Business Standard

30,000 AXED DIRECTORS OF SHELL COMPANIES BACK IN THE RUNNING

- VEENA MANI

About 13,993 companies are now eligible for restoring their names with the Registrar of Companies and 30,000 people are qualified for being directors of these companies again. Their names were struck off during the crackdown on shell companies. In the first phase, more than 225,000 companies and 300,000 directors got the axe. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs is working on a definition of shell companies. VEENA MANI reports

As many as 13,993 companies are now eligible for restoring their names at the registrar of companies (RoCs). And, 30,000 persons have again qualified for being directors of companies, after their names were struck off as part of an official exercise to weed out ‘shell companies’.

In the first phase of this weeding, about 225,000 companies and 300,000 directors faced the axe. Of these, 13,993 companies and 30,000 directors had availed of a scheme for condonatio­n of delay in this regard, opened for five months by the ministry of corporate affairs, officials said. This was meant to help genuine corporates to regularise their delayed filing of returns.

The ministry is also working on a better definition of shell companies. Some of the suggestion­s to define these include excessive leveraging, rotation of transactio­ns and disproport­ionate investment.

In the first list, companies were found not filing annual reports and returns, based on which the ministry struck these off. There is a second list of 225,000 entities with the characteri­stics of shell companies but probe into the first list is not over.

The government has been asking banks for details of transactio­ns of many of these. However, thousands of them do not have a Permanent Account Number (PAN, given by the income tax department). PAN is compulsory for any transactio­n above ~50,000. So far, the government has transactio­n details of only 73,000 companies. These companies had deposited ~240 billion at the time of demonetisa­tion.

The income tax department is investigat­ing seeming irregulari­ties at some of the companies in question. During a meeting of the task force on shell companies on November 30 last year, the director-general of corporate affairs suggested the department approach the RoCs on the matter of revival of these entities, in the interest of revenue earning.

It is possible that of the 1.1 million companies registered with the RoCs, only around 500,000 would be fully operative. Apart from shell companies, ‘vanishing’ companies are also on the ministry’s radar. As many as 400 companies are not traceable, despite being listed on the bourses.

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