance is India’s largest general insurance company — in fact, it is pretty much THE general insurance company that matters. Founded in 1919 by Sir Dorabji Tata, nationalised in 1973, and now 85.4% owned by the Government of India. It doesn’t compete. It dominates. It holds 13.4% of the national general insurance market share, operates through 1,668 offices across India, and manages an investment portfolio of ₹86,718 crore as of December 2024.

Impressive metrics. Meaningless profits. Because here’s the bitter truth: New India Assurance doesn’t make money from selling insurance. It makes money from selling insurance claims at a loss, and then filling the profit gap with investment gains. In Q3 FY26, they lost ₹1,736 crore on underwriting and pocketed ₹1,080 crore from selling stocks. Net result: ₹372 crore PAT. It’s the financial equivalent of a shop that sells coffee at half the cost of beans, then hopes the real estate appreciates to pay the rent.

The business has been in India for over a century. The government owns it because India needs a government insurer. The market rewards it with a 0.79x price-to-book ratio because the market is not stupid. Recent triggers: Wage revision provisions of ₹2,500 crore, regulatory GST disputes totalling ₹2,300+ crore, and an incurred claims ratio that refuses to budge below the danger zone. Yet, they rank AAA from CRISIL, command market leadership, and have a dividend yield of 1.32%. Confusing? Welcome to NIACL.

The Concall Hint (Feb 2026): Management said “claims inflation and competitive intensity persist.” Translated to English: we’re losing on every single policy, but we can’t raise prices because the government won’t let us, and competition is eating our lunch even when we drop prices. Fun times.

They Collect Premium. They Pay Claims. They Pray The Difference Doesn’t Kill Them.

New India Assurance operates across eight major insurance lines: Health & PA (48% of premium mix), Fire (15.5%), Motor OD (11.1%), Motor TP (13%), Marine (2.4%), Crop (0.4%), and miscellaneous (9.4%). Distribution happens through brokers (39% of business), direct sales (33%), agents (22%), dealers (6%), and bancassurance (0.5%).

The model is straightforward: collect premiums, invest the float, and claim to be profitable. The execution is where it gets ugly. In FY25, the combined ratio hit 120.9% — they paid ₹1.21 for every rupee of premium, before investment income. In the first nine months of FY26, the combined ratio is 119.1% — still underwriting negative. The company needs to generate ~7–10% annual returns on its ₹86,718 crore investment book just to break even on the core business. Whenever investment markets stumble, so does NIACL’s reported profitability.

Segment-wise, health insurance claims ratio improved from 106.5% to 103% in Q3 (good news), but motor claims are still above 105%, marine has unpredictable large losses, and aviation had an ₹323% claims ratio for 9M (hello, Air India claim). The portfolio is systematically unprofitable in underwriting. The company survives because it’s backed by India’s government, has a captive investment base, and doesn’t need to maximize ROE.

Health & PA48%Portfolio Mix
Combined Ratio119.1%9M FY26
UW Loss (9M)₹7,046 CrBefore Inv. Income
Market Position: NIACL is the only Indian general insurer with a presence in 25 countries and a desk at Lloyd’s of London. In home insurance, it commands 16.5% market share. In marine, 16.2%. In health, 18.9%. This is brand moat so thick you could build a bunker with it. Yet, the moat doesn’t translate to profitability — just premium volume.
💬 If NIACL loses money on every insurance policy sold, why does it even bother? Drop your thoughts on how a government company survives this.

Q3 FY26: The Numbers (Before Investment Magic)

Result type: Quarterly Results  |  Q3 EPS: ₹2.31  |  Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹9.24  |  9M FY26 EPS: ₹5.00 (₹826cr / 165.2cr shares)

Metric (₹ Cr) Q3 FY26
Dec 2025
Q3 FY25
Dec 2024
Q2 FY26
Sep 2025
YoY % QoQ %
GWP / Revenue12,06910,70313,450+12.8%-10.3%
Operating Profit20698-74+110%Flip to Profit
OPM %1.7%0.9%-0.5%+80 bps+220 bps
PAT37234955+6.6%+576%
EPS (₹)2.312.120.33+9.0%+600%
The Investment Income Mirage: Operating Profit swung from ₹98cr (Q3 FY25) to ₹206cr (Q3 FY26) because management “monetized investments” — code for sold equity positions worth ₹1,080 crore in Q3 alone. Without the ₹1,080 crore in capital gains, Q3 PAT would have been ₹100cr lower. The normalized earnings power of NIACL (ex-investment gains) is approximately ₹400–500 crore per quarter, not ₹372 crore. Strip out the volatile investment income, and the business is barely clearing ₹50–100 crore per quarter on core underwriting.

What’s This Loss-Making Insurer Actually Worth?

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