London, May 19, 2026, 16:05 (BST)
- Prudential shares dropped around 0.9% in late London trading, lagging the almost unchanged FTSE 100.
- The insurer is set to acquire 75% of Bharti Life Insurance for roughly $389 million, with as much as $78 million more on the table.
- Prudential might have to bring its stake in ICICI Prudential Life below 10%. That remains a key regulatory hurdle for the deal.
Prudential plc shares dropped in London on Tuesday. The insurer is looking to take control of Bharti Life Insurance in India, doubling down on growth there, but the deal could mean it has to scale back its big stake in ICICI Prudential Life.
Prudential shares traded at 1,123.5p on the sell side and 1,124.0p to buy in delayed deals, off 10.5p or 0.9%. The FTSE 100 slipped 0.03%, Hargreaves Lansdown data showed. HL
Prudential is moving to shake up its India business, aiming to switch from a minority stake to real control. The insurer, which focuses on Asia and Africa, plans to buy 75% of Bharti Life from Bharti Life Ventures and 360 ONE Asset Management. Prudential will pay an initial ₹3,500 crore, or roughly $389 million, once the deal closes. Prudential plc
Prudential CEO Anil Wadhwani called India “a strategically important and exciting market” after the deal, saying Prudential’s insurance know-how and Bharti’s reach would work together for Indian savings and protection. Prudential plc
Deal still pending. Prudential said closing rests on regulatory sign-offs and other conditions, saying it expects regulators will ask it to cut its ICICI Prudential Life stake to under 10% from about 22%. Prudential plc
ICICI Prudential Life shares dropped after the news, as Indian market reports pointed to worries about the planned stake sale and Prudential’s future exit as promoter, a key shareholder role in India. Business Today
Prudential shares now look “fairly valued,” according to Morningstar’s Henry Heathfield, who kept his GBX 1,270 fair value estimate after the latest deal. Heathfield also pointed to a planned 12-point drop in Prudential’s stake in ICICI Prudential Life. Morningstar
Prudential said Bharti Life could look for distribution deals with Bharti Airtel and 360 ONE, offering a different way into Indian homes than the usual bank-led approach of most life insurers. Reuters Breakingviews said Bharti Airtel has close to 300 million smartphone users in India, much more than ICICI’s retail banking base of about 80 million. Reuters
Valuation is also on the table. Breakingviews noted the price for Bharti Life values the business at just over $500 million, around 1.5 times embedded value. Embedded value is insurance jargon for future profits plus net assets. That ratio lines up with SBI Life, HDFC Life, and Life Insurance Corporation of India, and is just under ICICI Prudential Life’s 1.6 times, according to the note. Reuters
Bharti Life remains a small player but is picking up speed. Prudential said Bharti Life’s new business premium jumped 44% year over year to ₹1,069 crore in the financial year to March 31, 2026—roughly triple the wider industry growth rate. Embedded value hit ₹3,102 crore at Sept. 30, 2025. Prudential plc
Prudential said it has enough capital for the transaction. The company plans to use existing resources to fund the purchase and reported $4.3 billion in holding-company cash and short-term investments at the end of 2025. Prudential also said it will keep its plan to return $7 billion to shareholders between 2024 and 2027. Prudential plc
Prudential is getting a lift from supportive trading so far this year. In its first-quarter update on April 29, the insurer said new business profit climbed 10% at constant exchange rates to $686 million. Annual premium equivalent sales were up 6% to $1.82 billion, the company said. That measure includes regular premiums plus a tenth of single premiums, which is the industry standard. Prudential plc
Execution is the key risk here. If regulators in India push for Prudential to sell down its ICICI Prudential Life stake more quickly than planned, or if Airtel’s distribution effort doesn’t bring in policy sales from its user base, the company could end up losing a long-standing bank partner without seeing clear growth from a new channel. That explains why shares moved the way they did Tuesday—it’s not a clear verdict on India, but investors want to see more evidence.