4.97bn rupee (approx. US$53.5m) scheme sees India joins a growing list of governments mobilising state-backed insurance support in response to conflict.
India's long-delayed plans for a domestic P&I club have gained fresh urgency as the Strait of Hormuz blockade disrupts the country's energy cargo flows.
The institute said the fallout could stretch beyond underwriting, with currency swings, weaker risk assets and inflation concerns adding pressure to insurers’ balance sheets.
Fitch has identified correlated aggregation risk as the key near-term concern for specialty insurers, even as the agency maintains a broadly contained ratings outlook.
Marking its 60th anniversary this year, the company reported its most recent cumulative insured business exceeding HK$2.45 trillion (US$313bn), encompassing over 200 markets globally.
The trade credit insurer is rolling out liquidity aid, faster claims handling, and counterparty diversification support for firms exposed to markets around the Strait of Hormuz and Israel.
War-risk terms have tightened across shipping and aviation, with P&I clubs cutting Gulf liability limits and insurers reassessing cover amid route disruption.