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April 2021

GIFTS FROM ‘GIFT CITY’

By Dr. Anup P. Shah
Chartered Accountant
Reading Time 13 mins
INTRODUCTION

The Gujarat International Financial Tec-City (‘GIFT City’) in Gujarat is India’s first International Financial Service Centre (‘IFSC’). Many nations such as Singapore, the UAE, etc., have successfully developed IFSCs which have become financial service hubs and have attracted foreign investments. India aims to do so through the GIFT City. Several sops have been provided for setting up financial service intermediaries in the GIFT City both by the RBI and by SEBI. While GIFT City is a subject which merits a publication to itself, this article only looks at some of the key features and benefits available to financial service intermediaries for setting up an entity in the GIFT City.

REGULATORY REGIME
Instead of multiple financial services regulators such as SEBI, RBI and IRDA, the GIFT City is regulated by only one body – the International Financial Services Centres Authority set up under the Finance Ministry. The IFSC Authority is based in Gujarat. The unified IFSC Authority aims to ease the business environment for the intermediaries. However, multiple legislations continue to impact the GIFT City.

Units set up in the IFSC are treated as SEZ Units set up under the Special Economic Zones Act, 2005. Accordingly, units set up in an IFSC must conform to the provisions of the SEZ Act and its regulations.

Some of the key regulations pertaining to the setting up of financial institutions in the GIFT City are:

  •  Special Economic Zones Act, 2005
  •  Foreign Exchange Management (International Financial Services Centre) Regulations, 2015
  •  International Financial Services Centres Authority Act, 2019
  •  International Financial Services Centres Authority (Banking) Regulations, 2020
  •  Securities and Exchange Board of India (International Financial Services Centre) Guidelines, 2015
  •  SEBI’s Operating Guidelines for Alternative Investment Funds in International Financial Services Centres of 2018
  •  IFSCA’s Guidelines of 2020 for AIFs in IFSCs.

PERSON RESIDENT OUTSIDE INDIA
One of the most salient features of the GIFT City is that any entity set up here would be treated as a Person Resident Outside India under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999. Thus, even though the unit is physically incorporated in India, it would be treated as if it is a non-resident under the FEMA. A financial institution is an entity engaged in rendering financial services or carrying out financial transactions and includes banks, NBFCs, insurance companies, brokerages, merchant bankers, securities exchanges, mutual funds, etc. On the other hand, a financial service is defined to mean any activity allowed to be carried out by SEBI / RBI / IRDA or any authority empowered to regulate the financial institution.

Consequently, a financial institution set up in the GIFT City must conduct business only in foreign currency and not in Indian Rupees. This feature has certain unique consequences which are explained below.

Any SEBI-registered intermediary may provide financial services relating to the securities market in the IFSC without forming a separate company.

FOREIGN PORTFOLIO INVESTORS
SEBI has liberalised the regime for foreign investors operating in the GIFT City as well as for FPIs to operate in it. Any applicant incorporated in the GIFT City shall be deemed to be appropriately regulated for the purposes of being registered as an FPI with SEBI. Hence, such an entity can apply for registration as a Category-I FPI.

Eligible Foreign Investors (EFIs) operating in IFSCs / GIFT City shall not be treated as entities regulated by SEBI. Further, SEBI-registered FPIs shall be permitted, without undergoing any additional documentation and / or prior approval process, to operate in the IFSC. The following are eligibility and KYC norms for EFIs:

Eligibility norms: EFIs are those foreign investors who are eligible to invest in IFSCs by satisfying the following conditions:
a) the investor is not resident in India,
b) the investor is not resident in a country identified in the public statement of the Financial Action Task Force as a deficient jurisdiction, and
c) the investor is not prohibited from dealing in the securities market in India.

KYC norms: An intermediary operating in an IFSC needs to ensure that the records of its clients are maintained as per the Prevention of Money-Laundering Act, 2002 and the rules made thereunder. The following KYC norms may be made applicable to EFIs:

  •  In case of participation of an EFI, not registered with SEBI as an FPI but desirous of operating in the IFSC, a trading member of the recognised stock exchange in the IFSC may rely upon the due diligence carried out by a bank which is permitted by RBI to operate in the IFSC during the account opening process of the EFI.
  •  In case of EFIs that are not registered with SEBI as FPIs and also not having bank accounts in the IFSC, KYC as applicable to Category-II FPI as per the new FPI categorisation shall be made applicable. However, PAN shall not be applicable for KYC of EFIs in the IFSC.
  •  In case of participation of FPIs in the IFSC, due diligence carried out by a SEBI-registered intermediary during the time of account opening and registration shall be considered.

Segregation of accounts: FPIs who operate in the Indian securities market and also propose to operate in the IFSC shall be required to ensure clear segregation of funds and securities. The custodians shall, in turn, monitor compliance of this provision for their respective FPI clients. Such FPIs shall keep their respective custodians informed about their participation in the IFSC.

AIFs IN THE GIFT CITY
Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) are investment vehicles set up in India which privately pool funds / monies from domestic as well as foreign investors and invest such funds / monies in securities as per a defined investment policy. In India, an AIF along with its constituents is regulated by SEBI under the SEBI (AIF) Regulations, 2012 (SEBI AIF Regulations). SEBI has provided several incentives for setting up an AIF in the GIFT City / IFSCs. The IFSC Authority has further liberalised the framework for setting up AIFs in the GIFT City. The combined regulations for setting up an AIF are explained below.

Incorporation of the AIF
Any trust / LLP / company set up in the IFSC can be registered with SEBI as an AIF. If the sponsor / manager of an Indian AIF wishes to set up an AIF in the IFSC, it must first set up a branch / company in the IFSC which will act as the sponsor / manager of the AIF. Thus, the Indian sponsor cannot directly sponsor the IFSC AIF. It must first set up a foreign branch / foreign company in the IFSC. The investment in the IFSC sponsor would be treated as an overseas direct investment in a Joint Venture / Wholly-Owned Subsidiary under the Foreign Exchange Management (Transfer or Issue of any Foreign Security) Regulations, 2004 (FEMA No. 120/RB-2004). Since this would be an investment in the Financial Services Sector, the provisions of Regulations 6 and 7 of these Regulations would need to be adhered to.

The SEBI IFSC guidelines along with the SEBI AIF Regulations recognise the following types of AIFs:
(a) Category-I AIF: Funds which invest in startups, early-stage ventures, social ventures, small and medium enterprises, infrastructure sector, etc. These include Venture Capital Funds.
(b) Category-II AIF: Residual category, i.e., other than Category I and III AIFs and which do not undertake leverage other than to meet day-to-day operational requirements as per SEBI AIF Regulations. These include Private Equity Funds / Debt Funds.
(c) Category-III AIF: Funds which employ diverse or complex trading strategies and leverage including through investments in listed or unlisted securities / derivatives. These would include Hedge Funds.

Each scheme of the AIF shall have a corpus of at least US $3 million. The manager or sponsor shall have a continuing interest in the AIF of not less than 2.5% of the corpus or US $750,000, whichever is lower, in the form of investment in the AIF and such interest shall not be through the waiver of management fees. Further, for Category-III AIFs the continuing interest shall be not less than 5% of the corpus or US $1.5 million, whichever is lower. The AIF must raise money only in foreign currency and not in Indian Rupees.

Investments permissible by the AIF
SEBI has harmonised the provisions governing investments by AIFs incorporated in IFSCs with the provisions regarding investments applicable for domestic AIFs. Accordingly, AIFs set up in the IFSC can invest in

  •  Securities which are listed in the IFSC
  •  Securities issued by companies incorporated in the IFSC
  •  Securities issued by companies in India or belonging to foreign jurisdictions
  •  Units of other AIFs located in India as well as in the IFSC
  •  Any company, Special Purpose Vehicle or Limited Liability Partnership or body corporate or Real Estate Investment Trust or Infrastructure Investment Trust in which a domestic AIF can make an investment
  •  It can also co-invest in a portfolio company through a segregated portfolio by issuing a separate class of units. However, the investments by such segregated portfolios shall, in no circumstances, be on terms more favourable than those offered to the common portfolio of the AIF and appropriate disclosures must be made in the placement memorandum regarding creation of the segregated portfolio.

AIFs operating in India are subject to leverage restrictions under the SEBI Regulations. Accordingly, AIF Category-I cannot borrow, while Category-II can only borrow for meeting daily expenses. However, these restrictions have been removed for AIFs set up in the GIFT City. An AIF in an IFSC may borrow funds or engage in leveraging activities without any regulatory limit, subject only to the following conditions:
(a) The maximum leverage by the AIF, along with the methodology for calculation of leverage, shall be disclosed in the placement memorandum;
(b) The leverage shall be exercised subject to consent of the investors;
(c) The AIF employing leverage shall have a comprehensive risk management framework appropriate to the size, complexity and risk profile of the fund.

Further, AIFs operating in India have a maximum investment diversification rule. Thus, under the SEBI Regulations a Category-I AIF can invest a maximum of  25% of its investible funds in one investee company. Similarly, a Category-II AIF can invest a maximum of 10% of its investible funds in one investee company. The guidelines for AIFs in the IFSC have removed these diversification rules. Accordingly, they shall not apply to AIFs in IFSCs, subject to the conditions that appropriate disclosures have been made in the placement memorandum and the investments by the AIFs are in line with the risk appetite of the investors.

Most offshore financial centres do not have restrictions on leveraging or diversification guidelines. This is a very welcome move since now AIFs in IFSCs can set up tailor-made schemes for investing in a very select pool of companies. These guidelines should encourage more foreign institutions to set up AIFs in India.

Lastly, Indian AIFs are subject to a monetary limit when they want to invest abroad. AIFs set up in the IFSC are exempt from this limit since they are treated as set up in an offshore jurisdiction.

Nature of Indian investments by the AIF
Under the FEM (Non-Debt Instruments) Rules, 2019 an AIF is treated as an Investment Vehicle. If the control and management of the sponsor and manager of the AIF are ultimately with resident Indian citizens, then the entire investment made in India by such an AIF is treated as a domestic investment. It does not then matter whether the corpus of the scheme is foreign or Indian. Thus, if the AIF in the GIFT City is set up by and managed by another Indian entity which in turn is ultimately controlled and managed by resident Indian citizens, then the downstream investment by such an AIF in Indian entities would be treated as domestic investment. Such investment would then be outside the purview of the FEMA Regulations and would not be subject to pricing / sectoral conditions / sectoral caps under the FEM (Non-Debt Instruments) Rules, 2019 even if the entire corpus is raised from non-residents.

Eligible investors in the AIF
The following persons can make investments in an AIF operating in the IFSC:

  •  A person resident outside India;
  •  A non-resident Indian;
  •  Institutional investor resident in India who is eligible under FEMA to invest funds offshore, to the extent of outward investment permitted;
  •  A person resident in India having a net worth of at least US $1 million during the preceding financial year who is eligible under FEMA to invest funds offshore, to the extent  allowed in the LRS (US $250,000) of RBI. The minimum investment by an investor in an AIF is US $40,000 for employees or directors of the AIF or its manager and US $150,000 for all other investors.

The RBI has recently expressly allowed resident individuals to make remittances under LRS to IFSCs set up in India. Resident individuals may also open non-interest-bearing Foreign Currency Accounts (FCAs) in IFSCs for making the above permissible investments under LRS. Any funds lying idle in the account for a period up to 15 days from the date of receipt into the account shall be immediately repatriated to the domestic Rupee account of the investor in India. This is an example of express round-tripping being permissible by the RBI ~ Indian money under LRS would go abroad to an offshore AIF (although physically the AIF is in India) and could be routed back into India since such an AIF can invest in Indian companies!

Under the International Financial Services Centres Authority (Banking) Regulations, 2020 Qualified Resident Individuals (meaning an individual who is a person resident in India having net worth not less than US $1 million or equivalent in the preceding financial year) are permitted to open, hold and maintain accounts in a freely convertible foreign currency, with a banking unit, for undertaking transactions connected with or arising from any permissible transaction specified in the Liberalised Remittance Scheme of the Reserve Bank of India. The IFSCA has clarified that the net worth criteria shall not be applicable for an individual, being a person resident in India who opens an account with the bank for the purpose of investing in securities under the LRS. This is because of the fact that the purpose of such remittance under the LRS is investment in securities and the opening of a bank account with a banking unit is incidental to the same.

Triple role of the AIF
The AIF set up in the IFSC can also invest in India under the FDI Route, the FPI Route or the Foreign Venture Capital Investor (FVCI) Route. If it desires to come under the FPI or the FVCI Route, then it must get a separate registration for the same with SEBI. All such investments would be subject to the Foreign Exchange Management (Non-Debt Instrument) Rules, 2019 administered by the RBI and the relevant SEBI Regulations.

CONCLUSION
The GIFT City at Gujarat is an excellent idea to attract foreign investment and foreign financial institutions to set up shop in India. Along with the regulatory concessions provided to AIFs, there are several income-tax benefits which are also afforded to AIFs established in the IFSC. While the Government has given a strong impetus to the GIFT City, it remains to be seen whether financial institutions actually set up shop.

 

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