
PNB MetLife Insurance Unlisted Share Price
As of , the indicative unlisted share price of PNB MetLife Insurance is ₹100 per share. This is an over-the-counter reference price, not a stock-exchange quote.
As of , PNB MetLife Insurance is not listed on any Indian stock exchange (NSE or BSE) — its shares trade in the unlisted, over-the-counter (pre-IPO) market.
| Price / unit | ₹100 |
|---|---|
| Market cap | ₹11,072 Cr |
| Min. investment | ₹10,000 |
| Lot size | 100 |
| P/E ratio | 98.2 |
| P/B ratio | 5.47 |
What is PNB MetLife Insurance?
PNB MetLife Insurance is an unlisted Financials company whose shares trade in India's over-the-counter (pre-IPO) market and settle in demat form (NSDL/CDSL).
PNB MetLife India Insurance Company Limited is one of India's established private life insurers, operating since its incorporation in 2001. The company is structured as a joint venture between two well-known names in financial services: Punjab National Bank, one of India's largest public-sector banks, and MetLife International Holdings, an affiliate of the global insurance group MetLife. Jammu & Kashmir Bank, M. Pallonji and Company, and other investors round out the shareholder base, with MetLife and Punjab National Bank holding the majority stakes. The company's core business is life insurance, spanning a broad product range. Its portfolio includes protection-focused term plans, savings and endowment plans, unit-linked investment plans, retirement and pension solutions, child plans, and group insurance offerings for employers and institutions. Distribution is a notable strength: alongside its own agency and direct channels, PNB MetLife leverages bancassurance partnerships with its bank promoters and partner banks, giving it reach into thousands of branch locations across the country. The company reports a presence in more than 150 cities and a large employee base, positioning it among the mid-to-large private life insurers by scale. In the unlisted market, PNB MetLife draws attention for a few structural reasons. It carries strong parentage through a public-sector bank and a global insurance brand, operates in the long-runway Indian life insurance sector, and has publicly moved toward a stock-market listing by filing draft offer documents with the regulator for a proposed initial public offering largely structured as an offer for sale by existing shareholders. Until any such listing is completed, its equity continues to change hands in the private, unlisted segment, where prices are quoted on an indicative basis. Interest typically reflects the company's bancassurance-led distribution model, its recognisable promoters, and the broader appeal of insurance businesses among investors tracking financial-sector names ahead of a potential public market debut. All figures and references here are descriptive market information and not a view on suitability.
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Frequently asked questions
No. As of 16 July 2026, PNB MetLife Insurance is an unlisted company whose shares trade over-the-counter; it would list only if and when it completes an IPO.
The minimum lot is 100 share(s); at the indicative price of about ₹100, that is approximately ₹10,000. Indicative reference, not a quote.
As of 16 July 2026, the indicative unlisted share price of PNB MetLife Insurance is ₹100 per share. This is an over-the-counter reference price, not a stock-exchange quote.
PNB MetLife India Insurance Company Limited is a private life insurer incorporated in 2001 as a joint venture between Punjab National Bank and MetLife International Holdings. It offers term protection, savings, unit-linked, child, retirement and group insurance plans, distributed through its own channels and bancassurance partnerships with partner banks.
As of the latest available information, PNB MetLife is not listed on the NSE or BSE main board and remains a privately held, unlisted company, though it has filed draft offer documents for a proposed IPO. Until any listing is completed, its shares trade in the unlisted market, where transactions are typically arranged off-market through dealers and settled by transferring shares into the buyer's demat account. Availability and indicative prices vary.
The indicative price in the unlisted market is set by buyer and seller interest rather than a live exchange order book. It is influenced by factors such as the company's financial performance, the outlook for the life insurance sector, news around its proposed IPO, overall demand and supply for the shares, and broader market sentiment. Quoted prices are indicative and can change frequently.
PNB MetLife operates under CIN U66010KA2001PLC028883 with ISIN INE207O01014 and a face value of ₹10 per share. It was incorporated in 2001 and is registered in Bengaluru, Karnataka. The company is promoted by Punjab National Bank and MetLife, with other shareholders including Jammu & Kashmir Bank and M. Pallonji and Company. These details are factual and provided for information only.
They can. If the company declares a dividend, unlisted shareholders are eligible like any other shareholder. Many unlisted firms reinvest profits, so dividends are not guaranteed.
After listing, unlisted shares convert into regular listed shares in your demat account and can be traded on the exchange, usually once any applicable SEBI lock-in period ends.
Unlisted shares are less liquid than listed shares. You can sell when a buyer is available through an off-market transfer; there is no continuous exchange market, so exits can take longer.
Unlisted shares carry higher risk and lower liquidity than listed shares, with fewer disclosures and no live market price. This is general information, not investment advice — assess suitability before investing.
An unlisted share price is an indicative, over-the-counter reference set by demand and supply in private deals between buyers and sellers. There is no live exchange quote, so prices can vary across dealers and over time.
Yes. Unlisted shares are delivered in dematerialised form, so you need an active demat account (NSDL or CDSL). No special account type is required — a regular demat account works.
Unlisted shares are sold through an off-market transfer to a buyer via a registered intermediary, settling from your demat account with a contract note. Liquidity depends on buyer availability, so exits can take longer than listed shares.
PNB MetLife Insurance vs similar unlisted Financials shares
Indicative over-the-counter prices, as of 16 July 2026. Information only — not a recommendation or ranking.