Foreign Portfolio Investors Investments in India September 2015 Overview - Portfolio Investments in India The Government of India announced for the first time the policy framework for foreign institutional investors permitting them to invest in the Indian listed entities which regime subsequently culminated into the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Foreign Institutional Investors) Regulations 1995 (FII Regulations). Presently, foreign investors are allowed to invest in the Indian capital markets through different investment windows (foreign direct investment, portfolio investment scheme and foreign venture capital) investment, each of which has its own regulatory framework, licensing/registration requirements and investment conditions Investment by the Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) in India was jointly regulated by the securities market regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), through the SEBI (Foreign Institutional Investors) Regulations, 1995 and by the nation’s financial regulator, the Reserve Bank of India, through the Regulation 5(2) of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 In order to reduce the overall complexity and number of regulations governing inbound investments, in 2014 SEBI have notified the SEBI (Foreign Portfolio Investors) Regulations, 2014 (FPI Regulations) which aims to rationalize foreign investments made into India by the portfolio investors such as the FIIs and Qualified Foreign Investors Regulatory Framework – Investments in India Venture Capital Investments Portfolio Investments Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) Erstwhile Model Sub-Accounts of FIIs Qualified Foreign Investors (QFIs) Foreign Venture Capital Investor (FVCI) No Change Current Model Foreign Venture Capital Investor (FVCI) Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) Direct/Strategic Investments Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) No Change Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) Eligibility Criteria of Foreign Portfolio Investor FPI should not be: Authorized by its Constitution documents / agreement to invest on its own behalf or on the behalf of its clients; A non-resident Indian; and A fit and proper person3 based on the criteria specified by SEBI; and A resident of a country listed in the specified public statements issued by Financial Action Task Force Grant of certificate to the applicant is in the interest of the development of securities market. FPI should be: A person1 not resident in India2; A resident of a country whose securities market regulator is a signatory to International Organization of Securities Commission’s Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding (Appendix A Signatories) or is signatory to bilateral Memorandum of Understanding with the SEBI; Resident of a country whose Central Bank is a member of Bank of International Settlements in case of Bank applicant; FPI should also have sufficient experience, good track record, is professionally competent, financially sound and has a generally good reputation of fairness and integrity Fund having Non-Resident Indian (NRI) investors not prohibited to obtain registration Private Banks and Merchant Banks allowed to undertake only proprietary investments Legally permitted to invest in securities outside its home country; 1The term “person” shall have the same meaning as assigned to it under section 2(31) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 2The term “resident in India” shall have the same meaning as assigned to it under section 6 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 3 An FPI shall be deemed as a ‘fit and proper person’ after taking into account the following criteria at the minimum in relation to the applicant, the principal officer and the key management persons: (a) integrity, reputation and character (b) absence of convictions and restraint orders (c) competence including financial solvency and networth © 2015 KPMG, an Indian Registered Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. Category of FPIs FPI Category SEBI Fees (every 3 years) Type of Investors Privileges & Restrictions Category I NIL This category shall include Government and Government related entities such as Central Banks, Governmental agencies, sovereign wealth funds and international or multilateral organizations or agencies. Can issue Offshore Derivative Instruments (ODIs) USD 3,000 Regulated broad-based funds (please refer next slide) such as mutual funds, investment trusts, insurance/reinsurance companies Regulated persons such as banks, asset management companies, investment managers/ advisors, portfolio managers Broad-based funds not ‘appropriately regulated’ (please refer next slide) but whose investment manager (including investment advisor or trustee) is appropriately regulated and registered as Category II FPI University Funds, Pension Funds and University related Endowments already registered with SEBI (Low Risk) Category II (Moderate Risk) Category III USD 300 (High Risk) All others FPIs not eligible under Category I and II such as endowments, charitable societies, charitable trusts, foundations, corporate bodies, trusts, individuals and family offices Can issue ODIs, except nonregulated broadbased funds cannot issue / subscribe Cannot issue ODIs Definitions Broad-based fund means a fund established or incorporated outside India which fulfill following conditions at all times: Sr. No 1 Conditions Explanation Should have at least 20 investors To ascertain the number of investors in the Fund, direct and underlying investors are to be considered Only investors of entities set-up for sole purpose of pooling funds and making investments are to be considered for ascertaining the underlying investors in the Fund Funds having NRI as investor is not prohibited from obtaining registration 2 No single investor should hold more than 49 percent of the shares / units of the Fund Institutional investor could hold more than 49 percent of the shares / units of the Fund as long as it is a broad based fund • Conditional registration available subject to certain conditions and broad based criteria being met within 180 days • FPI deemed broad based if it has a bank as an investor Appropriately Regulated means an applicant falling in Category II regulated or supervised by the securities market regulator or the banking regulator of the concerned foreign jurisdiction, in the same capacity in which it proposes to make investments in India © 2015 KPMG, an Indian Registered Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. Registration Process 2 1 7 Registration discussion to invest in the Portfolio Route DDP applies for trading codes and sends confirmation to the FPI once accounts are opened DDP checks the registration documents and provides feedback 4 FPI registration is granted to the Applicant Fees paid by Applicant to DDP for registration 6 9 8 3 Applicant sends soft copy of the documents for FPI registration for review to DDP in India. Applicant also makes application for Permanent Account Number (PAN) card through their tax advisor Account details shared by the FPI with their brokers who would be executing their trades on the exchange Go live with market trades Applicant clarifies on feedback and queries raised 5 Documents needed from FPIs for registration • FPI application form • Declaration and undertaking • Ultimate Beneficial Owner (UBO) letter • Constitution documents including evidence of being regulated • Prospectus/ Offering Memorandum of the Fund (in case of funds) • PAN card instruction to open FPI account • KYC documents as per Applicant category Registration Conditions • An applicant (newly incorporated / established) who intends to register as Category II FPI but does not meet broad-based criteria, may apply for conditional registration with a validity of 180 days if it is an India dedicated fund, or undertakes to: - make investment of atleast five percent corpus of the fund in India; and comply with the broad-based criteria before the validity of its conditional registration i.e. within 180 days • DDPs shall not allow entities having opaque structure (wherein details of ultimate beneficiary owners are not known or where the beneficial owners are ring fenced from each other etc.) to register as FPIs • FPIs who meet the following conditions shall not be treated as having opaque structure : - • In case DDP issues acknowledgement regarding fulfilment of broad-based criteria, the conditional registration shall be treated as registration are regulated in its home jurisdiction; - each fund or sub fund in the applicant satisfies broad based criteria; and • If the FPI fails to meet the broad-based status within 180 days, it will be reclassified as Category III FPI - gives an undertaking to provide information regarding its beneficial owners as and when SEBI seeks this information • If an existing broad-based fund registered as Category II FPI, ceases to remain broad-based on account of redemption etc., it will have to fulfill criteria mentioned above for conditional registration © 2015 KPMG, an Indian Registered Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. Know Your Client Norms - FPI Entity Level Senior Management (Whole Time Directors/ Partners/ Trustees/etc) Authorized Signatories Ultimate Beneficial Owner (UBO) Document Type Category - I Category - II Category - III Erstwhile KYC requirement Constitutive Docs Required Required Required Required Proof of Address Power of Attorney mentioning address is acceptable Power of Attorney mentioning address is acceptable Power of Attorney mentioning address is acceptable Required PAN Card Required Required Required Required Financials *Exempt *Exempt Risk Based-Financial data sufficient Required (Exempt for SWFs) Board Resolution to invest in India *Exempt Required Required Not Required Uniform Know Your Client (KYC) Form Required Required Required Required List of personnel Required Required Required Required Proof of identity *Exempt *Exempt Entity declares on letterhead - Full name, nationality and Date of Birth or Proof of Identity Required Proof of Address *Exempt *Exempt Declaration on Letter head Required Photographs *Exempt *Exempt *Exempt Required List & Signatures Required Required Required Required Proof of identity *Exempt *Exempt Required Not Required Proof of Address *Exempt *Exempt *Declaration on Letter Head Not Required Photographs *Exempt *Exempt *Exempt Only photograph of signer on the KYC form is required in page 1 List *Exempt Required (can declare no UBO over 25%) Required Required (Exempt for SWFs) Proof of identity *Exempt *Exempt Required Not Required Proof of Address *Exempt *Exempt *Declaration on Letter Head Not Required Photographs *Exempt *Exempt *Exempt Not Required * Not required for cash account opening. However, FPIs must submit an undertaking that upon demand by Regulators/Law Enforcement Agencies the relative documents would be submitted to the DDPs Key differences - FII & FPI Regulations Particulars Erstwhile FII Regulations Current FPI Regulations Regulatory Structure 2 Tier Structure - Main FII and sub-accounts No tiers Registering Institution SEBI DDP on behalf of SEBI Issuance of ODIs (Participatory Notes) (Please also refer next slide) Only permitted for Main FIIs Permitted for Category I and Category II FPIs except unregulated broad-based funds KYC Procedure Uniform KYC Risk based KYC Permitted Investments Equity, Government Securities, Corporate Debt, Mutual Funds, Listed equity derivatives, Securities Lending and Borrowings, Interest Rate Future, Indian Depository Receipts, Security Receipts, Rupee bonds or units issued by Infrastructure Debt Fund, Commercial Paper Same as FII (except unlisted equity). Additionally, FPIs are also permitted to do currency-risk hedging • • Investment Limits and restrictions • For any portfolio investing entity up to 10 percent of paid-up capital of the company Aggregate FII investment limit of 24 percent of paid-up equity capital in a company (extendable to sectoral cap) • For any portfolio investing entity below 10 percent of paid-up capital of the company Aggregate investment limit of 24 percent of paid-up equity capital in a company (extendable to sectoral cap) © 2015 KPMG, an Indian Registered Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. Issuance of ODIs • No FPI may issue, subscribe to or otherwise deal in ODIs, directly or indirectly, unless such ODIs are issued: – only to persons who are regulated by an appropriate foreign regulatory authority; – after compliance with KYC norms • Category I & II FPIs (other than unregulated broad based funds) can issue, subscribe to or otherwise deal in ODIs • ODIs issued before start of the FPI Regime as on 7 January 2014 as well as the existing ODI subscribers as on that date are grandfathered • ODI issuers may continue to issue ODIs to those subscribers even if there is a change in their investment manager, provided the incumbent is a regulated entity • ODI issuer can issue ODIs to existing entities, which were registered as clients but did not have positions as on 7 January 2014 • FPIs to fully disclose to SEBI, information concerning the parties to ODIs and terms of issue Investment Limits and Restrictions Instrument DEBT Eligible Investor Limit Government Securities FPIs and Long term investors– Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs), Multilateral Agencies, Pension/ Insurance/ Endowment Funds, Foreign Central Banks USD 25 billion Government Securities- long term FPIs which are Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs), Multilateral Agencies, Endowment Funds, Insurance Funds, Pension Funds and Foreign Central Banks USD 5 billion Remarks Eligible investors permitted to make investments in government securities/ bonds with a minimum residual maturity of three years. Eligible investors permitted to invest only in dated securities of residual maturity of one year and above. Note: • FPIs are permitted to invest in Government Securities, the coupons received on investment in Government Securities. • The coupons invested in purchasing Government securities shall be classified into a separate investment category which is over and above the USD 30 billion Government debt limit • For the purpose of investment of coupons, the FPIs shall have an investment period of 5 working days from the date of receipt of the coupon. A re-investment facility of 5 working days shall be provided on the Government securities that have been purchased by utilizing the coupons • Coupons received on these Government securities purchased by investment of coupons shall also have the same facility Investment in Commercial Papers permitted only up to USD 2 billion within the limit of USD 51 billion Corporate Debt FPIs and Long term investors –SWFs, Multilateral Agencies, Pension/ Insurance/ Endowment Funds, Foreign Central Banks USD 51 billion Eligible Investors permitted to make investments in corporate bonds with a minimum residual maturity of three years FPIs are not permitted to make any further investments in liquid and money market mutual fund schemes No lock-in period and FPIs be free to sell the securities (including those that are presently held with less than three years residual maturity to domestic investors Total USD 81 billion Note: FPIs are barred from making investments in Treasury Bills EQUITY • Holding of equity shares of each company by any portfolio investing entity shall be below 10 percent of paid-up capital of the company • Aggregate FPI investment limit of 24 percent of paid-up equity capital in a company (extendable to sectoral cap) • FPIs cannot invest in unlisted and physical securities © 2015 KPMG, an Indian Registered Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. How KPMG can assist • In identifying suitable jurisdictions for setting-up funds for investment in India and also provide assistance in implementing the identified investment structure • In review of FPI application etc. to Designated Depository Participant (DDP) • In obtaining a PAN • We have a specialized dedicated team working to accurately and expeditiously perform computation of capital gains tax liability on the sale transactions executed by the FPI • Computing and assisting in monitoring advance tax payments • Assisting in preparing and filing of annual tax returns • Assisting in audit/ appellate proceedings before the tax authorities • Timely updates on tax and regulatory developments We actively participate in the meetings with the Regulators - Department of Financial Services, Department of Economic Affairs, Ministry of Finance, Government of India, SEBI and Reserve Bank of India Why KPMG We have been providing services to over 800 FII and sub-account clients over a decade Dedicated teams of professionals who efficiently manage the ongoing tax compliance requirements of FPIs in India. Our team of experts has an indepth knowledge of local laws, as well as practical experience with issues relating to FPIs investments into India We have good working relationships with all the leading Indian DDPs / custodians providing custody services to FPIs investing into India. Conduct road shows along with local custodian bankers to update on India tax developments Regular flash alerts and knowledge sharing calls on tax and regulatory matters including Indian Budget. Notice to the reader: This presentation is prepared solely for informational purposes. The information contained herein is of a general nature and is not intended to address the circumstances of any particular individual or entity. Although we endeavor to provide accurate and timely information, there can be no guarantee that such information is accurate as of the date it is received or that it will continue to be accurate in the future. No one should act on such information without appropriate professional advice after a thorough examination of the particular situation. In accordance with its policy, KPMG advises that neither it nor any of its director or employee undertakes responsibility arising in any way whatsoever, to any person or party in respect of the matters dealt with in this presentation, including any errors or omissions therein, arising through negligence or otherwise, howsoever caused. In connection with the presentation or any part thereof, KPMG does not owe duty of care (whether in contract or in tort or under statute or otherwise) to any person or party to whom the presentation is circulated to and KPMG shall not be liable to any person or party who uses or relies on presentation. KPMG thus disclaims all responsibility or liability for any costs, damages, losses, liabilities, expenses incurred by such person or party arising out of or in connection with the presentation or any part thereof. By reading our presentation the reader of the presentation shall be deemed to have accepted the terms mentioned hereinabove. Thank you Key Contact Naresh Makhijani Partner Financial Services T: +91 22 3090 2120 M: +91 98923 33376 E: [email protected] © 2015 KPMG, an Indian Registered Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative (“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved. The KPMG name, logo and "cutting through complexity" are registered trademarks or trademarks of KPMG International Cooperative ("KPMG International").
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