RBI/2007-2008/18 Master
Circular No.02/2007-08 July
2, 2007 To, All
Category - I Authorised Dealer banks Madam
/ Sir, Master
Circular on Foreign Investment in India Foreign
investment in India is governed by sub-section (3) of section 6 of the Foreign
Exchange Management Act, 1999 read with Notification
No. FEMA 20/2000-RB dated May 3, 2000, as amended from time to time. The regulatory
framework and instructions issued by the Reserve Bank of India have been compiled
in this Master Circular. In addition to the above, this Master Circular also covers
the following areas. (i)
Acquisition of immovable property which is regulated in terms of Section 6(3)
(i) of Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 read with Notification
No. FEMA 21/ 2000-RB dated May 3, 2000;
(ii)
Establishment or Branch/Liaison Office in India, which is regulated in terms
of Section 6(6) of Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 read with Notification
No. FEMA 22/ 2000-RB dated May 3, 2000; (iii)
Investment in capital of partnership firms or proprietary concern which is
regulated in terms of Section 2(h) of Section 47 of Foreign Exchange Management
Act, 1999, read with Notification
No. FEMA 24/2000-RB dated May 3, 2000. 2.
This Master Circular consolidates the existing instructions
issued by the Reserve Bank of India through AP (DIR Series) Circulars and Notifications
under FEMA, in respect of the above areas. The list of underlying circulars/notifications
is furnished in Appendix. 3.
This Master Circular is being issued with a sunset clause of one year. This circular
will stand withdrawn on July 1, 2008 and be replaced by an updated Master Circular
on the subject on that date. Yours
faithfully, (Salim
Gangadharan) Chief
General Manager
INDEX Part
– I Foreign
Investments in India—schematic representation:
Foreign
Investment in India Entry routes for investments in India Prohibition
on investment in India Eligibility for Investing in India Type
of instruments Investments in Small Scale Industrial
units Investments in EOUs/FTZs/ EPZs/HTPs and STPs Reporting
of FDI Issue Price Foreign
Currency Account Transfer of Shares and convertible
debentures Conversion of ECB / Lumpsum Fee/Royalty into
Equity Remittance of sale proceeds Issue
of shares by Indian companies under ADR / GDR Two-way
Fungibility Scheme Sponsored ADR/GDR issue Portfolio
Investment Scheme Investments by Overseas Corporate
Bodies (OCBs) Investments
by Venture Capital Funds Purchase of other securities
by NRIs Purchase of other securities by FIIs Investment
by MDBs Part
II Acquisition
and Transfer of Immovable Property in India Acquisition
and Transfer of Immovable Property in India Purchase
/ Sale of Immovable Property by Foreign Embassies / Diplomats/Consulate General Acquisition
of Immovable Property for carrying on a permitted activity Repatriation
of sale proceeds Prior permission for acquisition or
transfer of immovable property in India by citizens of certain countries Part
III Application
to RBI Liaison Offices Liaison
Office of foreign Insurance Companies Branch Offices Branch
Office in SEZs Branches of Banks Project
Offices General conditions Closure
of Offices Part
IV Investments
with repatriation benefits Investment by non-residents
other than NRIs / PIO Restrictions Annex-1 Annex-2 Annex-3 Annex-4 Annex-5 Annex-6 Annex-7 Annex-8 Annex-9 APPENDIX
Part
– I Foreign
Investments in India—schematic representation: Section-I:
Foreign Direct Investments
Foreign
Investment in India |
Foreign
Investment in India is governed by the FDI policy announced by the Government
of India and the provisions of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) 1999.
Reserve Bank of India has issued Notification No. FEMA 20/2000-RB dated May 3,
2000 which contains the Regulations in this regard. This notification has been
amended from time to time. |
Entry
routes for investments in India |
Foreign
investment is freely permitted in almost all sectors. Foreign Direct Investments
(FDI) can be made under two routes—Automatic Route and Government Route. Under
the Automatic Route, the foreign investor or the Indian company does not require
any approval from RBI or Government of India for the investment. Under the Government
Route, prior approval of the Government of India, Ministry of Finance, Foreign
Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) is required. Entry route for foreign investors
as well as sector-specific investment limits in India are given in Annex-2. FDI
Policy is formulated by the Government of India. The policy and procedures in
respect of FDI in India is available in 'the Manual on Investing in India-
Foreign Direct Investment, Policy & Procedures'. This document is
available in public domain and can be downloaded from the website of Ministry
of Commerce and Industry, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion— www.dipp.nic.in.
FEMA Regulations prescribe the mode of investments i.e. manner of receipt of funds,
issue of shares/convertible debentures and preference shares and reporting of
the investments to RBI. |
Prohibition
on investment in India |
Foreign
investment in any form is prohibited in a company or a partnership firm
or a proprietary concern or any entity, whether incorporated or not (such as Trusts)
which is engaged or proposes to engage in the following activities: (i)
Business of chit fund, or (ii)
Nidhi Company , or (iii)
Agricultural or plantation activities or (iv)
Real estate business, or construction of farm houses (v)
Trading in Transferable Development Rights (TDRs). It
is clarified that Real Estate Business does not include development of townships,
construction of residential/commercial premises, roads or bridges. It is further
clarified that partnership firms/proprietorship concerns having investments as
per FEMA regulations are not allowed to engage in Print Media sector. In
addition to the above, investment in the form of FDI is also prohibited
in certain sectors such as: (i)
Retail Trading (ii)
Atomic Energy (iii)
Lottery Business (iv)
Gambling and Betting (v)
Agriculture (excluding Floriculture, Horticulture, Development of seeds, Animal
Husbandry, Pisiculture and Cultivation of vegetables, mushrooms etc. under controlled
conditions and services related to agro and allied sectors) and Plantations (Other
than Tea plantations) |
Eligibility
for Invsting in India |
A
person resident outside India (other than a citizen of Pakistan or Bangladesh)
or an entity incorporated outside India, (other than an entity incorporated in
Pakistan or Bangladesh) can invest in India, subject to the FDI Policy of the
Government of India. Erstwhile
OCBs, who have converted themselves into companies incorporated outside India
can make fresh investments in India under the FDI Scheme provided they are not
under the adverse notice of RBI / SEBI. |
Type
of instruments |
Indian
companies can freely issue equity shares / convertible debentures and preference
shares subject to valuation norms prescribed under FEMA Regulations. Issue of
other types of preference shares such as non-convertible, optionally convertible
or partially convertible are considered as debt. As such, the guidelines applicable
for External Commercial Borrowing (ECB), viz. eligible borrowers, recognised lenders,
amount and maturity, end use stipulations, etc. will apply to such issues. Since
these instruments are denominated in rupees, the rupee interest rate will be based
on the swap equivalent of LIBOR plus the spread permissible for ECBs of corresponding
maturity. As far as Debentures are concerned, only those which are fully and mandatorily
convertible into equity, within a specified time would be reckoned as part of
equity under the FDI Policy. |
Investments
in Small Scale Industrial units |
A
foreign investor can invest in an Indian company which is a small scale industrial
unit provided it is not engaged in any activity which is prohibited under the
FDI policy. Such investments are subject to a limit of 24% of paid-up capital
of the Indian company/SSI Unit. An SSI Unit can issue equity shares / fully convertible
preference shares / fully convertible debentures more than 24% of its paid-up
capital if: (a)
It has given up its small scale status, (b)
It is not engaged or does not propose to engage in manufacture of items reserved
for small scale sector, and (c)
It complies with the sectoral caps specified in Annex-2. It
is clarified that the company/SSI Unit would be reckoned as having given up its
SSI status, if the investment in plant and machinery exceeds the limits prescribed
under the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006. |
Investments
in EOUs/FTZs/ EPZs/HTPs and STPs |
An
SSI Unit, which is an Export Oriented Unit or a unit in Free Trade Zone or in
Export Processing Zone or in a Software Technology Park or in an Electronic Hardware
Technology Park, issue of shares / convertible debentures / preference shares
exceeding 24% of the paid-up capital upto the sectoral caps specified in Annex-2.
|
Investments
in Asset Reconstruction Companies (ARCs) |
Persons
resident outside India (other than Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs)), can
invest in the equity capital of Asset Reconstruction Companies (ARCs) registered
with RBI under the Government Route. Automatic Route is not available for such
investments. Such investments have to be strictly in the nature of FDI and
investments by FIIs are not permitted. FDI is restricted to 49% of the
paid up capital of the ARC. However,
FIIs registered with SEBI can invest in the Security Receipts (SRs) issued by
ARCs registered with RBI. FIIs can invest upto 49% of each tranche of scheme of
SRs subject to the condition that investment by a single FII in each tranche of
scheme of SRs shall not exceed 10% of the issue. |
Investment
in infrastructure companies in the Securities Market |
Foreign
investment is permitted in Infrastructure Companies in Securities Markets, namely
stock exchanges, depositories and clearing corporations, in compliance
with SEBI Regulations and subject to the following conditions : i)
Foreign investment upto 49% of the paid up capital, is allowed in these companies
with a separate Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) cap of 26% and Foreign Institutional
Investment (FII) cap of 23%; ii)
FDI will be allowed with specific prior approval of FIPB; and iii)
FIIs can invest only through purchases in the secondary market. |
Investments
from Nepal & Bhutan |
NRIs
resident in Nepal and Bhutan as well as citizens of Nepal and Bhutan are permitted
to invest in shares and convertible debentures of Indian companies under FDI Scheme
on repatriation basis subject to the condition that the amount of consideration
for such investment shall be paid only by way of inward remittance in free
foreign exchange through normal banking channels or by debit to the NRE/ FCNR
(B) accounts of the NRIs. |
Issue
of Rights / Bonus shares |
FEMA
provisions allow Indian companies to freely issue Right / Bonus shares to existing
non-resident share-holders, subject to adherence to sectoral cap, if any. However,
such issue of bonus/rights shares have to be in accordance with other laws/statutes
like the Companies Act, 1956, SEBI (Disclosure and Investor Protection) Guidelines
(in case of listed companies) etc. The price of shares offered on right basis
by the Indian company to non-resident shareholders shall not be lower than the
price at which such shares are offered to resident shareholders. Rights
issue to erstwhile OCBs: As
such, entitlement of rights shares is not automatically available to Overseas
Corporate Bodies (OCBs). OCBs have been de-recognised as a class of investors
with effect from September 16, 2003. Therefore, Companies desiring to issue rights
shares to such erstwhile OCBs will have to take specific prior permission from
RBI. However,
bonus shares can be issued to erstwhile OCBs. Renunciation
of rights by residents to non-residents: Existing
non-resident shareholders are allowed to apply for issue of additional shares
/ convertible debentures / preference shares over and above their rights entitlements.
The investee company can allot the additional rights shares out of un-subscribed
shares, subject to the condition that the overall issue of shares to non-residents
in the total paid-up capital of the company does not exceed the sectoral cap. |
Acquisition
of shares under Scheme of Amalgamation / merger |
Mergers
and amalgamations of companies in India are usually governed by an order issued
by a competent Court on the basis of the Scheme submitted by the companies undergoing
merger/amalgamation. Once the scheme of merger or amalgamation of two or more
Indian companies has been approved by a Court in India, the transferee company
or new company is allowed to issue shares to the shareholders of the transferor
company resident outside India subject to the condition that: (i)
The percentage of shareholding of persons resident outside India in the transferee
or new company does not exceed the sectoral cap. (ii)
The transferor company or the transferee or new company is not engaged in activities
which are prohibited in terms of FDI policy. |
Issue
of shares under Employees Stock Option Scheme |
Listed
Indian companies are allowed to issue shares under the Employees Stock Option
Scheme (ESOPs), to its employees or employees of its joint venture or wholly owned
subsidiary abroad, other than citizens of Pakistan. Shares under ESOPs can be
issued directly or through a Trust subject to the condition that: (i)
The scheme has been drawn in terms of relevant regulations issued by the Securities
and Exchange Board of India; and (ii)
The face value of the shares to be allotted under the scheme to the non-resident
employees does not exceed 5 per cent of the paid-up capital of the issuing company. If
the company is not listed, it has to follow the provisions of the Companies Act,
1956. The Indian company can issue ESOPs to employees who are resident outside
India, other than citizens of Pakistan and Bangladesh. The issuing company
is required to report the details of such issues to the concerned Regional Office
of the Reserve Bank, within 30 days from the date of issue of shares under ESOPs. |
Reporting
of FDI |
Reporting
of inflow:
An
Indian company receiving investment from outside India for issuing shares / convertible
debentures / preference shares under the FDI Scheme, should report the details
of the inflow to the Reserve Bank not later than 30 days from the date of receipt.
Details to be reported are: (i)
Name and address of the foreign investor/s (ii)
Date of receipt of funds in foreign currency and its rupee equivalent (iii)
Name and address of the Authorised Dealer through whom the funds have been received,
and (iv)
Details of Government approval for the investment, if any. |
|
Reporting
of issue of shares After
issue of shares/convertible debentures/preference shares, the Indian company has
to file Form FC-GPR enclosed in Annex-6, not later than 30 days from the date
of issue. The form can be downloaded from the RBI website http://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/BS_ViewFemaForms.aspx.
Part
A of Form FC-GPR has to be duly filled up and signed by the Authorised Signatory
and submitted to the Authorised Dealer of the company, who will forward it to
the Reserve Bank. While
forwarding the Form, the Authorised Dealer will enclose a KYC Report on
the foreign investor. Along with Part A of FC-GPR, the following documents has
to be attached by the company: (i)
A certificate from the Company Secretary of the company certifying that (a)
all the requirements of the Companies Act, 1956 have been complied with; (b)
terms and conditions of the Government approval, if any, have been complied with; (c)
the company is eligible to issue shares under these Regulations; and (d)
the company has all original certificates issued by authorised dealers in India
evidencing receipt of amount of consideration; (ii)
A certificate from Statutory Auditors or Chartered Accountant indicating the manner
of arriving at the price of the shares issued to the persons resident outside
India. Both
the above reports have to be submitted to the concerned Regional Office of RBI
under whose jurisdiction the registered office of the company is situated. Part-B
of FC-GPR should be filed on an annual basis with the Reserve Bank. This filing
has to be done in the month of June every year, for all outstanding investment
by way of FDI as well as Portfolio / other investments and by way of re-invested
earnings for the previous April to March period. [For example, all Indian companies
who have received FDI, Portfolio investments, other investments (such as bonds,
debentures etc.) from foreign investors during the period April 2006 to March
2007, have to report in Part B of Form FC-GPR in the month of June 2007, along
with their retained earnings during the period.] The
above mentioned three stage reporting mechanism has to be followed wherever there
is inflow of funds through normal banking channels or debit to NRE/FCNR account
for investment purposes. Moreover, issue of bonus/rights shares or stock options
to persons resident outside India directly or on amalgamation / merger with an
existing Indian company, as well as issue of shares on conversion of ECB/royalty/lumpsum
technical know-how fee has to be reported in Form FC-GPR. |
Issue
Price |
Price
of shares issued to persons resident outside India under the FDI Scheme, shall
be worked out on the basis of SEBI guidelines in case of listed companies. In
case of unlisted companies, valuation of shares has to be done by a Chartered
Accountant in accordance with the guidelines issued by the erstwhile Controller
of Capital Issues. |
Foreign
Currency Account |
Indian
companies which are eligible to issue shares to persons resident outside India
under the FDI Scheme will be allowed to retain the share subscription amount in
a foreign currency account, with the prior approval of RBI. |
Transfer
of Shares and convertible debentures |
Foreign
investors can also invest in Indian companies by purchasing/ acquiring existing
shares from Indian shareholders or from other non-resident shareholders. General
permission has been granted to non-residents / NRIs for acquisition of shares
by way of transfer subject to the following:- - A
person resident outside India (Other than NRI and OCB) may transfer by way of
sale or gift the shares or convertible debentures to any person resident
outside India (including NRIs).
- NRIs
and erstwhile OCBs may transfer by way of sale or gift the shares or convertible
debentures held by him or it to another NRI.
In
both the above cases, if the transferee has previous venture or tie-up in India
through investment/technical collaboration/trade mark agreement in the same
field in which the Indian company, whose shares are being transferred, is
engaged, he has to obtain prior permission of SIA/FIPB to acquire the shares.
This restriction is, however, not applicable to the transfer of shares to International
Financial Institutions (i.e. ADB, IFC, CDC, DEG) and transfer of shares to Indian
company engaged in Information Technology Sector. - A
person resident outside India can transfer any security to a person resident in
India by way of gift.
- A
person resident outside India can sell the shares and convertible debentures of
an Indian company on a recognized Stock Exchange in India through a registered
broker.
| |
- A
person resident in India can transfer by way of sale, shares / convertible debentures
(including transfer of subscriber's shares), of an Indian company in sectors other
than financial service sector (i.e. Banks, NBFC, Insurance, ARCs and infrastructure
providers in the securities market such as Stock Exchanges, Clearing Corporations
etc.) under private arrangement to a person resident outside India, subject to
the guidelines given in Annex 3.
- General
permission is also available for transfer of shares / convertible debentures,
by way of sale under private arrangement by a person resident outside India to
a person resident in India, subject to the guidelines given in Annex 3.
- The
above General Permission also covers transfer by a resident to a non-resident
of shares / convertible debentures of an Indian company, engaged in an activity
earlier covered under the Government Route but now falling under Automatic Route
of RBI, as well as transfer of shares by a non-resident to an Indian company under
buy-back and / or capital reduction scheme of the company. However, this General
Permission is not available for transfer of shares / debentures of an entity engaged
in any activity in the financial service sector (i.e. Banks, NBFCs, ARCs
and Insurance),
Reporting
of transfer of shares between residents and non-residents and vice versa is to
be done in Form FC-TRS (enclosed in Annex-7). This Form needs to be submitted
to the AD Bank, which will forward the same to its link office. The link office
will consolidate the form and submit a report to RBI. AD
Category – I banks have been given general permission to open Escrow account and
Special account by non-resident corporates for open offers/ exit offers and delisting
of shares. The relevant SEBI (SAST) Regulations or any other applicable SEBI Regulations
/ provisions of the Companies Act, 1956 will be applicable. |
Prior
permission of RBI in certain cases for transfer of shares/ convertible debentures |
A
person resident in India, who intends to transfer any security, by way of gift
to a person resident outside India, has to obtain prior approval from Reserve
Bank. Reserve Bank considers the following factors while processing such applications:
- The
transferee (donee) is eligible to hold such security under Schedule 1, 4 and 5
of Notification No. FEMA 20/2000-RB dated 3rd May 2000, as amended from time to
time.
- The
gift does not exceed 5 per cent of the paid-up capital of the Indian company /
each series of debentures/each mutual fund scheme.
- The
applicable sectoral cap / foreign direct investment (FDI) limit in the Indian
company is not breached.
- The
transferor (donor) and the transferee (donee) are close relatives as defined in
section 6 of the Companies Act, 1956, as mended from time to time. The current
list is reproduced in Annex 5.
- The
value of security to be transferred together with any security already transferred
by the transferor, as gift, to any person residing outside India does not exceed
the rupee equivalent of USD 25,000 during a calendar year.
- Such
other conditions as stipulated by Reserve Bank in public interest from time to
time.
The
following instances of transfer of shares from residents to non-residents by way
of sale requires RBI approval: - Transfer
of shares or convertible debentures of an Indian company engaged in financial
sector (i.e. Banks, NBFCs, Asset Reconstruction Companies and Insurance),
- Transactions
which attract the provisions of SEBI (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers)
Regulations, 1997.
The
following instances of transfer of shares from residents to non-residents by way
of sale or otherwise requires Government approval followed by permission
from RBI: - Transfer
of shares of companies engaged in sectors falling under the Government Approval
Route,
- Transfer
of shares resulting in foreign investments in the Indian company, breaching the
sectoral cap applicable.
|
Conversion
of ECB / Lumpsum Fee/Royalty into Equity |
Indian
companies have been granted general permission for conversion of External Commercial
Borrowings (ECB) into shares/ preference shares, subject to the following conditions
and reporting requirements. - The
activity of the company is covered under the Automatic Route for FDI or the company
has obtained Government approval for foreign equity in the company,
- The
foreign equity after conversion of ECB into equity is within the sectoral cap,
if any,
- Pricing
of shares is as per SEBI regulations /erstwhile CCI guidelines/ in the case of
listed/unlisted companies as the case may be.
- Compliance
with the requirements prescribed under any other statute and regulation in force.
The
conversion facility is available for ECBs availed under the Automatic or Approval
Route. This would also be applicable to ECBs irrespective of whether due for payment
or not, as well as secured / unsecured loans availed from non-resident collaborators.
General permission is also available for issue of shares/preference shares against
lump-sum technical know-how fee, royalty, under automatic route or SIA / FIPB
route, subject to pricing guidelines of SEBI/CCI and compliance with applicable
tax laws. |
Reporting
Requirements |
Units
in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) are permitted to issue equity shares to non-residents
against import of capital goods subject to the following :-
- The
valuation should be verified by a Committee consisting of Development Commissioner
and the appropriate Customs officials.
- The
SEZ unit issuing equity in the above manner should report the particulars of the
shares issued in the Form FC-GPR.
Details
of issue of shares against conversion of ECB has to be reported to the concerned
Regional Office of the Reserve Bank, as indicated below:
- In case
of full conversion of ECB into equity, the company shall report the conversion
in form FC-GPR to the concerned Regional Office of the Reserve Bank as well as
in form ECB-2 submitted to the Department of Statistical Analysis and Computer
Services (DESACS), Reserve Bank of India, Bandra-Kurla Complex, Mumbai – 400 051,
within seven working days from the close of month to which it relates. The words
'ECB wholly converted to equity' shall be clearly indicated on top of the ECB-2
form. Once reported, filing of ECB-2 in the subsequent months is not necessary.
- In
case of partial conversion of ECB, the company shall report the converted
portion in form FC-GPR to the concerned Regional Office as well as in form ECB-2
clearly differentiating the converted portion from the unconverted portion. The
words 'ECB partially converted to equity' shall be indicated on top of the ECB-2
form. In the subsequent months, the outstanding portion of ECB shall be reported
in ECB-2 form to DESACS.
|
Remittance
of sale proceeds |
An
authorised dealer bank can allow the remittance of sale proceeds of a security
(net of applicable taxes) to the seller of shares resident outside India, provided
the security has been held on repatriation basis, the sale of security has been
made in accordance with the prescribed guidelines and NOC / tax clearance certificate
has been produced. |
Issue
of shares by Indian companies under ADR / GDR |
Depositary
Receipts (DRs) are negotiable securities issued outside India by a Depository
Bank, on behalf of an Indian company, which represent the local Rupee denominated
equity shares of the company held as deposit by a Custodian Bank in India. DRs
are traded in Stock Exchanges in the US, Singapore, Luxembourg etc. DRs listed
and traded in the US markets are known as American Depository Receipts (ADRs)
and those listed and traded elsewhere are known as Global Depository Receipts
(GDRs). In the Indian context, DRs are treated as FDI. Indian
companies can raise foreign currency resources abroad through the issue of ADRs/GDRs,
in accordance with the Scheme for issue of Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds
and Ordinary Shares (Through Depository Receipt Mechanism) Scheme, 1993 and guidelines
issued by the Central Government thereunder from time to time. The
company can issue ADRs/GDRs if it is eligible to issue shares to persons resident
outside India under the FDI Scheme. However, an Indian listed company, which is
not eligible to raise funds from the Indian Capital Market including a
company which has been restrained from accessing the securities market by the
Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) will not be eligible to issue ADRs/GDRs.
Unlisted
companies, which have not yet accessed the ADR/GDR route for raising capital in
the international market would require prior or simultaneous listing in the domestic
market, while seeking to issue such overseas instruments. Unlisted companies,
which have already issued ADRs/GDRs in the international market, have to list
in the domestic market on making profit or within three years of such issue of
ADRs/GDRs, whichever is earlier. ADRs/GDRs
are issued on the basis of the ratio worked out by the Indian company in consultation
with the Lead Manager to the issue. The proceeds so raised have to be kept abroad
till actually required in India. Pending repatriation or utilisation of the proceeds,
the Indian company can invest the funds in - - Deposits
with or Certificate of Deposit or other instruments offered by banks who have
been rated by Standard and Poor, Fitch, IBCA or Moody's etc. and such rating not
being less than the rating stipulated by Reserve Bank from time to time for the
purpose,
- Deposits
with branch outside India of an authorised dealer in India, and
- Treasury
bills and other monetary instruments with a maturity or unexpired maturity of
the instrument of one year or less.
There
are no end use restrictions except for a ban on deployment / investment
of such funds in Real Estate or the Stock Market. There is no monetary limit upto
which an Indian company can raise ADRs / GDRs. Voting
rights on shares issued under the Scheme shall be as per the provisions of Companies
Act, 1956 and in a manner in which restrictions on voting rights imposed on ADR/GDR
issues shall be consistent with the Company Law provisions. RBI regulations regarding
voting rights in the case of banking companies will continue to be applicable
to all shareholders exercising voting rights. Erstwhile
OCBs who are not eligible to invest in India through the portfolio route and entities
prohibited to buy, sell or deal in securities by SEBI will not be eligible
to subscribe to ADRs / GDRs issued by Indian companies. The
pricing of ADR / GDR issues should be made at a price not less than the higher
of the following two averages: (i)
The average of the weekly high and low of the closing prices of the related shares
quoted on the stock exchange during the six months preceding the relevant date;
(ii)
The average of the weekly high and low of the closing prices of the related shares
quoted on a stock exchange during the two weeks preceding the relevant date. The
"relevant date" means the date thirty days prior to the date on which
the meeting of the general body of shareholders is held, in terms of section 81
(IA) of the Companies Act, 1956, to consider the proposed issue. The
ADR / GDR proceeds can be utilised for first stage acquisition of shares in the
disinvestment process of Public Sector Undertakings / Enterprises and also in
the mandatory second stage offer to the public in view of their strategic importance.
|
Two-way
Fungibility Scheme |
A
limited Two-way Fungibility scheme has been put in place by the Government of
India for ADRs / GDRs. Under
this scheme, a stock broker in India, registered with SEBI, can purchase shares
of an Indian company from the market for conversion into ADRs/GDRs based on instructions
received from overseas investors. Re-issuance
of ADRs /GDRs would be permitted to the extent of ADRs / GDRs which have been
redeemed into underlying shares and sold in the Indian market. |
Sponsored
ADR/GDR issue |
An
Indian company can also sponsor an issue of ADR / GDR. Under this mechanism, the
company offers its resident shareholders a choice to submit their shares back
to the company so that on the basis of such shares, ADRs / GDRs can be issued
abroad. The
proceeds of the ADR / GDR issue is remitted back to India and distributed among
the resident investors who had offered their rupee denominated shares for conversion.
These proceeds can be kept in Resident Foreign Currency (Domestic) accounts in
India by the resident shareholders who have tendered such shares for conversion
into ADR / GDR. |
Reporting
of ADR/GDR Issues |
The
Indian company issuing ADRs / GDRs has to furnish to the Reserve Bank, full details
of such issue in the form enclosed in Annex-8, within 30 days from the date of
closing of the issue. The company should also furnish a quarterly return in the
form enclosed in Annex-9, to Reserve Bank within 15 days of the close of the calendar
quarter. |
Section-II:
Foreign Portfolio Investments
Portfolio
Investment Scheme |
Foreign
Institutional Investors (FIIs) registered with SEBI and Non-resident Indians (NRIs)
are eligible to purchase shares and convertible debentures issued by Indian companies
under the Portfolio Investment Scheme (PIS). The
FIIs who have been granted registration by SEBI should approach their designated
Authorised Dealer bank (known as Custodian Bank), for opening a foreign currency
account and/or a Non Resident Special Rupee Account. NRIs
can approach the designated branch of any AD bank authorised by RBI to administer
the Portfolio Investment Scheme for permission to open a NRE/NRO account under
the Scheme for routing investments. |
Investment
by FIIs under PIS Shareholding Prohibition
on investments
Exchange
Traded Derivative Contracts Forward
cover & cancellation and rebooking Margin
requirements
Accounts
with ADs
|
Reserve
Bank has given general permission to SEBI registered FIIs/sub-accounts to invest
under the PIS. Total
holding of each FII/sub account under this Scheme shall not exceed 10% of the
total paid up capital or 10% of the paid up value of each series of convertible
debentures issued by the Indian company. Total
holdings of all FIIs/sub-accounts put together shall not exceed 24% of the paid-up
capital or paid-up value of each series of convertible debentures. This limit
of 24% can be increased to the sectoral cap / statutory limit as applicable to
the Indian company concerned, by passing a resolution of its Board of Directors
followed by a special resolution to that effect by its General Body. A
domestic asset management company or portfolio manager, who is registered with
SEBI as an FII for managing the fund of a sub-account can make investments under
the Scheme on behalf of (i)
a person resident outside India who is a citizen of a foreign state, or (ii)
a body corporate registered outside India; Provided
such investment is made out of funds raised or collected or brought from outside
through normal banking channel. Investments by such entities shall not exceed
5% of the total paid-up equity capital or 5% of the paid-up value of each series
of convertible debentures issued by an Indian company, and shall also not exceed
the overall ceiling specified for FIIs. FIIs
are not permitted to invest in equity issued by an Asset Reconstruction Company.
They are also not allowed to invest in any company which
is engaged or proposes to engage in the following activities: i)
Business of chit fund, or ii)
Nidhi Company , or iii)
Agricultural or plantation activities or iv)
Real estate business, or construction of farm houses v)
Trading in Transferable Development Rights (TDRs). 'Real
Estate Business' mentioned above, does not include development of townships, construction
of residential/commercial premises, roads or bridges. SEBI
registered FIIs are allowed to trade in all exchange traded derivative contracts
on recognised Stock Exchanges in India subject to the position limits as prescribed
by SEBI from time to time. The SEBI registered FII/sub-account may open a separate
account under their Special Non-Resident Rupee Account through which all receipts
and payments pertaining to trading/investment in exchange traded derivative contracts
will be made (including initial margin and mark to market settlement, transaction
charges, brokerage etc.). Further, transfer between the Special Non-Resident
Rupee Account and the separate account maintained for the purpose of trading in
exchange traded derivative contracts can be freely made. However, repatriation
of the rupee amount will be made only through their Special Non-Resident Rupee
Account subject to payment of relevant taxes. The Authorised Dealer banks have
to keep proper records of the above mentioned separate account and submit them
to Reserve Bank as and when required. FIIs
are allowed to offer foreign sovereign securities with AAA rating as collateral
to the recognised Stock Exchanges in India for their transactions in derivatives
segment subject to SEBI guidelines. In order to accept the securities as collateral,
recognised Stock Exchanges have to take RBI approval under FEMA. AD
banks can also offer forward cover to FIIs to the extent of total inward remittance
net of liquidated investments. Rebooking of cancelled forward contracts is allowed
up to a limit of 2% of the market value of the entire investment of FIIs in equity
and / or debt in India. The limit for calculating the eligibility for rebooking
will be based upon market value of the portfolio as at the beginning of the financial
year (April – March). The outstanding contracts have to be duly supported by underlying
exposure at all times. The AD Category - I bank has to ensure that (i) total forward
contracts outstanding does not exceed the market value of portfolio and, (ii)
forward contracts permitted to be rebooked does not exceed 2% of the market value
as determined at the beginning of the financial year. The monitoring of forward
cover is to be done on a fortnightly basis. SEBI
registered FIIs / sub-accounts are allowed to keep with the Trading Member / Clearing
Member amount sufficient to cover the margins prescribed by the Exchange / Clearing
House and such amounts as may be considered necessary to meet the immediate needs.
FIIs/sub-accounts
can open a Foreign Currency denominated Account and / or a Special Non-Resident
Rupee Account for the purpose. They can transfer sums from the foreign currency
account to the rupee account for making genuine investments in securities in terms
of the SEBI (FII) Regulations, 1995. The sums may be transferred from foreign
currency account to rupee account at the prevailing market rate and the Authorised
Dealer bank may transfer repatriable proceeds (after payment of tax) from the
rupee account to the foreign currency account. The Special Non-Resident Rupee
Account may be credited with the proceeds of sale of shares / debentures, dated
Government securities, Treasury Bills etc., dividend, income received by way of
interest, forward contracts booked etc., by compensation received towards sale
/ renouncement of right offerings of shares and income earned on securities lent
under SEBI’s Securities Lending Scheme, 1997 after deduction of appropriate tax,
if any. Such credits are allowed, subject to the condition that the Authorized
Dealer bank should obtain confirmation from the investee company / FII concerned
that tax at source, wherever necessary, has been deducted from the gross amount
of dividend / interest payable / approved income to the share / debenture / Government
securities holder at the applicable rate, in accordance with the Income Tax Act.
The Special Non-Resident Rupee Account may be debited for purchase of shares /
debentures, dated Government securities, Treasury Bills etc., and for payment
of fees to applicant FIIs’ local Chartered Accountant / Tax Consultant where such
fees constitute an integral part of their investment process. |
Private
placement with FIIs |
SEBI
registered FIIs have been permitted to purchase shares / convertible debentures
of an Indian company through offer/private placement, subject to the ceilings
prescribed above, i.e. individual FII/sub account—10% and all FIIs/sub-accounts
put together—24% of the paid-up capital of the Indian company. Indian company
is permitted to issue such shares provided that: (i)
in the case of public offer, the price of shares to be issued is not less than
the price at which shares are issued to residents and (ii)
in the case of issue by private placement, the price is not less than the price
arrived at in terms of SEBI guidelines or guidelines issued by the erstwhile Controller
of Capital Issues, as applicable. Purchases can also be made of PCDs / FCDs/ Right
Renunciations / Warrants / Units of Domestic Mutual Fund Schemes. |
Allocation
of funds |
The
SEBI registered FII shall restrict allocation of its total investment between
equities and debt in the Indian capital market in the ratio of 70:30. The FII
may form a 100% debt fund and get such fund registered with SEBI. Investment in
debt securities by FIIs are subject to limits, if any, stipulated by SEBI in this
regard. |
Reporting
of FII investments |
An
FII may invest in a particular share issue of an Indian company either under the
FDI Scheme or the Portfolio Investment Scheme. The AD banks have to ensure that
the FIIs who are purchasing the shares by debit to the special rupee accounts
report these details separately in the LEC (FII) returns. The
Indian company which has issued shares to FIIs under the FDI Scheme (for which
the payment has been received directly into company’s account) and the Portfolio
Investment Scheme (for which the payment has been received from FIIs' account
maintained with an Authorised Dealer bank in India) should report these figures
separately under item no. 5 of Form FC-GPR (Post issue pattern of shareholding)
so that the details could be suitably reconciled for statistical / monitoring
purposes. A
daily statement in respect of all transactions (except derivative trade) have
to be submitted by the custodian bank in floppy / soft copy in the prescribed
format directly to Reserve Bank to monitor the overall ceiling / sectoral cap
/ statutory ceiling. |
Investments
by Non Resident Indians (NRIs) |
NRIs
are allowed to invest in shares of listed Indian companies in recognised Stock
Exchanges under the PIS. NRIs can invest on repatriation and non-repatriation
basis under PIS route upto 5% of the paid up capital / paid up value of each series
of debentures of listed Indian companies. The aggregate paid-up value of shares
/ convertible debentures purchased by all NRIs cannot exceed 10% of the paid-up
capital of the company / paid-up value of each series of debentures of the company.
The aggregate ceiling of 10% can be raised to 24%, if the General Body of the
Indian company passes a special resolution to that effect. The
NRI investor has to take delivery of the shares purchased and give delivery of
shares sold. Payment
for purchase of shares and/or debentures on repatriation basis has to be made
by way of inward remittance of foreign exchange through normal banking channels
or out of funds held in NRE/FCNR account maintained in India. If the shares are
purchased on non-repatriation basis, the NRIs can also utilise their funds in
NRO account in addition to the above. The
link office of the designated branch of an AD bank shall furnish to the Reserve
Bank, a report on a daily basis on PIS transactions undertaken by it, such report
can be furnished on-line or on a floppy to RBI. |
|
Shares
purchased by NRIs on the stock exchange under PIS cannot be transferred by way
of sale under private arrangement or by way of gift to a person resident in India
or outside India without prior approval of RBI. NRIs
are allowed to invest in Exchange Trade Derivative Contracts approved by SEBI
from time to time out of Rupee funds held in India on non-repatriation basis subject
to the limits prescribed by SEBI. |
Monitoring
by RBI Caution
List Ban
List |
When
the total holdings of FIIs/NRIs under the Scheme reach the trigger limit, which
is 2% below the applicable limit, Reserve Bank will issue a notice to all designated
branches of Authorised Dealer banks stating that any further purchases of shares
of the particular Indian company will require prior approval of Reserve Bank.
RBI gives case-by-case approvals to FIIs for purchase of shares of companies included
in the Caution List. This is done on first-come-first-served basis. Once
the shareholding by FIIs/NRIs reach the overall ceiling / sectoral cap / statutory
limit, Reserve Bank puts the company on the Ban List. Once a company is placed
on the Ban List, no FII or NRI can purchase the shares of the company under the
Portfolio Investment Scheme. |
Investments
by Overseas Corporate Bodies (OCBs) |
With
effect from November 29, 2001, OCBs are not permitted to invest under the PIS
in India. Further, the OCBs which have already made investments under the Portfolio
Investment Scheme are allowed to continue holding such shares / convertible debentures
till such time these are sold on the stock exchange. OCBs have been de-recognised
as a class of investors in India with effect from September 16, 2003. |
Section-III:
Foreign Venture Capital Investments
Investments
by Venture Capital Funds |
A
SEBI registered Foreign Venture Capital Investor (FVCI) with specific approval
from RBI under FEMA Regulations can invest in Indian Venture Capital Undertaking
(IVCU) or Indian Venture Capital Fund (IVCF) or in a Scheme floated by such IVCFs
subject to the condition that the VCF should also be registered with SEBI.
An
IVCU is defined as a company incorporated in India whose shares are not listed
on a recognized stock exchange in India and which is not engaged in an activity
under the negative list specified by SEBI. A VCF is defined as a fund established
in the form of a trust, a company including a body corporate and registered under
the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Venture Capital Fund) Regulations,
1996 which has a dedicated pool of capital raised in a manner specified under
the said Regulations and which invests in Venture Capital Undertakings in accordance
with the said Regulations. FVCIs
can purchase equity / equity linked instruments / debt / debt instruments, debentures
of an IVCU or of a VCF through initial public offer or private placement in units
of schemes / funds set up by a VCF. At the time of granting approval, RBI permits
the FVCI to open a foreign currency account or rupee account with a designated
branch of an AD bank. The
purchase / sale of shares, debentures and units can be at a price that is mutually
acceptable to the buyer and the seller. Authorised
Dealers can offer forward cover to FVCIs to the extent of total inward remittance.
In case the FVCI has made any remittance by liquidating some investments, original
cost of the investments has to be deducted from the eligible cover. |
Section-IV:
Other Foreign Investments
Purchase
of other securities by NRIs |
1.
On non-repatriation basis: NRIs
can purchase shares/ convertible debentures issued by an Indian company on non-repatriation
basis without any limit. Amount of consideration for such purchase shall be paid
by inward remittance through normal banking channels from abroad or out of funds
held in NRE / FCNR / NRO account maintained with the AD bank. NRI can also, without
any limit, purchase on non-repatriation basis dated Government securities, treasury
bills, units of domestic mutual funds, units of Money Market Mutual Funds. Government
of India has notified that NRIs are not permitted to make Investments in Small
Savings Schemes including PPF. In case of investment on non-repatriation basis,
the sale proceeds shall be credited to NRO account. The amount invested under
the scheme and the capital appreciation thereon will not be allowed to be repatriated
abroad. 2.
On repatriation basis: A
Non-resident Indian can purchase on repatriation basis, without limit, Government
dated securities (other than bearer securities) or treasury bills or units of
domestic mutual funds; bonds issued by a public sector undertaking (PSU) in India
and shares in Public Sector Enterprises being disinvested by the Government of
India, provided the purchase is in accordance with the terms and conditions stipulated
in the notice inviting bids. |
Purchase
of other securities by FIIs |
Foreign
Institutional Investors can buy dated Government securities / treasury bills,
listed non-convertible debentures /bonds issued by Indian companies and units
of domestic mutual funds either directly from the issuer of such securities or
through a registered stock broker on a recognized stock exchange in India. These
purchases are subject to limits notified by SEBI. |
Investment
by MDBs |
A
Multilateral Development Bank (MDB) which is specifically permitted by Government
of India to float rupee bonds in India can purchase Government dated securities. |
Foreign
Investment in Tier I and Tier II instruments issued by banks in India |
FIIs
registered with SEBI and NRIs have been permitted to subscribe to the Perpetual
Debt instruments (eligible for inclusion as Tier I capital) and Debt Capital instruments
(eligible for inclusion as upper Tier II capital), issued by banks in India, subject
to the following conditions. a)
Investment by all FIIs in Perpetual Debt instruments (Tier I) should not exceed
an aggregate ceiling of 49 per cent of each issue, and investment by individual
FII should not exceed the limit of 10 per cent of each issue. b)
Investments by all NRIs in Perpetual Debt instruments (Tier I) should not exceed
an aggregate ceiling of 24 per cent of each issue and investments by a single
NRI should not exceed 5 percent of the issue. c)
Investment by FIIs in Debt capital instruments (Tier II) shall be within the limits
stipulated by SEBI for FII investment in corporate debt. d)
Investment by NRIs in Debt Capital instruments (Tier II) shall be in accordance
with the extant policy for investment by NRIs in other debt instruments. The
issuing banks are required to ensure compliance with the conditions stipulated
above at the time of issue. They are also required to comply with the guidelines
notified by the Department of Banking Operations and Development (DBOD), Reserve
Bank of India, from time to time. The
issue-wise details of amount raised as Perpetual Debt Instruments qualifying for
Tier I capital by the bank from FIIs / NRIs are required to be reported in the
prescribed format within 30 days of the issue to the Reserve Bank. Investment
by FIIs in Upper Tier II Instruments raised in Indian Rupees will be outside the
limit prescribed by SEBI for investment in corporate debt instruments. However,
investment by FIIs in these instruments will be subject to a separate ceiling
of USD 500 million. The
details of the secondary market sales / purchases by FIIs and the NRIs in these
instruments on the floor of the stock exchange are to be reported by the custodians
and designated banks respectively, to the Reserve Bank of India through the soft
copy of the LEC Returns. | Part
II Acquisition
and Transfer of Immovable Property in India.
Acquisition
and Transfer of Immovable Property in India. |
A
person resident outside India who is a citizen of India (NRI) can acquire by way
of purchase, any immovable property in India other than agricultural land/plantation
property / farm house. He can transfer any immovable property other than agricultural
or plantation property or farm house to: a)
A person resident outside India who is a citizen of India or b)
A person of Indian origin resident outside India or c)
A person resident in India. He
may transfer agricultural land / plantation property / farm house acquired by
way of inheritance, only to Indian citizens permanently residing in India. Payment
for acquisition of property can be made out of: i)
Funds received in India through normal banking channels by way of inward remittance
from any place outside India or ii)
Funds held in any non-resident account maintained in accordance with the provisions
of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 and the regulations made by Reserve
Bank of India from time to time. Such
payment cannot be made either by traveller's cheque or by foreign currency
notes or by other mode other than those specifically mentioned above. |
|
A
person resident outside India who is a person of Indian Origin (PIO) can acquire
any immovable property in India other than agricultural land / farm house / plantation
property :- |
i.
By way of purchase out of funds received by way of inward remittance through normal
banking channels or by debit to his NRE / FCNR(B) / NRO account. ii.
By way of gift from a person resident in India or a NRI or a PIO. By
way of inheritance from a person resident in India or a person resident outside
India who had acquired such property in accordance with the provisions of the
foreign exchange law in force or FEMA regulations at the time of acquisition of
the property. |
| |
A
PIO may transfer any immoveable property other than agricultural land/Plantation
property/farmhouse in India a)
By way of sale to a person resident in India. b)
By way of gift to a person resident in India or a Non resident Indian or a PIO. A
PIO may transfer agricultural Land / Plantation property / farmhouse in India
by way of sale or gift to person resident in India who is a citizen of India. |
Purchase
/ Sale of Immovable Property by Foreign Embassies / Diplomats / Consulate General |
Foreign
Embassy / Consulate as well as Diplomatic personnel in India are allowed to purchase/
sell immovable property in India other than agricultural land/ plantation property
/ farm house provided (i) clearance from Government of India, Ministry of External
Affairs is obtained for such purchase / sale, and (ii) the consideration for acquisition
of immovable property in India is paid out of funds remitted from abroad through
banking channel. |
Acquisition
of Immovable Property for carrying on a permitted activity |
A
branch, office or other place of business, (excluding a liaison office) in India
of a foreign company established with requisite approvals wherever necessary,
is eligible to acquire immovable property in India which is necessary for or incidental
to carrying on such activity provided that all applicable laws, rules, regulations
or directions in force are duly complied with. The entity / concerned person is
required to file a declaration in the form IPI with the Reserve Bank, within ninety
days from the date of such acquisition. The non-resident is eligible to transfer
by way of mortgage the said immovable property to an AD bank as a security for
any borrowing. |
Repatriation
of sale proceeds |
In
the event of sale of immovable property other than agricultural land / farm house
/ plantation property in India by NRI / PIO, the authorised dealer will allow
repatriation of sale proceeds outside India provided; i)
the immovable property was acquired by the seller in accordance with the provisions
of the foreign exchange law in force at the time of acquisition by him or the
provisions of FEMA Regulations; ii)
the amount to be repatriated does not exceed (a) the amount paid for acquisition
of the immovable property in foreign exchange received through normal banking
channels or out of funds held in Foreign Currency Non-Resident Account or (b)
the foreign currency equivalent as on the date of payment, of the amount paid
where such payment was made from the funds held in Non-Resident External account
for acquisition of the property. iii)
In the case of residential property, the repatriation of sale proceeds is restricted
to not more than two such properties. In
the case of sale of immovable property purchased out of Rupee funds, ADs may allow
the facility of repatriation of funds out of balances held by NRIs/PIO in their
Non-resident Rupee (NRO) accounts upto US$ 1 million per financial year subject
to production of undertaking by the remitter and a certificate from the Chartered
Accountant in the formats prescribed by the CBDT. |
Prior
permission for acquisition or transfer of immovable property in India by citizens
of certain countries |
No
person being a citizen of Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, China,
Iran, Nepal or Bhutan shall acquire or transfer immovable property in India, other
than lease, not exceeding five years without prior permission of Reserve Bank.
Foreign nationals of non-Indian origin resident outside India are not permitted
to acquire any immovable property in India unless such property is acquired by
way of inheritance from a person who was resident in India. Foreign Nationals
of non Indian origin who have acquired immovable property in India by way of inheritance
with the specific approval of RBI cannot transfer such property without prior
permission of RBI. | Part
III Establishment
of Branch/Liaison/Project Offices in India
Application
to RBI |
Companies
incorporated outside India, desirous of opening a Liaison/Branch Office in India
have to make an application in form FNC-1 to the Reserve Bank of India, along
with the following documents: - English
version of the Certificate of Incorporation/ Registration or Memorandum &
Articles of Association attested by Indian Embassy/ Notary Public in the Country
of Registration.
- Latest
Audited Balance Sheet of the applicant entity.
|
Liaison
Offices |
Companies
which are incorporated outside India can establish Liaison Office in India with
the specific approval of the Reserve Bank. A Liaison Office (also known as Representative
Office) can undertake only liaison activities, i.e. it can act as a channel of
communication between Head Office abroad and parties in India. It is not allowed
to undertake any business activity in India and cannot earn any income in India.
Expenses of such offices are to be met entirely through inward remittances of
foreign exchange from the Head Office outside India. The role of such offices
is, therefore, limited to collecting information about possible market opportunities
and providing information about the company and its products to the prospective
Indian customers. Permission to set up such offices is initially granted for a
period of 3 years and this may be extended from time to time by the Regional Office
of RBI under whose jurisdiction the office is set up. A Liaison Office can undertake
the following activities in India: ii)
Representing in India the parent company/group companies. ii)
Promoting export import from/to India. iii)
Promoting technical/financial collaborations between parent/group companies and
companies in India. | |
iv)
Acting as a communication channel between the parent company and Indian companies. Liaison/representative
offices have to file an Annual Activity Certificate from a Chartered Accountant
to the Regional Office of RBI. The Certificate is obtained to ensure that the
Liaison Office has undertaken only those activities that have been approved by
RBI. |
Liaison
Office of foreign Insurance Companies |
Foreign
Insurance companies can establish Liaison Offices in India after obtaining approval
from the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority. Such Insurance companies
have been given general permission under FEMA for establishing Liaison Offices
in India. |
Branch
Offices |
Companies
incorporated outside India and engaged in manufacturing or trading activities
are allowed to set up Branch Offices in India with specific approval of the Reserve
Bank. Such Branch Offices are permitted to represent the parent/group companies
and undertaking the following activities in India: (i)
Export/Import of goods* (ii)
Rendering professional or consultancy services. (iii)
Carrying out research work, in which the parent company is engaged. (iv)
Promoting technical or financial collaborations between Indian companies and parent
or overseas group company. (v)
Representing the parent company in India and acting as buying/selling agent in
India. (vi)
Rendering services in Information Technology and development of software in India. (vii)
Rendering technical support to the products supplied by parent/group companies.
Foreign
airline/shipping Company. *
Retail trading activities of any nature is not allowed for a Branch Office
in India. | |
A
branch office is not allowed to carry out manufacturing, processing activities
in India, directly or indirectly. Branch Offices have to submit Annual Activity
Certificate from a Chartered Accountant to RBI. The branch offices are permitted
to acquire property for their own use and to carry out the permitted /incidental
activities but not for leasing or renting out the property. However, entities
from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Iran or China are not allowed
acquire immovable property in India even for a Branch Office. These entities are
allowed to take such property on lease basis only. Entities from Nepal are allowed
to establish only Liaison Offices in India. Profits earned by the Branch Offices
are freely remittable from India, subject to payment of applicable taxes. |
Branch
Office in SEZs |
RBI
has given general permission to foreign companies for establishing branch/unit
in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) to undertake manufacturing and service activities.
The general permission is subject to the following conditions: i)
such units are functioning in those sectors where 100 per cent FDI is permitted, ii)
such units comply with part XI of the Companies Act (Section 592 to 602), iii)
such units function on a stand-alone basis, iv)
in the event of winding-up of business and for remittance of winding-up proceeds,
the branch shall approach an Authorised Dealer in Foreign Exchange with the documents
mentioned in the paragraph below—'Closure of Office'—except the copy of RBI approval.
|
Branches
of Banks |
Foreign
Banks do not require approval from RBI under FEMA, if such Bank has obtained necessary
approval under the provisions of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. |
Project
Offices Opening
of Foreign Currency Account Intermittent
remittances by Project Offices in India |
Reserve
Bank has granted general permission to foreign companies to establish Project
Offices in India, provided they have secured a contract from an Indian company
to execute a project in India, and (a)
the project is funded directly by inward remittance from abroad; or (b)
the project is funded by a bilateral or multilateral International Financing Agency;
or (c)
the project has been cleared by an appropriate authority; or (d)
a company or entity in India awarding the contract has been granted Term Loan
by a Public Financial Institution or a bank in India for the project. However,
if the above criteria are not met, the foreign entity has to approach RBI to obtain
approval. ADs
can open non-interest bearing Foreign Currency Account for Project Offices
in India subject to the following: a)
The Project Office has been established in India, with the general/ specific permission
of Reserve Bank, having the requisite approval from the concerned Project Sanctioning
Authority, b)
The contract under which the project has been sanctioned, specifically provides
for payment in foreign currency, c)
Each Project has only one Foreign Currency Account. d)
The permissible debits to the account shall bepayment of project related expenditure
and credits shall be foreign currency receipts from the Project Sanctioning Authority,
and remittances from parent/group company abroad or bilateral/multilateral international
financing agency. e)
The responsibility of ensuring that only the approved debits and credits are allowed
in the Foriegn Currency Account shall rest solely with the concerned branch of
the AD. Further, the Accounts shall be subject to 100 percent scrutiny by the
Concurrent Auditor of the respective AD banks. f)
The Foreign Currency account has to be closed at the completion of the Project.
AD
branch can permit intermittent remittances by Project Offices pending winding
up / completion of the project provided they are satisfied with the bonafides
of the transaction and subject to the following: a)
The Project Office submits an Auditors' /Chartered Accountants’ Certificate to
the effect that sufficient provisions have been made to meet the liabilities in
India including Income-Tax etc. b)
An undertaking from the Project Office that the remittance will not, in any way,
affect the completion of the Project in India and that any shortfall of funds
for meeting any liability in India will be met by inward remittance from abroad. Inter
Project transfer of funds requires prior permission of the concerned Regional
Office of the Reserve Bank under whose jurisdiction the Project Office is situated. |
General
conditions |
Partnership/Proprietary
concerns set up abroad are not allowed to establish Branch/Liaison Offices in
RBI. Branch/Liaison/Project
Offices are allowed to open non-interest bearing current accounts in RBI. Such
Offices are required to approach their Authorised Dealers for opening the accounts.
Transfer
of assets of Liaison/Branch Office to subsidiaries or other Liaison/Branch Offices
is allowed with specific approval of the Central Office of RBI. |
Closure
of Offices |
At
the time of winding up of the Liaison Offices, the company has to approach the
respective Regional Office with documents such as: - Copy
of the Reserve Bank’s permission for establishing the Office in India;
- Auditor’s
certificate,—
- indicating
the manner in which the remittable amount has been arrived and supported by a
statement of assets and liabilities of the applicant, and indicating the manner
of disposal of assets;
- confirming
that all liabilities in India including arrears of gratuity and other benefits
to employees etc. of the branch/office have been either fully met or adequately
provided for;
- confirming
that no income accruing from sources outside India (including proceeds of exports)
has remained unrepatriated to India;
- No-objection
or Tax clearance certificate from Income-tax authority for the remittance; and
- Confirmation
from the applicant that no legal proceedings in any Court in India are pending
and there is no legal impediment to the remittance.
Once
RO's approval is obtained, ADs can allow remittance of surplus. At
the time of closure of Branch Offices, the entities have to approach the Central
Office for approval, with the same set of documents as mentioned above. |
Part
IV Investment
in Partnership Firm / Proprietary Concern
Investment
in Partnership Firm / Proprietary Concern |
A
non-resident Indian or a person of Indian origin resident outside India can invest
by way of contribution to the capital of a firm or a proprietary concern in India
on non-repatriation basis provided i)
Amount is invested by inward remittance or out of NRE / FCNR / NRO account maintained
with AD bank. ii)
The firm or proprietary concern is not engaged in any agricultural/plantation
or real estate business (i.e. dealing in land and immovable property with a view
to earning profit or earning income there from) or print media sector. iii)
Amount invested shall not be eligible for repatriation outside India. |
Investments
with repatriation benefits |
NRIs
/ PIO may seek prior permission of Reserve Bank for investment in sole proprietorship
concerns/ partnership firms with repatriation benefits. The application will be
decided in consultation with the Government of India. |
Investment
by non-residents other than NRIs / PIO |
A
person resident outside India other than NRIs / PIO may make an application and
seek prior approval of Reserve bank for making investment by way of contribution
to the capital of a firm or a proprietorship concern or any association of persons
in India. The application will be decided in consultation with the Government
of India. |
Restrictions
|
An
NRI or PIO is not allowed to invest in a firm or proprietorship concern engaged
in any agricultural/plantation activity or real estate business i.e. dealing in
land and immovable property with a view to earning profit or earning income therefrom
or engaged in Print Media. |
Annex-I |
Sectors/Activities
prohibited/restricted under FDI Policy | | |
(A) |
List
of Activities for which Automatic Route of RBI for investment from person resident
outside India is not available |
1. |
Petroleum
Refining (except for private sector oil refining), Natural Gas / LNG Pipelines
|
2. |
Investing
companies in Infrastructure & Services Sector |
3. |
Defence
and Strategic Industries |
4. |
Atomic
Minerals |
5. |
Print
Media |
6. |
Broadcasting |
7. |
Postal
services |
8. |
Courier
Services |
9. |
Establishment
and Operation of satellite |
10. |
Development
of Integrated Township |
11. |
Tea
Sector |
12 |
Asset
Reconstruction Companies | | |
(B) |
List
of activities or items for which FDI is prohibited |
1. |
Retail
Trading |
2. |
Atomic
Energy |
3. |
Lottery
Business |
4. |
Gambling
and Betting |
5. |
Housing
and Real Estate business |
6. |
Agriculture
(excluding Floriculture, Horticulture, Development of seeds, Animal Husbandry,
Pisiculture and Cultivation of vegetables, mushrooms etc. under controlled conditions
and services related to agro and allied sectors) and Plantations (Other than
Tea plantations) |
Annex-2 |
|
Sectoral
Cap on Investments by Persons Resident Outside India | |
Sector |
Investment Cap |
Description of Activity/Items/Conditions |
1. |
Private Sector Banking |
74% |
Subject
to guidelines issued by RBI from time to time | | | | |
2. |
Non-Banking Financial Companies |
100% |
FDI /NRI
investments allowed in the following 19 NBFC activities shall be as per the levels
indicated below : | | | |
a) |
Activities covered |
| | | |
1. 2.
3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. |
Merchant Banking Under
writing Portfolio Management Services Investment Advisory Services
Financial Consultancy Stock-broking Asset Management Venture Capital
Custodial Services Factoring Credit Reference Agencies Credit Rating
Agencies Leasing & Finance Housing Finance Forex-broking Credit
Card Business Money-changing Business Micro-credit Rural credit |
| | |
b) |
Minimum Capitalisation
norms for fund based NBFCs | | | | |
i) |
for FDI
upto 51%, US $ 0.5 million to be brought in upfront | | | | |
ii) |
If the FDI
is above 51 % and upto 75 %, US $ 5 million to be brought upfront |
| | | |
iii) |
If the FDI
is above 75 % and upto 100 %, US $ 50 million out of which $ 7.5 million to be
brought in upfront and the balance in 24 months | | | |
c) |
Minimum
Capitalisation norms for non-fund based activities | | | | |
Minimum
Capitalisation norm of US$0.5 million is applicable in respect of non-fund based
NBFCs with foreign investment. | | | |
d) |
Foreign
investors can set up 100% operating subsidiaries without the condition to disinvest
a minimum of 25% of its equity to Indian entities, subject to bringing in US $
50 million as at b) (iii) above (without any restriction on number of operating
subsidiaries without bringing in additional capital) | | | |
e) |
Joint Venture
operating NBFCs that have 75% or less than 75% foreign investment will also be
allowed to set up subsidiaries for undertaking other NBFC activities, subject
to the subsidiaries also complying with the applicable minimum capital inflow
i.e., (b)(i) and (b)(ii) above. | | | |
f) |
FDI in the
NBFC sector is put on automatic route subject to compliance with guidelines of
the Reserve Bank of India. RBI would issue appropriate guidelines in this regard. |
| | | |
3. |
Insurance |
26% |
FDI upto
26% in the Insurance sector is allowed on the automatic route subject to obtaining
license from Insurance Regulatory & Development Authority (IRDA) |
| | | | |
4. |
Telecommunications |
49% |
i) |
In basic,
Cellular, Value Added Services, and Global Mobile Personal Communications by Satellite,
FDI is limited to 49% subject to licensing and security requirements and adherence
by the companies (who are investing and the companies in which the investment
is being made) to the license conditions for foreign equity cap and lock-in period
for transfer and addition of equity and other license provisions. |
| | |
ii) |
ISP with
gateways, radio paging and end-to-end bandwidth, FDI is permitted upto 74% with
FDI, beyond 49% requiring Government approval. These services would be subject
to licensing and security requirements. | | | |
iii) |
No equity
cap is applicable to manufacturing activities. | | | |
iv) |
FDI upto
100% is allowed for the following activities in the telecom sector: |
| | | |
a) |
ISPs not
providing gateways (both for satellite and submarine cables) |
| | | |
b) |
Infrastructure
Providers providing dark fibre (IP Category 1) | | | | |
c) |
Electronic
Mail, and | | | | |
d) |
Voice Mail |
| | |
The above
would be subject to the following conditions: | | | |
a) |
FDI upto
100% is allowed subject to the condition that such companies would divest 26%
of their equity in favour of Indian public in 5 years, if these companies are
listed in other parts of the world. | | | |
b) |
The above
services would be subject to licensing and security requirements, wherever required |
| | |
c) |
Proposal
for FDI beyond 49% shall be considered by FIPB on case-to-case basis. |
5.
| (i)
| Petroleum
Refining (Private Sector) |
100% |
FDI permitted
upto 100 % in case of private Indian companies. | |
(ii) |
Petroleum Product Marketing
| 100%
| Subject
to the existing sectoral policy and regulatory framework in the oil-marketing
sector. | |
(iii) |
Oil Exploration in both
small and medium sized fields |
100% |
Subject
to and under the policy of Government on private participation in – a) exploration
of oil and b) the
discovered fields of national oil companies. | |
(iv) |
Petroleum Product Pipelines
| 100%
| Subject
to and under the Government Policy and regulations thereof. |
| | | |
6. |
Housing and Real Estate |
100% |
ONLY NRIs
are allowed to invest in the areas listed below: | | | |
a) |
Development
of serviced plots and construction of built-up residential premises |
| | |
b) |
Investment
in real estate covering construction of residential and commercial premises including
business centres and offices | | | |
c) |
Development
of townships | | | |
d) |
City and
regional level urban infrastructure facilities, including both roads and bridges |
| | |
e) |
Investment
in manufacture of building materials | | | |
f) |
Investment
in participatory ventures in (a) to (e) above | | | |
g) |
Investment
in housing finance institutions which is also opened to FDI as an NBFC. |
7. |
Coal and Lignite | |
i) |
Private
Indian companies setting up or operating power projects as well as coal and lignite
mines for captive consumption are allowed FDI upto 100%. | | | |
ii) |
100% FDI
is allowed for setting up coal processing plants subject to the condition that
the company shall not do coal mining and shall not sell washed coal or sized coal
from its coal processing plants in the open market and shall supply the washed
or sized coal to those parties who are supplying raw coal to coal processing plants
for washing or sizing. | | | |
iii) |
FDI upto
74% is allowed for exploration or mining of coal or lignite for captive consumption. |
| | |
iv) |
In all the
above cases, FDI is allowed upto 50% under the automatic route subject to the
condition that such investment shall not exceed 49%of the equity of a PSU. |
| | | |
8. |
Venture Capital Fund (VCF)
and Venture Capital Company (VCC) | |
Offshore
Venture Capital Funds/companies are allowed to invest in domestic venture capital
undertaking as well as other companies through the automatic route, subject only
to SEBI regulations and sector specific caps on FDI. | | | | |
9. |
Trading |
| Trading
is permitted under automatic route with FDI upto 51% provided it is primarily
export activities, and the undertaking is an export house/ trading house / super
trading house/ star trading house. However, under the FIPB route: |
| | |
i) |
100% FDI
is permitted in case of trading companies for the following activities: |
| | | |
a) |
exports; |
| | | |
b) |
bulk imports
with export/ ex-bonded warehouse sales; | | | | |
c) |
cash and
carry wholesale trading; | | | | |
d) |
other import
of goods or services provided at least 75% is for procurement and sale of the
same group and not for third party use or onward transfer/ distribution/sales. |
| | |
ii) |
The following
kinds of trading are also permitted, subject to provisions of Exim Policy. |
| | | |
a) |
Companies
for providing after sales services( that is not trading per se) |
| | | |
b) |
Domestic
trading of products of JVs is permitted at the wholesale level for such trading
companies who wish to market manufactured products on behalf of their Joint ventures
in which they have equity participation in India | | | | |
c) |
Trading
of hi-tech items/items requiring specialised after sales service |
| | | |
d) |
Trading of items for social
sector | | | | |
e) |
Trading
of hi-tech, medical and diagnostic items | | | | |
f) |
Trading
of items sourced from the small scale sector under which, based on technology
provided and laid down quality specifications, a company can market that item
under its brand name | | | | |
g) |
Domestic
sourcing of products for exports | | | | |
h) |
Test marketing
of such items for which a company has approval for manufacture provided such test
marketing facility will be for a period of two years, and investment in setting
up manufacturing facilities commences simultaneously with test marketing. |
| | | |
i) |
FDI upto
100% permitted for e-commerce activities subject to the condition that such companies
would divest 26% of their equity in favour of the Indian public in five years,
if these companies are listed in other parts of the world. Such companies would
engage only in business to business (B2B) e-commerce and not in retail trading. |
| | | |
10. |
Power |
100% |
FDI allowed
upto 100 % in respect of projects relating to electricity generation, transmission
and distribution, other than atomic reactor power plants. There is no limit on
the project cost and quantum of foreign direct investment. | | | | |
11. |
Drugs & Pharmaceuticals |
100% |
FDI permitted
upto 100% for manufacture of drugs and pharmaceuticals provided the activity does
not attract compulsory licensing or involve use of recombinant DNA technology
and specific cell/tissue targeted formulations. FDI proposals for the manufacture
of licensable drugs and pharmaceuticals and bulk drugs produced by recombinant
DNA technology and specific cell/tissue targeted formulations will require prior
Govt. approval. | | | | |
12. |
Road and highways, Ports
and harbours | 100% |
In projects
for construction and maintenance of roads, highways, vehicular bridges, toll roads,
vehicular tunnels, ports and harbours. | | | | |
13. |
Hotel & Tourism |
100% |
The term
hotels include restaurants, beach resorts and other tourist complexes providing
accommodation and/ or catering and food facilities to tourists. Tourism related
industry include travel agencies, tour operating agencies and tourist transport
operating agencies, units providing facilities for cultural, adventure and wild
life experience to tourists, surface, air and water transport facilities to tourists,
leisure, entertainment, amusement, sports and health units for tourists and Convention/Seminar
units and organisations. | | | |
For foreign
technology agreements, automatic approval is granted if | | | |
i) |
Upto 3%
of the capital cost of the project is proposed to be paid for technical and consultancy |
| | |
ii) |
Upto 3%
of the net turnover is payable for franchising and marketing/publicity support
fee, and | | | |
Upto 10%
of gross operating profit is payable for management fee, including incentive fee. |
| | | |
14. |
Mining |
74% |
i) |
For exploration
and mining of diamonds and precious stones FDI is allowed upto 74 % under automatic
route | | |
100% |
ii) |
For exploration
and mining of gold and silver and minerals other than diamonds and precious stones,
metallurgy and processing FDI is allowed upto 100 % under automatic route |
| | |
iii) |
Press Note
18 (1998 series) dated 14/12/98 would not be applicable for setting up 100 % owned
subsidiaries in so far as the mining sector is concerned, subject to a declaration
from the applicant that he has no existing joint venture for the same area and/or
the particular mineral. | | | | |
15. |
Advertising |
100% |
Advertising
sector - FDI upto 100% allowed on the automatic route | | | | |
16. |
Films |
100% |
Film Sector
(Film production, exhibition and distribution including related services/products) |
| | |
FDI upto
100% allowed on the automatic route with no entry-level condition |
| | | |
17. |
Airports |
74% |
Govt. approval
required beyond 74% | | | | |
18. |
Mass Rapid Transport
Systems | 100% |
FDI upto
100% is permitted on the automatic route in mass rapid transport system in all
metros including associated real estate development | | | | |
19. |
Pollution Control &
Management | 100% |
In both
manufacture of pollution control equipment and consultancy for integration of
pollution control systems is permitted on the automatic route |
| | | |
20. |
Special Economic Zones |
100% |
All manufacturing
activities except: | | | |
i) |
Arms and
ammunition , Explosives and allied items of defence equipments, Defence aircrafts
and warships, | | | |
ii) |
Atomic substances,
Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances and hazardous Chemicals, |
| | |
iii) |
Distillation
and brewing of Alcoholic drinks and | | | |
iv) |
Cigarette/cigars
and manufactured tobacco substitutes. | | | | |
21.
| Any
other Sector/ Activity |
100 % |
if not included
in Annexure A | | | | |
22.
| Air
Transport Services (Domestic Airlines) |
100% for NRIs 49% for
others |
No direct
or indirect equity participation by foreign airlines is allowed |
| | | |
23.
|
Townships, housing, built-up
infrastructure and construction - development projects The
sector would include, but not be restricted to, housing, commercial premises,
hotels, resorts, hospitals, educational institutions, recreational facilities,
city and regional level infrastructure. |
100% |
The investment
shall be subject to the following guidelines: |
(a) |
Minimum
area to be developed under each project shall be as under : | |
(i) |
In case
of development of serviced housing plots - 10 hectares. | |
(ii) |
In case
of construction -development project -50,000 sq.mtrs. | |
(iii) |
In case
of combination project, any one of the above two conditions. |
(b)
| The
investment shall be subject to the following conditions: | |
(i) |
Minimum
capitalization of US $ 10 Million for wholly owned subsidiaries and US $ 5 Million
for joint ventures with Indian partners. The funds would have to be brought in
within six months of commencement of business of the Company. |
|
(ii) |
Original
investment cannot be repatriated before a period of three years from completion
of minimum capitalization. However, the investor may be permitted to exit earlier
with prior approval of the Government through the FIPB. |
(c) |
At least
50% of the project must be developed within a period of five years from the date
of obtaining all statutory clearances. The investor shall not be permitted to
sell undeveloped plots. |
(d) |
The project
shall conform to the norms and standards, as laid down in the applicable building
control regulations, bye-laws, rules, and other regulations of the State Government
/ Municipal / Local Body concerned. |
(e) |
The investor
shall be responsible for obtaining all necessary approvals, including those of
the building / layout plans, developing internal and peripheral areas and other
infrastructure facilities, payment of development, external development and other
charges and complying with all other requirements as prescribed under applicable
rules / bye-laws / regulations of the State Government / Municipal / Local Body
concerned. |
(f) |
The State
Government / Municipal / Local Body concerned, which approves the building / development
plans, shall monitor compliance of the above conditions by the developer. |
Note:
For the purpose of these guidelines, 'undeveloped plots' will mean where roads,
water supply, street lighting, drainage, sewerage, and other conveniences, as
applicable under prescribed regulations, have not been made available. It will
be necessary that the investor provides this infrastructure and obtains the completion
certificate from the concerned local body / service agency before he would be
allowed to dispose of serviced housing plots. |
Annex-3 Terms
and conditions for Transfer of Shares/Convertible Debentures, by way of Sale,
from a Person Resident in India to a Person Resident Outside India and from a
Person Resident Outside India to a Person Resident in India
1.1
In order to address the concerns relating to pricing, documentation, payment/
receipt and remittance in respect of the shares/convertible debentures of an Indian
company, other than a company engaged in financial service sector, transferred
by way of sale; the parties involved in the transaction shall comply with the
guidelines set out below. 1.2
Parties involved in the transaction are (a) seller (resident/non-resident),
(b) buyer (resident/non-resident), (c) duly authorized agent/s of the seller and/or
buyer, (d) Authorised Dealer bank (AD) branch and (e) Indian company, for recording
the transfer of ownership in its books. 2.
Pricing Guidelines 2.1
The under noted pricing guidelines are applicable to the following types of
transactions: i.
Transfer of shares, by way of sale under private arrangement by a person resident
in India to a person resident outside India ii.
Transfer of shares, by way of sale under private arrangement by a person resident
outside India to a person resident in India 2.2
Transfer by Resident to Non-resident (i.e. to incorporated non-resident entity
other than erstwhile OCB, foreign national, NRI, FII) Price
of shares transferred by way of sale by resident to a non-resident shall not be
less than (a)
the ruling market price, in case the shares are listed on stock exchange, (b)
fair valuation of shares done by a Chartered Accountant as per the guidelines
issued by the erstwhile Controller of Capital Issues, in case of unlisted shares.
The price per share arrived at should be certified by a Chartered Accountant.
2.3 Transfer by Non-resident
(i.e. by incorporated non-resident entity, erstwhile OCB, foreign national,
NRI, FII) to Resident Sale
of shares by a non-resident to resident shall be in accordance with Regulation
10 B (2) of Notification No. FEMA 20/2000-RB dated May 3, 2000 which as below: (a)
Where the shares of an Indian company are traded on stock exchange,
i) The sale is at the prevailing market price on stock exchange and is effected
through a merchant banker registered with Securities and Exchange Board of India
or through a stock broker registered with the stock exchange; ii)
if the transfer is other than that referred to in clause (i), the price shall
be arrived at by taking the average quotations (average of daily high and low)
for one week preceding the date of application with 5 percent variation. Where,
however, the shares are being sold by the foreign collaborator or the foreign
promoter of the Indian company to the existing promoters in India with the objective
of passing management control in favour of the resident promoters the proposal
for sale will be considered at a price which may be higher by upto a ceiling of
25 percent over the price arrived at as above, (b) Where
the shares of an Indian company are not listed on stock exchange or are
thinly traded, i) if
the consideration payable for the transfer does not exceed Rs.20 lakh per seller
per company, at a price mutually agreed to between the seller and the buyer, based
on any valuation methodology currently in vogue, on submission of a certificate
from the statutory auditors of the Indian company whose shares are proposed to
be transferred, regarding the valuation of the shares, and ii) if
the amount of consideration payable for the transfer exceeds Rs.20 lakh per seller
per company, at a price arrived at, at the seller’s option, in any of the following
manner, namely: A) a
price based on earning per share (EPS linked to the Price Earning (P/E) multiple
,or a price based on the Net Asset Value (NAV) linked to book value multiple,
whichever is higher, or B) the
prevailing market price in small lots as may be laid down by the Reserve Bank
so that the entire shareholding is sold in not less than five trading days through
screen based trading system or C) where
the shares are not listed on any stock exchange, at a price which is lower of
the two independent valuations of share, one by statutory auditors of the company
and the other by a Chartered Accountant or by a Merchant Banker in Category 1
registered with Securities and Exchange Board of India.
Explanation: 1.
A share is considered as thinly traded if the annualized trading turnover in that
share, on main stock exchanges in India, during the six calendar months preceding
the month in which application is made, is less than 2 percent (by number of shares)
of the listed stock. ii) For
the purpose of arriving at Net Asset Value per share, the miscellaneous expenses
carried forward, accumulated losses, total outside liabilities, revaluation reserves
and capital reserves (except subsidy received in cash) shall be reduced from value
of the total assets and the net figure so arrived at shall be divided by the number
of equity shares issued and paid up. Alternatively, intangible assets shall be
reduced form the equity capital and reserves (excluding revaluation reserves)
and the figure so arrived at shall be divided by the number of equity shares issued
and paid up. The NAV so calculated shall be used in conjunction with the average
BV multiple of Bombay Stock Exchange National Index during the calendar month
immediately preceding the month in which application is made and BV multiple shall
be discounted by 40 per cent. iii) For
computing the price based on Earning Per Share, the earning per share as per the
latest balance sheet of the company shall be used in conjunction with the average
Price Earning Multiple of Bombay Stock Exchange National Index for the calendar
month preceding the month in which application is made and Price Earning shall
be discounted by 40 per cent. 3.
Responsibilities / Obligations of the parties All
the parties involved in the transaction would have the responsibility to ensure
that the relevant regulations under FEMA are complied with and consequent on transfer
of shares, the relevant individual limit/sectoral caps/foreign equity participation
ceilings as fixed by Government are not breached. Settlement of transactions will
be subject to payment of applicable taxes, if any. 4.
Method of payment and remittance/credit of sale proceeds 4.1
The sale consideration in respect of the shares purchased by a person resident
outside India shall be remitted to India through normal banking channels. In case
the buyer is a Foreign Institutional Investor (FII), payment should be made by
debit to its Special Non-Resident Rupee Account. In case the buyer is a NRI, the
payment may be made by way of debit to his NRE/FCNR (B) accounts. However, if
the shares are acquired on non-repatriation basis by NRI, the consideration shall
be remitted to India through normal banking channel or paid out of funds held
in NRE/FCNR (B)/NRO accounts. 4.2.
The sale proceeds of shares (net of taxes) sold by a person resident outside India)
may be remitted outside India. In case of FII the sale proceeds may be credited
to its special Non-Resident Rupee Account. In case of NRI, if the shares sold
were held on repatriation basis, the sale proceeds (net of taxes) may be credited
to his NRE/FCNR(B) accounts and if the shares sold were held on non repatriation
basis, the sale proceeds may be credited to his NRO account subject to payment
of taxes. 4.3
The sale proceeds of shares (net of taxes) sold by an OCB may be remitted outside
India directly if the shares were held on repatriation basis and if the shares
sold were held on non-repatriation basis, the sale proceeds may be credited to
its NRO (Current) Account subject to payment of taxes, except in the case of OCBs
whose accounts have been blocked by Reserve Bank. 2.
Documentation Besides
obtaining a declaration in the enclosed form FC-TRS (in quadruplicate), the AD
branch should arrange to obtain and keep on record the following documents: 1.
For sale of shares by a person resident in India i.
Consent Letter duly signed by the seller and buyer or their duly appointed agent
indicating the details of transfer i.e. number of shares to be transferred, the
name of the investee company whose shares are being transferred and the price
at which shares are being transferred. In case there is no formal Sale Agreement,
letters exchanged to this effect may be kept on record. ii.
Where Consent Letter has been signed by their duly appointed agent, the Power
of Attorney Document executed by the seller/buyer authorizing the agent to purchase/sell
shares. iii.
The shareholding pattern of the investee company after the acquisition of shares
by a person resident outside India showing equity participation of residents and
non-residents category-wise (i.e. NRIs/OCBs/foreign nationals/incorporated non-resident
entities/FIIs) and its percentage of paid up capital obtained by the seller/buyer
or their duly appointed agent from the company, where the sectoral cap/limits
have been prescribed. iv.
Certificate indicating fair value of shares from a Chartered Accountant. v.
Copy of Broker’s note if sale is made on Stock Exchange vi.
Undertaking from the buyer to the effect that he is eligible to acquire shares/convertible
debentures under FDI policy and the existing sectoral limits and Pricing Guidelines
have been complied with.
vii. Undertaking from the FII/sub account to the effect that the individual FII/
Sub account ceiling as prescribed by SEBI has not been breached. 3.
For sale of shares by a person resident outside India i.
Consent Letter duly signed by the seller and buyer or their duly appointed agent
indicating the details of transfer i.e. number of shares to be transferred, the
name of the investee company whose shares are being transferred and the price
at which shares are being transferred. ii.
Where the Consent Letter has been signed by their duly appointed agent the Power
of Attorney Document authorizing the agent to purchase/sell shares by the seller/buyer.
In case there is no formal Sale Agreement, letters exchanged to this effect may
be kept on record. iii.
If the sellers are NRIs/OCBs, the copies of RBI approvals evidencing the shares
held by them on repatriation/non-repatriation basis. The sale proceeds shall be
credited NRE/NRO account, as applicable. iv.
Certificate indicating fair value of shares from a Chartered Accountant. v.
No Objection/Tax Clearance Certificate from Income Tax authority/Chartered Account.
vi.
Undertaking from the buyer to the effect that the Pricing Guidelines have been
adhered to. 4.
Reporting requirements 4.1
For the purpose the Authorized Dealers may designate branches to specifically
handle such transactions. These branches could be staffed with adequately trained
staff for this purpose to ensure that the transactions are put through smoothly.
The ADs may also designate a nodal office to coordinate the work at these branches
and also ensure the reporting of these transactions to the Reserve Bank. 4.2
When the transfer is on private arrangement basis, on settlement of the transactions,
the transferee/his duly appointed agent should approach the investee company to
record the transfer in their books along with the certificate in the form FC-TRS
from the AD branch that the remittances have been received by the transferor/payment
has been made by the transferee. On receipt of the certificate from the AD, the
company may record the transfer in its books. 4.3
The actual inflows and outflows on account of such transfer of shares shall be
reported by the AD branch in the R-returns in the normal course. 4.4
In addition the AD branch should submit two copies of the Form FC-TRS received
from their constituents/customers together with the statement of inflows/outflows
on account of remittances received/made in connection with transfer of shares,
by way of sale, to IBD/FED/or the nodal office designated for the purpose by the
bank in the enclosed proforma (which is to be prepared in MS-Excel format). The
IBD/FED or the nodal office of the bank will in turn submit a consolidated monthly
statement in respect of all the transactions reported by their branches together
with a copies of the FC-TRS forms received from their branches to Foreign Exchange
Department, Reserve Bank, Foreign Investment Division, Central Office, Mumbai
in a soft copy (in MS- Excel) in by e-mail to fdidata@rbi.org.in 4.5
Shares purchased / sold by FIIs under private arrangement will be by debit /credit
to their Special Non Resident Rupee Account. Therefore, the transaction should
also be reported in (LEC FII) by the designated bank of the FII concerned.
4.6
Shares/convertible debentures of Indian companies purchased under Portfolio
Investment Scheme by NRIs, OCBs cannot be transferred, by way of sale under private
arrangement. 4.7
On receipt of statements from the AD, the Reserve Bank may call for such
additional details or give such directions as required from the transferor/transferee
or their agents, if need be.
Annex-4
Documents
to be submitted by a person resident in India for transfer of shares to a person
resident outside India by way of gift i.
Name and address of the transferor (donor) and the transferee (donee). ii.
Relationship between the transferor and the transferee. iii.
Reasons for making the gift. iv.
In case of Government dated securities and treasury bills and bonds, a certificate
issued by a Chartered Accountant on the market value of such security. v.
In case of units of domestic mutual funds and units of Money Market Mutual Funds,
a certificate from the issuer on the Net Asset Value of such security. vi.
In case of shares and debentures, a certificate from a Chartered Accountant on
the value of such securities according to the guidelines issued by the Securities
& Exchange Board of India or the erstwhile CCI for listed companies and unlisted
companies, respectively. vii.
Certificate from the concerned Indian company certifying that the proposed transfer
of shares/convertible debentures by way of gift from resident to the non-resident
shall not breach the applicable sectoral cap/ FDI limit in the company and that
the proposed number of shares/convertible debentures to be held by the non-resident
transferee shall not exceed 5 per cent of the paid up capital of the company.
Annex-5 Definition
of 'relative' as given in Section 6 of Companies Act, 1956. A
person shall be deemed to be a relative of another, if, and only if: (a)
they are members of a Hindu undivided family ; or (b)
they are husband and wife ; or (c)
the one is related to the other in the manner indicated in Schedule IA (as under)
1.
Father. 2.
Mother (including step-mother). 3.
Son (including step-son). 4.
Son's wife. 5.
Daughter (including step-daughter). 6.
Father's father. 7.
Father's mother. 8.
Mother's mother. 9.
Mother's father. 10.
Son's son. 11.
Son's son's wife. 12.
Son's daughter. 13.
Son's daughter's husband. 14.
Daughter's husband. 15.
Daughter's son. 16.
Daughter's son's wife. 17.
Daughter's daughter. 18.
Daughter's daughter's husband. 19.
Brother (including step-brother). 20.
Brother's wife. 21.
Sister (including step-sister). 22.
Sister's husband.
Annex-7
Form
FC-TRS |
Declaration
regarding transfer of shares of by way of sale from resident to non resident/ non-resident
to resident |
|
(to
be submitted to the AD branch in quadruplicate) |
|
The
following documents are enclosed (See Para 5 of Annex) For
sale of shares by a person resident in India (i)
Consent Letter duly signed by the seller and buyer or their duly appointed agent
and in the latter case the Power of Attorney Document (ii)
The shareholding pattern of the investee company after the acquisition of shares
by a person resident outside India (iii)
Certificate indicating fair value of shares from a Chartered Accountant. (iv)
Copy of Broker's note if sale is made on Stock Exchange. (v)
Undertaking from the buyer to the effect that he is eligible to acquire shares/convertible
debentures under FDI policy and the existing sectoral limits and Pricing Guidelines
have been complied with. (vi)
Undertaking from the FII/sub account to the effect that the individual FII/ Sub
account ceiling as prescribed by SEBI has not been breached. Additional
documents in respect of sale of shares by a person resident outside India (vii)
If the sellers are NRIs/OCBs, the copies of RBI approvals evidencing the shares
held by them on repatriation/non-repatriation basis. (viii)
No Objection/Tax Clearance Certificate from Income Tax Authority/Chartered Account.
|
1 |
Name
of the company |
|
|
|
Address
(including e-mail ,telephone Number Fax no) |
|
Activity |
|
|
|
NIC
Code No. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
Whether
FDI is allowed under Automatic route |
|
|
|
Sectoral
Cap under FDI Policy |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3 |
Nature
of transaction |
|
|
|
|
|
Transfer
from resident to non resident |
|
Transfer
from non resident to resident |
|
|
|
|
|
|
4 |
Name
of the buyer |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Category
(please tick
appropriate category) |
Individual |
Company |
FII |
Others |
|
In
case of Company/FII etc please indicate the constitution of the company i.e. Limited
company, registered partnership etc |
|
|
Date
and Place of Incorporation |
|
|
Address
of the buyer (including e-mail ,telephone Number Fax no) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
5 |
Name
of the seller |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Category
(Please tick
appropriate category) |
Individual |
Company |
FII |
Others(please
specify) |
|
In
case of Company/FII etc please indicate the constitution of the company i.e. Limited
company, registered partnership etc |
|
|
|
|
|
Date
and Place of Incorporation |
|
|
|
|
Address
of the seller (including e-mail ,telephone Number Fax no) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
6 |
Particulars
of earlier Reserve Bank/FIPB approvals |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7 |
Details
regarding shares/convertible debentures to be transferred |
|
|
Date
of the transaction |
Number
of shares |
face
value |
Negotiated
Price for the transfer** |
Amount
of consideration |
|
|
|
|
|
|
8 |
Foreign
Investments in the company |
|
|
|
|
|
No
of shares |
Percentage |
|
|
|
Before
the transfer |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
After
the transfer |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9 |
Where
the shares are listed on Stock Exchange |
|
If
so Name of the Stock exchange |
|
|
|
|
Price
Quoted on the Stock exchange |
|
|
|
|
|
Where
the shares are Unlisted |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Price as per Valuation
guidelines* |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Price
as per Chartered Accountants Valuation report |
*/
** |
CA
Certificate to be attached |
Declaration
by the transferor/transferee I/
We hereby declare that : (i)
The particulars given above are true and correct to the best of my/our knowledge
and belief (ii)
I/ We was/were holding the shares as per FDI Policy under FERA/ FEMA Regulations
on repatriation/non repatriation basis (iii)
I/ We are eligible to acquire the shares of the company in terms of the FDI Policy.
It is not a transfer relating to shares of a company engaged in financial services
sector or a sector where general permission is not available (iv)
The Sectoral limit under the FDI Policy and the pricing guidelines have been adhered
to Signature
of the Declarant or his
duly authorised agent Date:
|
Note In
respect of the transfer of shares from resident to non resident the declaration
has to be signed by the non resident buyer and In
respect of the transfer of shares from non resident to resident the declaration
has to be signed by the non resident seller |
Certificate
by the AD Branch It
is certified that the application is complete in all respects The
receipt /payment for the transaction is in accordance FEMA Regulations/ Reserve
Bank guidelines Signature Name
and Designation of the Officer Date:
Name of the AD Branch AD
Branch Code |
Annex-8
Return
to be filed by an Indian Company who has arranged issue of GDR/ADR |
[Refer
to paragraph 4(2) of Schedule 1 of Notification No. FEMA 20/2000-RB dated May
3, 2000] | |
|
Instructions
: The form should be completed and submitted to the Reserve Bank of India,
Foreign Investment Division, Central Office, Mumbai. | |
1. |
Name
of the Company | |
2. |
Address
of Registered Office | |
3. |
Address
for Correspondence | |
4. |
Existing
Business (please give the NIC Code of the activity in which the company is predominantly
engaged | |
5. |
Details
of the purpose for which GDRs/ADRs have been raised. If funds are deployed for
overseas investment, details thereof | |
6. |
Name
and address of the Depository abroad | |
7. |
Name
and address of the Lead/ Manager Investment/Merchant Banker | |
8. |
Name
and address of the Sub-Managers to the issue | |
9. |
Name
and address of the Indian Custodians | |
10. |
Details
of FIPB approval (please quote the relevant NIC Code if the GDRs are being issued
under the Automatic Route) | |
11. |
Whether
any overall sectoral cap for foreign investment is applicable. If yes, please
give details | |
12. |
Details
of the Equity Capital |
Before
Issue |
After
Issue | |
(a) |
Authorised
Capital | | |
|
(b) |
Issued
and Paid-up Capital | | |
| |
(i) |
Held
by persons Resident in India | | |
| |
(ii) |
Held
by foreign investors other than FIIs/NRIs/PIOs/ OCBs (a list of foreign investors
holding more than 10 percent of the paid-up capital and number of shares held
by each of them should be furnished) | | |
| |
(iii) |
Held
by NRIs/PIOs/OCBs | | |
| |
(iv) |
Held
by FIIs | | |
| |
Total
Equity held by non-residents | | |
|
(c) |
Percentage
of equity held by non-residents to total paid-up capital | | |
13. |
Whether
issue was on private placement basis. If yes, please give details of the investors
and ADRs/GDRs issued to each of them | |
14. |
Number
of GDRs/ADRs issued | |
15. |
Ratio
of GDRs/ADRs to underlying shares | |
16. |
Issue
Related Expenses | |
|
(a) |
Fee
paid/payable to Merchant Bankers/Lead Manager | |
| |
(i) |
Amount
(in US$, etc.) | |
| |
(ii) |
Amount
as percentage to the total issue | |
|
(b) |
Other
expenses | |
17. |
Whether
funds are kept abroad. If yes, name and address of the bank | |
18. |
Details
of the listing arrangement | |
|
Name
of Stock Exchange | |
|
Date
of commencement of trading | |
19. |
The
date on which ADRs/GDRs issue was launched | |
20. |
Amount
raised (in US $) | |
21. |
Amount
repatriated (in US $) | |
|
Certified
that all the conditions laid down by Government of India and Reserve Bank of India
have been complied with. | | |
Chartered Accountant
|
Authorised Signatory of the Company
|
Annex-9
Quarterly
Return |
[Refer
to paragraph 4(3) of Schedule 1 of Notification No. FEMA 20/2000-RB dated May
3, 2000] |
(to
be submitted to the Reserve Bank of India, Foreign Investment Division, Central
Office, Mumbai) | |
1. |
Name
of the Company | |
2. |
Address | |
3. |
GDR/ADR
issue launched on | |
4. |
Total
No. of GDRs/ADRs issued | |
5. |
Total
amount raised | |
6. |
Total
interest earned till end of quarter | |
7. |
Issue
expenses and commission etc. | |
8. |
Amount
repatriated | |
9. |
Balance
kept abroad - Details | |
|
(i) |
Banks
Deposits | |
|
(ii) |
Treasury
Bills | |
|
(iii) |
Others
(please specify) | |
10. |
No.
of GDRs still outstanding | |
11. |
Company's
share price at the end of the quarter | |
12. |
GDR
price quoted on overseas stock exchange as at the end of the quarter | |
|
Certified
that the funds raised through ADRs/GDRs have not been invested in stock market
or real estate. | | |
Chartered Accountant
|
Authorised Signatory of the Company
|
APPENDIX List
of Circulars/Notifications which have been consolidated in the Master Circular on
Foreign Investments / Acquisition of Immovable property in India/ Establishment
of Branch, Liaison and Project Offices in India and
investments in proprietary /partnership firms Notifications
Sl.No. |
Notification |
Date |
1. |
No.
FEMA 32/2000-RB |
December
26, 2000 |
2. |
No.
FEMA 35/2001-RB |
February
16, 2001 |
3. |
No.
FEMA 41/2001-RB |
March
2, 2001 |
4. |
No.
FEMA 45/2001-RB |
September
20, 2001 |
5. |
No.
FEMA 46/2001-RB |
November
29, 2001 |
6. |
No.
FEMA 50/2002-RB |
February
20, 2002 |
7. |
No.
FEMA 55/2002-RB |
March
7, 2002 |
8. |
No.
FEMA 62/2002-RB |
May
13, 2002 |
9. |
No.
FEMA 64/2002-RB |
June
29, 2002 |
10. |
No.
FEMA 65/2002-RB |
June
29, 2002 |
11. |
No.
FEMA 76/2002-RB |
November
12, 2002 |
12. |
No.
FEMA 85/2003-RB |
January
17, 2003 |
13. |
No.
FEMA 93/2003-RB |
June
9, 2003 |
14. |
No.
FEMA 94/2003-RB |
June
18, 2003 |
15. |
No.
FEMA 100/2003-RB |
October
3, 2003 |
16. |
No.
FEMA 101/2003-RB |
October
3, 2003 |
17. |
No.
FEMA 106/2003-RB |
October
27, 2003 |
18. |
No.
FEMA 108/2003-RB |
January
1, 2004 |
19. |
No.
FEMA 111/2004-RB |
March
6 , 2004 |
20. |
No.FEMA.118/2004-RB |
June
29, 2004 |
21. |
No.FEMA.122/2004-RB |
August
30, 2004 |
22. |
No.FEMA.125./2004-RB |
November
27, 2004 |
23. |
No.FEMA.130/2005-RB |
March
17, 2005 |
24. |
No.FEMA.131/2005-RB |
March
17, 2005 |
25. |
No.FEMA.138/2005-RB |
July
22, 2005 |
26. |
No.
FEMA.136 /2005-RB |
July
19, 2005 |
27. |
No.
FEMA.137/2005- RB |
July
22, 2005 |
28. |
No.FEMA.138/2005-RB |
July
22, 2005 |
29. |
No.
FEMA.149/2006-RB |
June
9, 2006 | Circulars
Sl.No. |
Circulars |
Date |
1. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.14 |
September
26, 2000 |
2. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.24 |
January
6, 2001 |
3. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.26 |
February
22, 2001 |
4. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.32 |
April
28, 2001 |
5. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.13 |
November
29, 2001 |
6. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.21 |
February
13, 2002 |
7. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.29 |
March
11, 2002 |
8. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.1 |
July
2, 2002 |
9. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.5 |
July
15, 2002 |
10. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.19 |
September
12, 2002 |
11. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.35 |
November
1, 2002 |
12. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.45 |
November
12, 2002 |
13. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.46 |
November
12, 2002 |
14. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.52 |
November
23, 2002 |
15. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.56 |
November
26, 2002 |
16. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.67 |
January
13, 2003 |
17. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.68 |
January
13, 2003 |
18. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.69 |
January
13, 2003 |
19. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.75 |
February
3, 2003 |
20. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.88 |
March
27, 2003 |
21. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.101 |
May
5, 2003 |
22. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.10 |
August
20, 2003 |
23. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.13 |
September
1, 2003 |
24. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.14 |
September
16, 2003 |
25. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.19 |
September
23, 2003 |
26. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.28 |
October
17, 2003 |
27. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.35 |
November
14, 2003 |
28. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.38 |
December
3, 2003 |
29. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.39 |
December
3, 2003 |
30. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.43 |
December
8, 2003 |
31. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.44 |
December
8, 2003 |
32. |
AP
(DIR Series) Circular No.53 |
December
17, 2003 |
33. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.54 |
December
20, 2003 |
34. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.63 |
February
3, 2004 |
35. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.67 |
February
6, 2004 |
36. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.89 |
April
24, 2004 |
37. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.11 |
September
13, 2004 |
38. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.13 |
October
1, 2004 |
39. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.15 |
October
1, 2004 |
40. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.16 |
October
4, 2004 |
41. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.39 |
April
25, 2005 |
42. |
A.P.DIR(Series)
Circular No.44 |
May
17, 2005 |
43. |
AP
(DIR Series) Circular No. 04 |
July
29, 2005 |
44. |
A.P.
(DIR Series) Circular No. 06 |
August
11, 2005 |
45. |
A.P.
(DIR Series) Circular No. 07 |
August
17, 2005 |
46. |
A.P.
(DIR Series) Circular No. 08 |
August
25, 2005 |
47. |
A.
P. (DIR Series) Circular No. 10 |
August
30, 2005 |
48. |
A.P.
(DIR Series) Circular No. 11 |
September
05, 2005 |
49. |
A.P.
(DIR Series) Circular No.16 |
November
11, 2005 |
50. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 24 |
January
25, 2006 |
51. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 4 |
July
28, 2006 |
52. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 5 |
August
16, 2006 |
53. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 12 |
November
16, 2006 |
54. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 25 |
December
22, 2006 |
55. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 32 |
February
8, 2007 |
56. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 40 |
April
20, 2007 |
57. |
A.P.(
DIR Series) Circular No. 62 |
May
24, 2007 | |