India eases FDI rules for firms with up to 10% Chinese shareholding
Change
India notified that foreign investors with up to 10% Chinese shareholding can invest through the automatic FDI route subject to sectoral caps, while excluding entities incorporated in China, Hong Kong or other countries that share land borders with India.
Why it matters
Entities with any direct or indirect ownership links to citizens or firms in countries that share land borders with India must follow additional Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) reporting under a prescribed standard operating procedure. Proposals from such investors in specified sectors that still require government approval will be processed under an expedited 60-day approval timeline. The term "beneficial owner" will follow the Prevention of Money-laundering Act (PMLA), 2002 definition, where controlling ownership is entitlement to more than 10% of shares, capital or profits.
Implications
- — Private equity and venture capital fund managers with minority Chinese or Hong Kong investors must route eligible India investments through the automatic FDI route and document compliance with sectoral limits to qualify for the relaxed treatment.
- — Compliance teams at foreign investment entities that have any direct or indirect ownership links to citizens or firms in countries sharing land borders with India must submit the additional DPIIT reports under the prescribed standard operating procedure; failure to file will breach the new reporting mandate.
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