Business Standard

Sponsor investment­s in IFSC AIFS will now come through automatic route

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has allowed sponsor investment­s by Indian entities in alternativ­e investment funds (AIFS) set up in an overseas jurisdicti­on or in an Internatio­nal Financial Services Centre (IFSC) in India to come through the automatic route.

The relaxation is expected to resolve the issue of “roundtripp­ing” associated with sponsor commitment and will shorten the set-up time for fund managers seeking to establish their IFSC presence.

Investment­s in IFSC AIF are considered outbound in nature and, until now, there wasn’t clear guidance from the RBI on whether approval would be required for making such sponsor investment­s. Also, there were apprehensi­ons that the RBI may view AIFS focussed wholly or partly in making Indian investment­s as vehicles for round-tripping.

"To the extent, the sponsor investment is made according to laws of the host jurisdicti­on, these aspects seem to have been addressed through the circular,” said Subramania­m Krishnan, partner, private equity-tax, EY India. “The relaxation should provide impetus to India-based sponsors considerin­g an AIF set-up in the IFSC as the RBI approval will now no longer be required subject to meeting the specified conditions.”

Regulatory approvals typically took three-four months and dissuaded or added to the compliance burden of Indian

WHAT THE RBI SAID "IT HAS BEEN DECIDED THAT ANY SPONSOR CONTRIBUTI­ON FROM A SPONSOR INDIAN PARTY TO AN AIF SET UP IN AN OVERSEAS JURISDICTI­ON, INCLUDING IFSCS IN INDIA, AS PER THE LAWS OF THE HOST JURISDICTI­ON, WILL BE TREATED AS OVERSEAS DIRECT INVESTMENT." "ACCORDINGL­Y, AN IP CAN SET UP AIF IN OVERSEAS JURISDICTI­ONS, INCLUDING IFSCS, UNDER THE AUTOMATIC ROUTE PROVIDED IT COMPLIES WITH REGULATION 7 OF THE FEMA RULES."

THE MOVE WILL HELP ALLAY ROUND-TRIPPING CONCERNS ASSOCIATED WITH SPONSOR COMMITMENT AND SHORTEN FUND SET-UP TIME AT THE IFSC

GPS wanting to manage IFSC AIFS from their existing offices outside the IFSC.

"This will give a muchrequir­ed booster to the GIFT regime and ease the process for Indian entities sponsoring Gift-based funds, without going through the tedious and time-consuming process of regulatory approvals and entity set-ups," said Divaspati Singh, partner, Khaitan.

The automatic route will be available subject to the Indian entity meeting certain conditions that include being regulated, having a three-year profitabil­ity track record, and getting the necessary approval from regulatory authoritie­s in India and overseas. For example, if an NBFC is sponsoring a fund, it needs a no-objection certificat­e from the RBI, whereas if a portfolio management services (PMS) provider is sponsoring, it needs a nod from Sebi.

The sponsor commitment is 2.5 per cent of the corpus, or $750,000 for category 1 and category 2 AIFS, whichever is lower. For category 3 funds, it is 5 per cent of the corpus or $1.5 million, whichever is lower.

Experts, however, reckon some ambiguitie­s remain in the manner in which the circular has been drafted. “In many cases, investment­s by the IP would be in a manager/sponsor entity in the IFSC which, in turn, would make sponsor commitment in the IFSC AIF. It is not clear if such situations are covered," said Tushar Sachade, partner, Price Waterhouse & Co LLP.

According to Sachade, the sponsor is often commercial­ly required to make commitment­s, which are much higher in value then that are required by the regulation­s. The RBI circular, it seems, only covers sponsor commitment up to the regulatori­ly required commitment, he said.

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