Hindustan Times (East UP)

India may relax curbs on Chinese FDI, say sources

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NEW DELHI: India is considerin­g easing scrutiny on certain foreign direct investment, according to people familiar with the matter, after rules mainly aimed at China created a bottleneck for inflows.

Currently, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government scrutinize­s all investment proposals from companies that are either based in countries that share a land border with India or have an investor from one of these nations. It is now considerin­g exempting proposals where the so-called beneficial ownership is less than 10%, which means the investor may be from a neighborin­g country but holds only a small stake in the firm proposing the investment.

The move is being considered after proposals worth $6 billion were stuck amid the red tape, the people added, asking not to be identified discussing private deliberati­ons.

The proposal could be approved as early as the next month.

The government had imposed curbs on such investment­s amid a bloody border standoff with China and also avert risks of opportunis­tic takeovers.

The move slowed down the approval process with proposals from the neighborin­g nations including China and Hong Kong piling up.

An email and text message sent to the trade and industry ministry spokespers­on remained unanswered.

Apart from delaying, the restrictio­n had also complicate­d deal-making for investors. Relaxing the rules will broaden the pool of investors that capital-hungry Indian firms can tap, as local firms increasing­ly turn to large global investors to fund their growth.

As of November 2021, over 100 proposals are awaiting clearance from the government, with around a quarter of them of over $10 million each.

Outward foreign direct investment by Indian companies fell by over 8% to $2.05 billion in December 2021 in the current fiscal, data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) showed on Monday.

The domestic companies had invested $2.23 billion in their overseas joint ventures and fully-owned subsidiari­es during December 2020 in the previous financial year.

 ?? MINT ?? Currently, government scrutinize­s all investment proposals from firms based in countries that share a land border with India.
MINT Currently, government scrutinize­s all investment proposals from firms based in countries that share a land border with India.

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