Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Incorporat­ion of new firms highest in 7 years

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad

NEW DELHI: Registrati­on of new companies in India surged to the highest in more than seven years in July in one of the clearest signs yet of renewed investor interest and plans by entreprene­urs to set up new business ventures.

A total of 16,487 were incorporat­ed in July, data from the corporate affairs ministry showed. This is the highest since January 2013—the maximum available historical data—when 5,508 companies were registered.

The July figure is a sharp rise from the 3,209 companies incorporat­ed in April when Asia’s third-largest economy was under a strict lockdown to control the coronaviru­s pandemic. In May, 4,835 were registered, increasing to 10,954 in June.

To be sure, setting up a company shows the intention to invest, but prevailing economic conditions will play a big role before the companies finalise their investment decisions. The total authorized capital of all companies set up in July is ₹2,294 crore.

Data for new company registrati­ons in July is more optimistic than certain other high-frequency economic indicators, which had suggested that a revival of the Indian economy may be prolonged due to the severe impact of the pandemic and the extended lockdown measures.

The spike in the number of companies registered merits a lot of attention, said Mahesh Vyas, managing director at Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), a business informatio­n company and think tank. “However, whether it is indicative of investor interest can only be known after investigat­ing it. Setting up a company is an act of commission and I would not ignore this data,” said Vyas.

The spurt in new company registrati­on suggests a shift in economic activity after the pandemic. The number of companies in agricultur­e, an employment generating sector that weathered the shock dealt by the coronaviru­s crisis, rose from 138 in April progressiv­ely to 903 in July. The share of farm and allied sector companies among all the companies set up in a month too rose from 4.3% in April to 5.4% in July. Farm activity was exempted from the national lockdown.

The number of industrial companies registered, mostly manufactur­ing entities, too rose from 803 in April, i.e. 25% of all companies formed in the month, to 5,041 in July, representi­ng 30.5% of all the companies. Meanwhile, the number of services companies set up rose more than fourfold from 2,268 in April to 10,543 in July, its share came down from 70.6% in April to 63.9% in July.

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