Foreign Exchange Management (Transfer or issue of any foreign security) Regulations, 2000
FEMA 19/2000-RB, dated 3-5-2000 [GSR 456(E), dated
3-5-2000] - In exercise of the
powers conferred by clause (a) of sub-section (3) of section 6 and section 47
of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (42 of 1999), the Reserve Bank of
India makes the following regulations relating to transfer or issue of any
foreign security by a person resident in India, namely :—
(i) These Regulations may be called the Foreign Exchange
Management (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) Regulations, 2000.
(ii) They
shall come into force on the 1st day of June, 2000.
In these Regulations, unless the context requires
otherwise :
(a) “Act” means Foreign Exchange Management
Act, 1999 (42 of 1999);
(b) “authorised dealer” means a person authorised as an authorised
dealer under sub-section (1) of section 10 of the Act;
(c) “American Depository Receipt (ADR)” means a security issued
by a bank or a depository in United States of America (USA) against underlying
rupee shares of a company incorporated in India;
(d) “Core Activity” means activity carried on by an Indian entity
which constitutes at least 50 per cent of its average turnover in the previous
accounting year;
(e) “Direct investment outside India” means investment by way of
contribution to the capital or subscription to the Memorandum of Association
of a Foreign entity, but does not include portfolio investment or investment
through stock exchange or by private placement in that entity;
(f) “Financial commitment” means the amount of direct investment
by way of contribution to equity and loan and 50 per cent of the amount of
guarantees issued by an Indian party to or on behalf of its overseas Joint
Venture Company or Wholly Owned Subsidiary;
(g) “Foreign Currency Convertible Bond (FCCB)” means a bond issued
by an Indian company expressed in foreign currency, and the principal and
interest in respect of which is payable in foreign currency;
(h) “Form” means the Form annexed to these
Regulations;
(i) “Global Depository Receipt (GDR)” means a security issued by
a bank or a depository outside India against underlying rupee shares of a company
incorporated in India;
(j) “Host country” means the country in which the foreign entity
receiving the direct investment from an Indian party is registered or
incorporated;
(k) “Indian party” means a company incorporated in India or body
created under an Act of Parliament, making investment in a Joint Venture or
Wholly Owned Subsidiary abroad, and includes any other entity in India as may
be notified by Reserve Bank :
Provided
that when more than one such company incorporated or bodies under an Act of
Parliament, makes a direct investment in the foreign entity, all such companies
or bodies together shall constitute the “Indian party”;
(l) “Investment banker” means an Investment banker registered
with the Securities and Exchange Commission in USA, or the Financial Services
Authority in UK, or appropriate regulatory authority in Germany, France,
Singapore or Japan;
(m) “Joint Venture (JV)” means a foreign entity formed, registered
or incorporated in accordance with the laws and regulations of the host
country in which the Indian party makes a direct investment;
(n) “Mutual Fund” means a Mutual Fund referred to in clause (23D)
of section 10 of the Income-tax Act, 1961;
(o) “Net worth” means paid-up capital and
free reserves;
(p) “Real estate business” means buying and selling of real estate
or trading in transferable development rights (TDRs) but does not include
development of townships, construction of residential/commercial premises,
roads or bridges;
(q) “Wholly Owned Subsidiary (WOS)” means a foreign entity formed,
registered or incorporated in accordance with the laws and regulations of the
host country, whose entire capital is held by the Indian party;
(r) Words and expressions used but not defined in these
Regulations shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them in the Act.
Prohibition on issue or transfer of
foreign security.
Save as otherwise provided in the Act or rules or regulations made or directions issued thereunder, no person resident in India shall issue or transfer any foreign security :
Provided
that the Reserve Bank may, on application made to it, permit any person
resident in India to issue or transfer any foreign security.
Purchase and sale of foreign security by a
person resident in India.
A person resident in India
(a) may purchase a foreign security out of funds held in Resident
Foreign Currency (RFC) account maintained in accordance with the Foreign
Exchange Management (Foreign Currency Accounts) Regulations, 2000;
(b) may acquire bonus shares on the foreign securities held in
accordance with the provisions of the Act or rules or regulations made
thereunder;
(c) when not permanently resident in India, may purchase a
foreign security from out of his foreign currency resources outside India;
(d) may sell the foreign security purchased
or acquired under clause (a), (b) or (c).
Explanation
- For the purpose of this clause, ‘not permanently resident’ means a person
resident in India for employment of a specified duration (irrespective of
length thereof) or for a specific job or assignment, the duration of which does
not exceed three years.
Part I
Prohibition on Direct Investment outside
India.
Save as otherwise provided in the Act, rules or
regulations made or directions issued thereunder, or with prior approval of
Reserve Bank,
(1) no person resident in India shall make
any direct investment outside India; and
(2) no Indian party shall make any direct
investment in a foreign entity engaged in real estate business or banking business.
Permission for
Direct Investment in certain cases.
(1) Subject to the conditions specified in
sub-regulation (2), an Indian party may make direct investment in a Joint
Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India.
(2) (i) 1[The total financial
commitment of the Indian Party in Joint Ventures/Wholly Owned Subsidiaries
shall not exceed 2[US $ 100 (one hundred)
million] or its equivalent in any one financial year, except investment in
Nepal, Bhutan and Pakistan :
3[Provided that in respect of
commitment in Joint Ventures/Wholly Owned Subsidiaries in Myanmar and SAARC
countries (other than Nepal, Bhutan and Pakistan) the total commitment shall
not exceed US $ 150 million or equivalent in any one financial year :]
4[Provided further
that the ceiling of 5[US $ 100 million] shall not apply to
financial commitment by a unit located in a Special Economic Zone where the
investment is made out of balances held in its EEFC account, maintained in
accordance with the Foreign Exchange Management (Foreign Currency Accounts by a
Person Resident in India) Regulations, 2000, as amended from time to time.]
(ii) 1[In respect of direct
investment in Nepal or Bhutan, in Indian rupees the total financial commitment
shall not exceed Indian Rupees 6[700 crores] in any one financial year;]
7[(iii) The direct investment is made in the
Overseas JV or WOS engaged in a bona fide business activity;]
(iv) 8[* * *];
(v) The Indian Party is not on the Reserve
Bank’s caution List or under investigation by the Enforcement Directorate;
(vi) The Indian Party routes all transactions
relating to the investment in a Joint Venture/Wholly Owned Subsidiary through
only one branch of an authorised dealer to be designated by it.
Explanation - The Indian Party may
designate different branches of authorised dealers for different Joint
Ventures/Wholly Owned Subsidiaries outside India;
(vii) The Indian Party submits Form ODA, duly completed,
to the designated branch of an authorised dealer for onward transmission to
Reserve Bank.
(3) Investment
under this Regulation may be funded out of one or more of the following
sources, namely :—
(i) out of balance held in the Exchange Earners Foreign Currency
Account of the Indian party maintained with an authorised dealer in accordance
with Regulation 4 of the Foreign Exchange Management (Foreign Currency
Accounts) Regulations, 2000;
(ii) drawal of foreign exchange from an authorised dealer in India 1[up to
100 per cent] of the networth of the Indian Party as on the date
of last audited balance sheet;
2[(iii) utilisation
of the amount raised by issue of ADRs/GDRs by the Indian Party.]
3 [***]
(5) An
Indian Party may extend a loan or a guarantee to or on behalf of the Joint
Venture/Wholly Owned Subsidiary abroad, within the permissible financial
commitment, provided that the Indian Party has made investment by way of
contribution to the equity capital of the Joint Venture.
(6) An
Indian Party may make direct investment without any limit in any foreign
security out of the proceeds of its international offering of shares through
the mechanism of ADR and/or GDR :
Provided
that :
(a) the ADR/GDR issue has been made in accordance with the Scheme
for issue of Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds and Ordinary Shares (Through
Depository Receipt Mechanism) Scheme, 1993 and the guidelines issued thereunder
from time to time by the Central Government;
(b) 4 [* * *]
(c) the Indian Party files with Reserve Bank, in Form ODA full
details of the investment made, within 30 days of such investment.
5[(7)(a)
For the purposes of investment
under this Regulation by way of remittance from India, the valuation of shares
of the company outside India shall be made,
(i) where the investment is more than US $ 5 (Five) million,
by a Category I Merchant Banker Registered with Securities and Exchange Board
of India (SEBI), or an Investment Banker/Merchant Banker outside India
registered with the appropriate regulatory authority in the host country; and
(ii) in all other cases, by a Chartered
Accountant or a Certified Public Accountant.
(b) For the purposes of investment under this Regulation by
acquisition of shares of an existing company outside India where the
consideration is to be paid fully or partly by issue of the Indian party’s
shares, the valuation of shares of the company outside India shall in all
cases, be carried out by a Category I Merchant Banker registered with the
Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) or an Investment Banker/Merchant
Banker outside India registered with the appropriate regulatory authority in
the host country.]
1[Permission for Direct
Investment in Equity of Companies Registered Overseas:
A person resident in India, being an individual or a listed Indian company or a mutual fund registered in India, may invest in the shares of an overseas company which is listed on a recognised stock exchange and has a shareholding in its name of not less than 10% in any listed Indian company as on 1st January of the year of investment, provided that :—
(i) in
the case of investment by the listed Indian company, the investment shall not
exceed 25% of its net worth shown in its latest audited balance sheet;
(ii) in
the case of investment by Mutual Fund, the investment shall not exceed the
ceiling stipulated by Securities & Exchange Board of India (SEBI) from time
to time;
(iii) every
transaction relating to purchase and sale of shares of the overseas company
shall be routed through the designated branch of an authorised dealer in
India.]
Investment in Financial Services Sector.
Subject to the Regulations in Part I, an Indian party
engaged in the financial services activities, may make investment in an entity
outside India also engaged in financial services activities :
Provided
that the Indian party—
(i) has earned net profit during the preceding three financial
years from the financial services activities;
(ii) is registered with the appropriate regulatory authority in
India for conducting the financial services activities;
(iii) has a minimum net worth of Rs. 15 crores as on the date of the
last audited balance sheet; and
(iv) has fulfilled the prudential norms relating to capital
adequacy as prescribed by the concerned regulatory authority in India.
Investment in a foreign security by swap
or exchange of shares of an Indian company.
2[(1) An
Indian party may acquire shares of a foreign company, engaged in the same core
activity, in exchange of ADRs/GDRs issued to the latter in accordance with the
scheme for issue of Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds and Ordinary Shares
(Through Depository Receipt Mechanism) Scheme, 1993, and the guidelines issued
thereunder from time to time by the Central Government :
Provided that—
(a) the Indian Party has already made an ADR
and/or GDR issue and that such ADRs/GDRs are currently Listed on any stock
exchange outside India;
(b) such investment by the Indian Party does
not exceed the higher of the following amounts, namely:—
(i) amount
equivalent of US $ 100 mn, or
(ii) amount equivalent to 10 times the export
earnings of the Indian Party during the preceding financial year as reflected
in its audited balance sheet, inclusive of all investments made under
Regulations in Part I, including under (i) of this clause, in the same
financial year,
(c) the ADR and/or GDR issue for the purpose
of acquisition is backed by underlying fresh equity shares issued by the Indian
Party;
(d) the total holding in the Indian Party by
persons resident outside India in the expanded capital base, after the new ADR
and/or GDR issue, does not exceed the sectoral cap prescribed under the
relevant regulations for such investment;
(e) the
valuation of the shares of the foreign company is made,—
(A) as per the recommendations of the
Investment Banker if the shares are not Listed on any stock exchange; or
(B) based on the current market
capitalization of the foreign company arrived at on the basis of monthly
average price on any stock exchange abroad for the three months preceding the
month in which the acquisition is committed and over and above,the premium, if
any, as recommended by the Investment Banker in its due diligence report in
other cases.]
(2) Within 30 days from the date of issue of
ADRs and/or GDRs in exchange for acquisition of shares of the foreign company
under sub-regulation (1), the Indian Party shall submit a report in Form ODG to
the Reserve Bank.
Approval
of Reserve Bank in certain cases.
(1) An Indian Party which does not satisfy the
eligibility norms under Regulation 6 or 7 or 8, may apply to the Reserve Bank
for approval.
(2) Application for direct investment in Joint
Venture/Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India, or by way of exchange for shares
of a foreign company, shall be made in Form ODI, or in Form ODB, respectively.
1[(2A) An application made
under sub-regulation (2) in Form ODI
(a) for the purpose of investment by way of
remittance from India, shall be accompanied by the valuation of shares of the
company outside India, made—
(i) where the investment is more than US $
5 (Five) million, by a Category I Merchant Banker Registered with the SEBI or
an Investment Banker/Merchant Banker registered with the appropriate regulatory
authority in the host country; and
(ii) in
all other cases, by a Chartered Accountant or a Certified Public Accountant.
(b) For the purposes of investment by
acquisition of shares of an existing company outside India where the
consideration is to be paid fully or partly by issue of the Indian party’s
shares, shall be accompanied by the valuation carried out by a Category I
Merchant Banker registered with the SEBI or an Investment Banker/Merchant
Banker registered with the appropriate regulatory authority in the host
country.]
(3) Reserve
Bank may, inter alia, take into account following factors while
considering the application made under sub-regulation (2):
(a) prima facie viability of the Joint
Venture/Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India;
(b) contribution to external trade and other benefits which will
accrue to India through such investment;
(c) financial position and business track
record of the Indian Party and the foreign entity;
(d) expertise and experience of the Indian Party in the same or
related line of activity of the Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary
outside India.
1[Block allocation by
Reserve Bank.
(1) Reserve
Bank may, on application made to it, approve, subject to such terms and
conditions as considered necessary, a block allocation of foreign exchange to
an Indian Party which has exhausted the limit available to it under
sub-regulation (2) of Regulation 6.
(2) For
considering the application made under sub-regulation (1), the Reserve Bank may
take into account the factors mentioned in sub-regulation (3) of Regulation 9.]
Reserve Bank will allot a Unique Identification
Number for each Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India and the
Indian Party shall quote such number in all its communications and reports to
the Reserve Bank and the authorised dealer.
Method of Investment by capitalisation.
An Indian Party may also make direct investment
outside India in accordance with the Regulations in Part I by way of
capitalisation in full or part of the amount due to the Indian Party from the
foreign entity as follows:—
(i) payment for export of plant, machinery, equipment and other
goods/software to the foreign entity;
(ii) fees, royalties, commissions or other entitlements of the
Indian party due from the foreign entity for the supply of technical know-how,
consultancy, managerial or other services:
Provided
that where the export proceeds have remained unrealised beyond a period of six
months from the date of export, such proceeds shall not be capitalised without
the prior permission of Reserve Bank.
Export of Goods towards Equity.
(1) An
Indian Party exporting goods/software/plant and machinery from India towards
equity contribution in a Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India
shall declare it on GR/SDF/SOFTEX Form, as the case may be, which shall be
superscribed as “Exports against equity participation in the JV/WOS abroad”,
and also quoting Identification Number, if already allotted by Reserve Bank.
(2) Notwithstanding
anything contained in Regulation 11 of the Foreign Exchange Management (Export
of Goods and Services) Regulations, 2000, the Indian Party shall, within 15
days of effecting the shipment of the goods, submit to the Reserve Bank a
custom certified copy of the invoice through the branch of an authorised dealer
designated by it.
(3) An
Indian Party capitalising exports under Regulation 1[11] shall, within six months from the date of
export, or any further time as allowed by Reserve Bank, submit to Reserve Bank
copy/ies of the share certificate/s or any document issued by the Joint Venture
or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India to the satisfaction of Reserve Bank
evidencing the investment from the Indian Party together with the duplicate of
GR/SDF/SOFTEX Form through, the branch of an authorised dealer designated by
it.
Submission of Information to Reserve
Bank.
(1) Where
the Indian Party holds 50 per cent or more of the paid-up capital of the
foreign entity and
(i) the foreign entity has been in
operation for a period of less than two years; or
(ii) the Indian Party has not repatriated the amount of dividends,
fees and royalties due to it from the foreign entity; or
(iii) proceeds of exports to the foreign entity have not been
realised in accordance with the Foreign Exchange Management (Export of Goods
and Services) Regulations, 2000; or
(iv) additional capital contribution will be
required from India; or
(v) the percentage of equity shareholding of the Indian Party in
the foreign entity is being reduced otherwise than in pursuance of the laws of
the host country,
the Indian Party shall not consent to the decision
relating to the following subject matters, without prior approval of the
Reserve Bank—
(a) undertaking any activity other than the activity in which the
foreign entity was engaged/or proposed to be engaged at the time of investment
by the Indian Party; or
(b) participation in the capital of another
foreign entity; or
(c) alteration of the company’s capital structure, authorised or
issued, or its shareholding pattern.
(2) The
restriction contained in sub-regulation (1) shall not apply where the
investment in the foreign entity is entirely made out of balances held in
Exchange Earners Foreign Currency account of the Indian Party and/or out of
foreign currency resources raised by the Indian Party through ADR/GDR issue.
Acquisition of a foreign company
through bidding or tender procedure.
(1) On
being approached by an Indian Party, which is eligible under the Regulations in
Part I to make investment outside India, an authorised dealer may allow
remittance towards earnest money deposit or issue a bid bond guarantee on its
behalf for participation in bidding or tender procedure for acquisition of a
company incorporated outside India.
(2) On the
Indian Party winning the bid,
(i) the authorised dealer may allow further remittances towards
acquisition of the foreign company, subject to the ceilings specified in
Regulation 6; and
(ii) the Indian Party shall submit through the authorised dealer
concerned a report to the Reserve Bank in Form ODA within 30 days of effecting
the final remittance.
(3) For
participation in bidding or tender procedure for acquisition of a company
incorporated outside India which does not fall within the provisions of
sub-regulation (1), the Reserve Bank may, on application in Form ODI, allow
remittance of foreign exchange towards earnest money deposit or permit the
authorised dealer in India to issue a bid bond guarantee, subject to such terms
and conditions as Reserve Bank may stipulate.
(4) In
case the Indian Party is successful in the bid but the terms and conditions of
acquisition of a company outside India, are,—
(a) not in conformity with the provisions of Regulations in Part
I, or different from those for which approval under sub-regulation (3) was
obtained, the Indian Party shall submit application in Form ODI to Reserve
Bank for obtaining approval for the foreign direct investment in the manner
specified in Regulation 9, or
(b) in conformity with the provisions of the Regulations in Part I
or are same as those for which approval under sub-regulation (3) was obtained,
the Indian Party shall submit a report to the Reserve Bank, giving details of
the remittances made, within 30 days of effecting the final remittance.
Obligations of the Indian Party.
An Indian Party which has acquired foreign security
in terms of the Regulations in Part I shall—
(i) receive share certificates or any other document as an
evidence of investment in the foreign entity to the satisfaction of the Reserve
Bank within six months, or such further period as Reserve Bank may permit, from
the date of effecting remittance or the date on which the amount to be
capitalised became due to the Indian Party or the date on which the amount due
was allowed to be capitalised;
(ii) repatriate to India, all dues receivable from the foreign
entity, like dividend, royalty, technical fees, etc. within 60 days of its
falling due, or such further period as the Reserve Bank may permit;
(iii) submit to the Reserve Bank every year within 60 days from the
date of expiry of the statutory period as prescribed by the respective laws of
the host country for finalisation of the audited accounts of the Joint
Venture/Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India or such further period as may be
allowed by Reserve Bank, an annual performance report in Form APR in respect
of each Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India set up or
acquired by the Indian Party and other reports or documents as may be
stipulated by the Reserve Bank.
Transfer by way of sale of shares of a
JV/WOS.
Save as otherwise provided in the Act or rules or
regulations made or directions issued thereunder or with the permission of the
Reserve Bank, no Indian Party shall transfer by way of sale to any person
whether resident in India or outside India, any share or security held by him
in a Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India :
1[Provided that a person resident in India,
being an individual, holding qualification shares or right shares in a company
incorporated outside India acquired in terms of clauses (a) and (c) of
Regulation 21 may sell such shares without prior approval.]
Pledge of Shares of Joint Ventures and
Wholly Owned Subsidiaries.
An Indian Party may transfer, by way of pledge,
shares held in a Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India as a
security for availing of fund based or non-fund based facilities for itself or
for the Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary from an authorised dealer or a
public financial institution in India.
1
PART
IA
Investments abroad by a firm in India.
(1) A
firm in India registered under the Indian Partnership Act, 1932, may apply to
the Reserve Bank for permission to invest abroad to the extent and in the
manner specified in Part I.
(2) Reserve
Bank may, after taking into account the factors specified in sub-regulation (3)
of Regulation 9, grant permission subject to such terms and conditions as are
considered necessary.
Investments by partnership firm without
prior approval of Reserve Bank.
(1) A
partnership firm registered under the Indian Partnership Act, 1932 which is
engaged in providing professional
services specified in the Schedule, may make investment in foreign concerns
engaged in similar activity, by way of remittance from India and/or
capitalization of fees/other entitlements due to it from such foreign concerns
:
Provided
that:—
(a) such investments do not exceed US $ 1 (one) million or its
equivalent in one financial year;
(b) the investing firm is a member of the respective All India
professional organization/body; and
(c) a report containing (i) name, full address, registration
and membership particulars of the investing firm, (ii) full details of
investment abroad, (iii) date and amount of remittance/amount of
capitalization of fees/other entitlements due to the investing firm, (iv)
name and address of the foreign concern together with its line of activity, (v)
identification number, if already allotted by the Reserve Bank, is submitted to
the Reserve Bank through the authorised dealer within 30 days of making such
investments.]
2[Investment by proprietary
concern.
A proprietary
concern in India may apply to the Reserve Bank in Form ODB for general
permission valid for a period of one year to accept shares of a company outside
India in lieu of fees due to it for professional services rendered to the said
company :
Provided
that :—
(a) the value of the shares accepted from each company outside
India shall not exceed fifty per cent of the fees receivable by the Indian
party from that company; and
(b) the Indian concern’s shareholding in any one company outside
India by virtue of shares accepted as aforesaid shall not exceed ten per cent
of the paid-up capital of the company outside India, whose shares are
accepted.]
Investments
in Foreign Securities other than by
way of Direct Investment
Prohibition on issue of foreign
security by a person resident in India.
(1) Save
as otherwise provided in the Act or in sub-regulation (2), no person resident
in India shall issue or transfer a foreign security.
1[(2) A person
resident in India, being an Indian Company or a Body Corporate created by an
Act of Parliament,
(i) may issue FCCBs not exceeding US $50 million, to a person
resident outside India in accordance with and subject to the conditions
stipulated in Schedule II;
(ii) where the issue exceeds US $50 million but does not exceed US
$ 100 million, may apply to the Reserve Bank in Form ECB for permission to
issue FCCBs;
(iii) where the issue exceeds US $ 100 million, may apply to the
Government of India, Ministry of Finance (Department of Economic Affairs) for
approval.]
(3) The
company/body corporate referred to in 2[clause (iii) of] sub-regulation (2) issuing
the FCCBs shall, within 30 days from the date of issue, furnish a report to the
Reserve Bank giving the details and documents as under :
(a) A copy of Government’s approval for issue
of FCCBs.
(b) Total amount for which FCCBs have been
issued.
(c) Names of the investors resident outside India and number of
FCCBs issued to each of them.
(d) The amount repatriated to India through normal banking
channels and/or the amount received by debit to NRE/FCNR accounts in India of
the investors (duly supported by bank certificate).
Permission for purchase/acquisition of
foreign securities in certain cases.
(1) A
person resident in India being an individual may acquire foreign securities :—
(i) by way of gift from a person resident
outside India; or
(ii) issued by a company incorporated outside India under Cashless
Employees Stock Option Scheme :
Provided
it does not involve any remittance from India; or
(iii) by way of inheritance from a person
whether resident in or outside India.
(2) A
person resident in India, being an individual, who is an employee or a director
of Indian Office or branch of a foreign company or of a subsidiary in India of
a foreign company or of an Indian company in which foreign equity holding is
not less than 51 per cent, may purchase the equity shares offered by the said
foreign company :
Provided
that —
(a) the shares are offered at a concessional
price; and
3[(b) the
consideration for purchase does not exceed US $ 20,000 or its equivalent, in
any one calendar year.]
(3) An
authorised dealer may allow the remittance by the person eligible to purchase
the shares in terms of sub-regulation (2) :
Provided
that the conditions specified in that sub-regulation are fulfilled.
Transfer of a foreign security by a
person resident in India.
A person resident in India, who has acquired or holds
foreign securities in accordance with the provisions of the Act, rules or
regulations made thereunder, may transfer them by way of pledge for obtaining
fund based or non-fund based facilities in India from an authorised dealer.
Prior Permission from Reserve Bank in
certain cases.
(1) Reserve
Bank, on an application, may permit a person resident in India to acquire
foreign securities :—
1[(a) A
person resident in India being an individual may acquire foreign securities as
qualification shares issued by a company incorporated outside India for holding
the post of a director in the company :
Provided
that,
(i) the number of shares so acquired shall be the minimum
required to be held for holding the post of director and in any case shall not
exceed 1 per cent of the paid-up capital of the company, and
(ii) the consideration for acquisition of such shares does not
exceed US $ 20,000 (Twenty Thousand only) in a calendar year;
(b) A person resident in India being an individual, seeking to
acquire qualification shares in a company outside India beyond the limits laid
down in the proviso to clause (a) shall apply to the Reserve Bank for
prior approval;]
2[(c) A
person resident in India, being an individual, may acquire foreign securities
by way of rights shares in a company incorporated outside India :
Provided
that the right shares are being issued by virtue of holding shares in
accordance with the provisions of the law for the time being in force;]
3[(d)] by
way of purchase by the employees/directors of an Indian promoter company of
shares of a Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India of the
Indian promoter company, in the field of software :
Provided
that—
(i) the consideration for purchase does not exceed US $ 10,000
or its equivalent per employee in a block of five calendar years,
(ii) the shares so acquired do not exceed 5 per cent of the
paid-up capital of the Joint Venture or Wholly Owned Subsidiary outside India,
and
(iii) after allotment of such shares, the percentage of shares held
by the Indian promoter company, together with shares allotted to its employees
is not less than the percentage of shares held by the Indian promoter company
prior to such allotment.
(2) Reserve
Bank may, on an application made to it by the Indian software company allow its
resident employees (including working directors) to purchase foreign securities
under the ADR/GDR linked stock option schemes :
Provided
that the consideration for purchase does not exceed US $ 50,000 or its equivalent
in a block of five calendar years.
Reserve Bank may, on application, permit a Mutual
Fund, to purchase foreign securities subject to such terms and conditions as it
may stipulate.
(See Regulation 17B)
List of professional services provided by Registered partnership firms eligible for investment abroad without prior approval of the Reserve Bank
1. Chartered Accountancy
2. Legal practice and related services
3. Information Technology and Entertainment Software related
services
4. Medical and healthcare services]
2[SCHEDULE II
[See Regulation
18(2)(i)]
Automatic
route for issue of Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds (FCCBs)
(i) The FCCBs to be issued will have to
conform to the Foreign Direct Investment Policy (including Sectoral Cap and
Sectors where FDI is permissible) of the Government of India as announced from
time to time and the Reserve Bank’s Regulations/directions issued from time to
time.
(ii) The issue of FCCBs shall be subject to a ceiling of US $50
million in any one financial year.
(iii) Public issue of FCCBs shall be only
through reputed lead managers in the international capital market. In case of
private placement, the placement shall be with banks, or with multilateral and
bilateral financial institutions, or foreign collaborators, or foreign equity
holder having a minimum holding of 5 per cent of the paid up equity capital of
the issuing company. Private placement with unrecognised sources is prohibited.
(iv) The maturity of the FCCB shall not be
less than 5 years. The call and put option, if any, shall not be exercisable
prior to 5 years.
(v) Issue of FCCBs with attached warrants is not permitted.
(vi) The “all in cost” will be 100 basis
points less than those prescribed for External Commercial Borrowing (ECB)
schemes specified in the Schedule to Notification No. FEMA 3/2000-RB, dated 3rd
May, 2000. The “all in cost” shall include coupon rate, redemption premium,
default payments, commitment fees, and fronting fees, if any, but shall not
include the issue related expenses such as legal fees, lead managers fees, out
of pocket expenses.
(vii) The FCCB proceeds shall not be used for
investment in Stock Market, and may be used for such purposes for which ECB
proceeds are permitted to be utilised under the ECB schemes.
(viii) In case the FCCBs are issued for financing
imports/foreign exchange capital expenditure, the proceeds can be retained
abroad with the approval of the Reserve Bank of India. In all other cases, the
proceeds shall be repatriated to India immediately on completion of issue
process.
(ix) The issue related expenses shall not
exceed 4 per cent of issue size and in case of private placement, shall not
exceed 2 per cent of the issue size.
(x) The issuing entity shall, within 30 days
from the date of completion of the issue, furnish a report to the concerned
Regional Office of the Reserve Bank of India
through a designated branch of an Authorized Dealer giving the details
and documents as under :
(a) the total
amount of the FCCBs issued,
(b) names
of the investors resident outside India and number of FCCBs issued to each of
them, and
(c) the amount repatriated to India through
normal banking channels and/or duly supported by bank certificates.]
[K1]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K2]Substituted for “US $ 50 million” by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Third Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 1-3-2002.
[K3]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2003, w.e.f. 15-1-2003.
[K4]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Second Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 19-1-2002.
[K5]Substituted for “US $ 50 million” by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2003, w.e.f. 1-3-2003.
[K6]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K7]Substituted for “350 crores” by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2003, w.e.f. 15-1-2003.
[K8]Substituted
for the following clause (iii) by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any
Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2003, w.e.f. 1-3-2003 :
“(iii) The direct investment is made in a foreign
entity engaged in the same core activity carried on by the Indian party;”
[K9]Omitted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001
[K10]Substituted for “not exceeding 50%” by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2003, w.e.f. 1-3-2003. Earlier “50%” was substituted for “25%” by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Third Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 1-3-2002.
[K11]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K12]Omitted
by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations,
2003, w.e.f. 1-3-2003. Prior to omission, proviso to clause (iii)
read as under :
“Provided
that where the investment is entirely funded out of the source mentioned in
clauses (i), the conditions specified in clause (iii) and (iv)
of sub-regulation (2) shall not apply.”
[K13]Omitted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K14]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 1-1-2002.
[K15]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Second Amendment) Regulations, 2003, w.e.f. 1-4-2003.
[K16]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K17]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 1-1-2002.
[K18]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K19]Substituted for “10” by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K20]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fifth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 24-4-2002.
[K21]Part IA, consisting regulations 17A and 17B, inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K22]Part IA, consisting regulations 17A and 17B, inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K23]Inserted by FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 1-1-2002.
[K24]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fourth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 7-3-2002.
[K25]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fourth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 7-3-2002
[K26]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001.
[K27]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fifth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 24-4-2002.
[K28]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fifth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 24-4-2002
[K29]Clause (c) relettered as clause (d) by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fifth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 24-4-2002
[K30]Substituted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Amendment) Regulations, 2001, w.e.f. 2-3-2001
[K31]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fourth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 7-3-2002.
[K32]Inserted by the FEM (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) (Fourth Amendment) Regulations, 2002, w.e.f. 7-3-2002