Title: INDIA STRUCTURE ISSUES Jonathan Blake
1INDIA STRUCTURE ISSUESJonathan Blake
2COMMERCIAL STRUCTURES
- Self-liquidating Fund
- Evergreen Fund
- Quoted Funds
- Funds for individuals
3BASIC STRUCTURE
Carried Interest
Shareholders
Investors
FUND
Manager
Investee Companies
4OBJECTIVES
- Limited liability
- Taxation the fund must be exempt or transparent
- Investors no worse off than for direct
investments - Suitable for all kinds of investors
5OBJECTIVES (CONTINUED)
- Tax efficient management charge no VAT
- Tax efficient carried interest
- Capable of being marketed
- Ease of administration
6TAX ISSUES
- Permanent Establishment
- Local tax on capital profits
- Withholding taxes on interest and dividends
- Transparency of partnerships recognised
- Double tax treaties
- Use of IHCs Luxembourg, Mauritius, Cyprus,
Netherlands
7AVOIDING TAXABLE PERMANENT ESTABLISHMENT
- Local office only advisors
- GP/Manager overseas
- Brand of GP/Manager composition and meetings
- Offshore administration
- Dos and don'ts decisions and signing documents
8AVAILABLE LEGAL STRUCTURES
- Transparent
- Limited Partnerships
- Parallel Investment
- Non-Transparent
- UK Investment Trust
- Jersey/Bermudan companies/or trusts
- Dutch BV
- Luxembourg SICAV
- Mauritius Company
9SPECIFIC INDIAN ISSUES
- Structure and terms broadly similar to European
funds - Availability of double tax relief
- Use of Mauritius and Cyprus holding companies
- Various investment norms and restrictions apply
10POSSIBLE INDIAN FUND STRUCTURE
General Partner
Investors
Executives
General Partner Partnership
General Partner
Limited Partnership
Limited Partners
Mauritius Co
Indian Advisory Company
Investment
11FDI (Foreign Direct Investment)
Fund
SPV
Investment in India
12FDI (Foreign Direct Investment)
- Direct investment permitted under automatic route
subject to sectoral caps, prescribed
capitalisation norms and pricing guidelines - Approval required from FIPB/RBI if FDI exceeds
sectoral caps or falls outside prescribed
conditions - FDI not permitted in sensitive sectors such as
agriculture - Progressive liberalisation of FDI norms in areas
such as infrastructure, telecommunications, real
estate and retail
13FII (Foreign Institutional Investor)
Manager (FII)
Fund
Sub-Account of FII (SPV)
Custodian/Broker
Investment in India
14FII (Foreign Institutional Investor)
- Certain categories of institutional investors can
register with SEBI as FIIs - pension funds, investment funds, asset managers,
banks - regulated by appropriate regulatory authority
- proven track record
15FII (Foreign Institutional Investor)
- FIIs can invest own funds or on behalf of clients
(e.g. SPV) registered as sub-accounts with SEBI - FIIs can invest in equity and debt securities
(listed or unlisted, primary or secondary
market), mutual funds, certain derivatives.
Off-exchange transactions require RBI approval.
Reporting of derivative instruments issued by
FIIs.
16FII (Foreign Institutional Investor)
- Investment limits apply
- Debt instruments - 30
- Equities - FIIs 10 with 24 overall cap for all
FII investment - Sub-accounts 5 or 10 as prescribed
17FVCI (Foreign Venture Capital Investor)
Fund
FVCI (SPV)
Domestic VCF
Investment in Unlisted VCU
18FVCI (Foreign Venture Capital Investor)
- Foreign funds can register with SEBI as an FVCI
- FVCIs can invest in domestic VCF or in unlisted
companies (VCUs) which are not on negative list,
e.g. equipment leasing, HP companies - Not mandatory to register as FVCI but offers
certain benefits - no entry or exit pricing restrictions apply
- no lock-in restrictions
19OPPORTUNITIES CHALLENGESIN PE AND VENTURE
CAPITALNovember 2006Jonathan BlakeSJ Berwin
LLP