News and developments
Cross-Border Share Swaps: Amendments to Regulatory Framework
In a share swap transaction, consideration is discharged through the issuance or transfer of securities by the acquiring company, rather than cash. This approach alleviates liquidity constraints and may enable more effective allocation of resources towards operational needs of the business.
While share swap transactions are common in other jurisdictions, their adoption in India has been limited due to regulatory challenges and the lack of tax neutrality.
With the intent to simplify cross-border share swaps under the exchange control laws, the Government of India has recently liberalized the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-Debt Instruments) Rules, 2019 (“NDI Rules”) by a notification dated August 16, 2024 pursuant to the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-debt Instruments) (Fourth Amendment) Rules, 2024 (the “Amendment”).[1]
As stated in the press release of Ministry of Finance dated August 16, 2024, “the amendments aim to simplify cross-border share swaps and provide for the issue or transfer of Indian company equity instruments in exchange for foreign company equity instruments. This will facilitate the global expansion of Indian companies through mergers, acquisitions, and other strategic initiatives, enabling them to reach new markets and grow their presence worldwide.”[2]
Structure permitted before the Amendment
Prior to the Amendment, only an issue of “equity instruments” by an Indian company to persons resident outside India was permitted against a swap of “equity instruments”. “Equity instruments” under the NDI Rules are defined to mean equity shares, convertible debentures, preference shares and share warrant issued by an Indian company.
Therefore, prior to the Amendment, a swap could only be undertaken under the automatic route if the following conditions were satisfied:
Structures permitted by the Amendment
The Amendment has introduced Rule 9A, specifically dealing with swap of equity instruments and equity capital of a foreign company (as defined under the Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Rules, 2022 (“OI Rules”)). Pursuant to the Amendment, the following structures have now been allowed:
In the given illustrations, the black arrows represent the existing structure before the swap, while the red arrows represent the steps and the final structure that will result from the swap in each illustration.
Ambiguity continues
Other considerations
The Government of India has progressively relaxed regulations on share swaps. The recent Amendment resolves certain inconsistencies by aligning the NDI Rules and OI Rules, thereby simplifying share swap transactions.
Notably, the changes introduced pursuant to the Amendment make reverse flip transactions significantly easier to execute, and have unlocked a range of restructuring possibilities. However, providing tax neutrality to such structures is essential to make these options more sustainable and practically feasible.
Authors:
Rajat Sethi (Partner) https://www.snrlaw.in/rajat-sethi/
Sumit Bansal (Partner) https://www.snrlaw.in/sumit-bansal/
Shivani Chhabra (Tax)
Footnotes
[1] https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2024/aug/doc2024816377701.pdf