Unlisted companies have to
demat shares
To Dematerialise Shares of
Unlisted
Corporates
As
part of its drive to lift the corporate veil and target benami entities, the
government has decided to dematerialise shares of unlisted corporates, starting
with 80,000-90,000 public companies. Separately, holdings above 10% in a
company are also being classified as “significant beneficial ownership” with
mandatory disclosures.
MCA IS TO ANNOUNCE SHORTLY
The
ministry of corporate affairs (MCA) is expected to announce the plan for
dematerialisation of shares over the next few weeks as it wants to ensure that
the real ownership is revealed through the exercise, besides making it easier
to track the shareholders, sources told TOI.
At
the end of March 2017, there were close to 11.7 lakh active companies in India,
but the requirement for dematerialisation of shares is currently in place only
for around 8,000 listed entities. Recognising that immediate dematerialisation
of shares for all companies is not possible, the initial focus will be on
public companies — a move that is expected to impact at least 5.5-6 crore
shareholders of such unlisted companies.
To Track the Real Beneficiaries
Parallelly, MCA is readying rules to provide for significant beneficial ownership aimed at tracking the real beneficiaries of shares as often benami holdings are found in shell companies. The new section that was inserted in the Companies Act is also part of the global fight against money laundering and came at the behest of Paris based Financial Action Task Force with countries such as the UK already is a member.
To Register of “Beneficial Owners”.
The
law provides for maintaining of a register of “beneficial owners”. While the
Companies Act had said that the threshold for classification will be at least
25% or another level that is prescribed, MCA is expected to set the limit at
10%, increasing the ambit of the provisions to cover a larger base of
shareholders, who may be warehousing the shares for someone else.
To Avoid Benami Transactions
“There are cases where the real owner is someone else as the shares have been paid for through funding to another person. Similarly, I may be holding shares but I can have a back-to-back arrangement on voting. With the new rules, all these issues will be sorted out,” said a source.
Impact on FDI
The
move will also have significant implications for foreign investors, especially
in tightly-regulated sectors where 100% FDI is still not per mitted.
What Companies Act 2013 says
about Beneficial Ownership?
The
law provides for mandatory disclosure within a stipulated period and once the
rules are notified there will be a rush of filings as shares in most companies
are not widely held. A failure to disclose beneficial ownership can result in a
fine of up to Rs 50,000 with a daily penalty of Rs 1,000, if the failure to
comply with the rules continues. The Companies Act also allows the Centre to
investigate cases of beneficial ownership.
Courtesy
: Times of India
Very Good move, But what about the Shares held in companies under liquidation. Much more Likely hood Benami is there also. Who cares for?
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