"We have had several discussions with the car-maker and will take a call on the proposal only when all details and related data are provided to us," said a senior LIC official. According to LIC sources, the car-maker has agreed to provide the requisite data in the next few days.
Recently, MSIL announced the proposed new passenger car plant in the Mandal region of Gujarat would be built by a subsidiary of its parent Suzuki Motor Corporation (SMC), instead of MSIL.
The new company, Suzuki Motor Gujarat Private Limited (SMGPL), which would be registered by April this year, would exclusively contract manufacture and sell vehicles to MSIL.
The country's top mutual funds are opposing Suzuki Motor of Japan’s move to make Maruti Suzuki India (MSIL)’s proposed Gujarat unit its wholly owned subsidiary. In a seven-page letter, managers of top fund houses that together have invested a little over Rs 2,000 crore in the company’s stock, said this was a forced transition of MSIL into a trading company.
They had claimed the deal’s announcement had already led to a loss of Rs 5,000 crore for shareholders. It was, they said, a way of siphoning off Maruti’s cash with a carefully worded, yet confusing, communication.
Meanwhile, insurance industry experts said insurance companies like LIC are per se not against the deal. This is because their fund sizes are very large and they take calculated investment decisions. Further, the stake that they hold is lower than that held by MFs.