Friday, February 20, 2026

KEY CORPORATE COMPLIANCE ISSUES IN JSW GROUP

KEY CORPORATE COMPLIANCE ISSUES IN

JSW GROUP



JSW GROUP

The JSW Group, a major Indian conglomerate with interests in steel, energy, and infrastructure, currently faces a multifaceted regulatory and compliance landscape.

As of early 2026, the primary issues center on environmental and human rights scrutiny, mining contract adherence, and cross-border supply chain hurdles.

HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL SCRUTINY (ODISHA PROJECT)

The most significant reputational and compliance risk currently involves the JSW Utkal Steel Ltd (JUSL) project in Odisha.

UN WARNING (FEBRUARY 2026):

Eight UN officials issued a formal communication warning that the construction of the new steel plant may be violating the rights of indigenous peoples and forest-dwelling communities.

HUMAN RIGHTS DUE DILIGENCE:

The UN officials requested detailed information on JSW’s due diligence processes regarding the rights to food, water, and a clean environment. As of early 2026, reports indicate JSW has faced criticism for a lack of formal response to these specific inquiries.

FINANCING RISK:

International monitoring groups have alerted major global banks (including BNP Paribas and Standard Chartered) that continued financing could lead to non-compliance with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs).

 

NON COMPLIANCE ISSUES IN MINING AND DETAILS OF PENALTIES

JSW Steel’s reliance on captive mining has led to recent legal friction with Karnataka state authorities:

PERFORMANCE SECURITY FORFEITURE (FEBRUARY 2026):

The Supreme Court declined to stay a Karnataka government order to forfeit ₹128 crore in performance securities.

Issue:

The forfeiture was triggered by the company's alleged failure to meet the Minimum Guaranteed Production (MGP) quotas at its iron ore mines in Chitradurga. This highlights a critical regulatory risk where operational shortfalls in mining lead to heavy financial penalties and potential "regulatory overhang" on future mining leases

 

₹128 CRORE FORFEITURE

The Supreme Court’s decision on February 18, 2026, to uphold the ₹128 crore forfeiture of JSW Steel’s performance security by the Karnataka government serves as a notable "one-off" financial hit.

While JSW Steel remains highly profitable, this penalty directly affects the bottom line of the current quarter (Q4 FY26). Here is a breakdown of the financial impact based on the latest performance data:

DIRECT EARNINGS IMPACT (BOTTOM LINE)

 

Net Profit Deduction: The ₹128 crore will likely be accounted for as an "Exceptional Item" or a direct expense in the Q4 FY26 financial results.

PROPORTION TO PROFIT:

In the previous quarter (Q3 FY26), JSW Steel reported a consolidated Net Profit of ₹2,410 crores. A ₹128 crore hit represents roughly 5.3% of a typical quarter’s net profit, indicating a measurable but non-crippling impact on earnings.

 

EPS DILUTION:

For a company with a massive share base, the impact on Earnings Per Share (EPS) is expected to be minimal (estimated at a few paisa per share), yet it contributes to the broader "regulatory overhang" that investors track.

 

COMPARISON WITH PAST PENALTIES

To put this in perspective, JSW Steel has navigated similar "regulatory leaks" before:

SEPTEMBER 2024:

Recognized a ₹342 crore provision for surrendering the Jajang mining lease.

SEPTEMBER 2023:

Recognized a ₹389 crore provision for a "Green Cess" in Goa.e

 

ENERGY SECTOR: CONTRACTUAL VS. REGULATORY CAPS

In the energy division, JSW has been navigating the balance between Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) rules and state agreements:


HYDRO POWER DISPUTE:

A 2025 Supreme Court ruling involving JSW Hydro Energy affirmed that while CERC caps the "free power" a company can pass into consumer tariffs (usually at 13%), the company must still honor higher contractual obligations (e.g., 18%) made to state governments.

FINANCIAL IMPACT:

These "excess" percentages must be borne by JSW and cannot be recovered from consumers, impacting the net profitability of specific power assets.

 

SUPPLY CHAIN AND CROSS-BORDER REGULATIONS

JSW’s foray into the electric vehicle (EV) market via JSW Motors is currently stalled by geopolitical and quality control regulations:

IMPORT LICENSES (2026):

The company has warned of delays in its first car launch due to pending licenses for importing critical components (like safety glass) from China.

QUALITY CONTROL ORDERS (QCO):

Strict Indian quality standards require overseas suppliers to be certified by local authorities. JSW’s heavy dependence on Chinese technology partners for its EV venture (including JSW MG Motor India) remains sensitive to New Delhi’s scrutiny of Chinese investments.


CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND SEBI COMPLIANCE

Despite the operational challenges, the Group maintains high transparency in its statutory filings:

SEBI DISCLOSURES:

Both JSW Steel and JSW Energy remain compliant with Regulation 30 of the SEBI LODR Regulations, notably in the timely reporting of NCLT approvals for acquisitions (e.g., the Raigarh Champa Rail Infrastructure acquisition in January 2026).

ESG FRAMEWORKS:

The group has shifted toward "Double Materiality" in its 2025-2026 reporting, aligning with the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and the Business Responsibility and Sustainability Reporting (BRSR) mandated by SEBI.

 

The above lapses signify how compliance is important for a conglomerate business group like JSW.

R V SECKAR , FCS, LLB, 79047 19295

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

ED IMPOSED A ₹184 CRORE FEMA VIOLATIONS PENALTY ON NEWSCLICK WHICH IS THE LARGEST FEMA-RELATED FINES IMPOSED ON A MEDIA ORGANIZATION IN INDIA

 

ED IMPOSED A ₹184 CRORE FEMA VIOLATIONS PENALTY ON NEWSCLICK WHICH IS THE LARGEST FEMA-RELATED FINES IMPOSED ON A MEDIA ORGANIZATION IN INDIA


PPK NEWSCLICK STUDIO PVT. LTD

On 16 February 2026, the Enforcement Directorate imposed a Rs 184 crore penalty under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) against PPK NewsClick Studio Pvt. Ltd. and its founder editor Prabir Purkayasthaz

DETAILS OF THE VIOLATIONS

1. The company misrepresented the nature of its business activity in statutory filings.


2. Foreign inward remittances declared as export of services but found to be in contravention of FEMA provisions.


3. Transactions were intentionally designed to defeat the objectives of the foreign exchange regulatory framework.

 

4.Misrepresentation of foreign direct investment (FDI) funds

 

5, Misdeclaration of services and exports

 

₹184 CRORE PENALTY

The Enforcement Directorate’s adjudicating authority has imposed a ₹184 crore penalty on NewsClick and its founder-editor Prabir Purkayastha for alleged violations of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA).

DETAILS OF THE PENALTY

- Rs 120 crore penalty levied on the company.

- Rs 64 crore penalty levied on Purkayastha personally, under Section 42 of FEMA, holding him liable for the company's conduct.

LEGAL GROUNDS:

Purkayastha was held liable under Section 42 of FEMA, which makes directors responsible for contraventions during their tenure.

INVESTIGATIONS:

NewsClick and its founder are also under scrutiny by other agencies including the CBI, Delhi Police, and Income Tax Department for alleged violations ranging from money laundering to breaches of the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA).

HIGHEST PENALTY UNDER FEMA

This penalty is one of the largest FEMA-related fines imposed on a media organization in India.

R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB , 79047 19295

Sunday, February 15, 2026

THE OPERATION OF FRAUDULENT INPUT TAX CREDIT (ITC) IN INDIA BY FRAUDUSTERS

 THE OPERATION OF FRAUDULENT INPUT

 TAX CREDIT (ITC) IN INDIA BY

 FRAUDUSTERS



Fraudulent ITC refers to the illegal practice of availing tax credits under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) framework without actual supply of goods or services. This undermines revenue collection and creates unfair competition.

 

COMMON METHODS OF ITC FRAUD

Bogus Invoices:

Claiming ITC on fake or inflated invoices without actual movement of goods.

Non-existent Suppliers:

Using shell companies or firms with cancelled GST registrations to generate invoices.

Circular Trading:

Creating artificial transactions among related parties to inflate turnover and claim ITC.

No Receipt of Goods:

Availing ITC without physically receiving goods or services, only on paper transactions.

 

RECENT CASES

₹2,150 crore scam:

DGGI busted a massive fake ITC-export refund fraud, arresting masterminds across India. A separate ₹17 crore fraud was unearthed in Andaman & Nicobar

₹6.53 crore fraud:

A company director was arrested in Delhi for availing ITC on bogus invoices worth ₹36.28 crore, with suppliers found to be fake or non-functional .

Nationwide crackdown:

Between August–October 2024, authorities identified 17,818 fake firms involved in ITC frauds worth ₹35,132 crore, saving ₹6,484 crore through ITC blocking and recoveries

FY26 surge:

GST officers detected fraudulent ITC claims of ₹15,851 crore in April–June 2025, showing a sharp rise despite fewer fake firms .

 

LEGAL FRAMEWORK & ENFORCEMENT

    Fraudulent ITC claims violate the CGST Act, 2017.

    Offenders can face:

    Arrest under Section 69 of the CGST Act.

    Cancellation of GST registration.

    Attachment of properties for recovery.

    Prosecution with imprisonment and fines.

    Courts have clarified that genuine ITC cannot be denied if transactions are bona fide, even if suppliers fail to pay GST .

KEY TAKEAWAYS

 Vendor due diligence, GST registration status checks, and actual goods movement documentation are now critical — not optional.

Because in GST law, “Documentation without substance = Litigation (and possibly prosecution).”

 

R V SECKAR , FCS, LLB 79047 19295

Saturday, February 14, 2026

KEY MCA PENALTY AREAS (2025-2026 TRENDS):

  KEY MCA PENALTY AREAS (2025-2026 TRENDS):

MCA IMPOSING SIGNIFICANT PENALTIES FOR NON COMPLIANCES UNDER COMPANIES ACT,2013

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) imposes significant penalties—ranging from ₹1 lakh to over ₹7 lakh—on companies and their directors for compliance lapses under the Companies Act, 2013. Frequent penalties stem from failures in filing annual returns (MGT-7/AOC-4), maintaining registered offices (INC-22), or appointing key personnel.

KEY MCA PENALTY AREAS (2025-2026 TRENDS):

 


STATISTICS ON NON-COMPLIANCE

·      1250 Cases have been filed for non-compliance during 25-26 and fines collected around Rs 75 Crores.

·      TOP VIOLATIONS

·      Reporting Issues – 45%

·      Audit Lapses         -30%

·      Regulatory non-compliances -25%

FINANCIALS MISTATEMENTS

·      Fraud Losses Rs 120 Crores

DIRECTOR DISQUALIFICATIONS

·      Disqualifications   320

·      Banned Directors    95

REASONS FOR DISQUALIFICATIONS

·      Fraud                            40%

·      Negligence                   30%

·      Conflict of Interest     25%

 

CONSEQUENCES OF NON-COMPLIANCE:

PERSONAL LIABILITY:

Penalties are often imposed on both the company and every officer in default (directors).

INCREASED SCRUTINY:

Repeated failure to respond to notices leads to ex-parte orders and higher penalties. 

 Failure to file forms can restrict a company's ability to borrow money, raise funds, or operate legally.

APPEAL TO REGIONAL DIRECTOR

Companies have 90 days to pay penalties or can file appeals to the Regional Director (RD) within 60 days of receiving an order.

RISKS & CONSEQUENCES

    Monetary fines can strain finances.

    Directors may face personal liability.

    Persistent non-compliance can lead to prosecution or disqualification of directors.

    Reputation damage and restrictions on future operations.

PREVENTIVE ACTION:

Timely filing of annual returns, financial statements, and board reports is critical to avoid penalties.

R V SECKAR FCS,LLB 79047 19295

Thursday, February 12, 2026

COMPETITION COMMISSION SLAPS RS 27 CR FINE ON COMPUTER CHIP MAKER INTEL CORP FOR UNFAIR BUSINESS PRACTICES

 COMPETITION COMMISSION  SLAPS RS 27 CR FINE ON COMPUTER CHIP MAKER INTEL CORP FOR UNFAIR BUSINESS PRACTICES

The Competition Commission of India (CCI) has fined Intel Corporation ₹27.38 crore for abuse of dominant position in the market for boxed microprocessors used in desktops.

WHAT HAPPENED?

•     WARRANTY RESTRICTION:

In 2016, Intel introduced an India-specific warranty policy that limited warranty coverage only to products purchased from authorized Indian distributors.

    DISCRIMINATION:

This policy was different from Intel’s global warranty practices in countries like China and Australia, where consumers had broader coverage.


    LEGAL FINDING:

CCI ruled that this amounted to anti-competitive conduct under Section 4 of the Competition Act, as it unfairly disadvantaged Indian consumers.

    PENALTY:

Intel must pay ₹27.38 crore, reinforcing that global corporations must align their policies with Indian competition law.

The penalty has been imposed on the company for abusing its dominant position in the market for Boxed Micro Processors (BMPs) for desktops in India.

WHY IT MATTERS

    For Consumers: Indian buyers of Intel chips may now expect fairer warranty terms, closer to global standards.

    For Competitors: Other chipmakers like AMD could benefit if Intel’s policies are seen as restrictive, potentially shifting consumer trust.

LEARNING LESSONS

This case highlights how consumer protection and competition law are becoming more assertive in India’s fast-growing tech sector.

EARLIER CASE LAWS BY CCI FOR MARKEK ABUSE

 

KEY TAKEAWAYS

    PATTERN:

Most cases involve abuse of dominant position in markets where companies hold significant control (tech, real estate, energy, automotive).

    IMPACT:

Penalties are often accompanied by directions to change policies or agreements to restore fair competition.

R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295

Friday, February 6, 2026

NO RBI REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS FOR SMALL NBFC--RBI MPC UPDATE (FEB 6, 2026):

 NO RBI REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS FOR SMALL NBFC--RBI MPC UPDATE (FEB 6, 2026):

WHAT IS NEW ?

During the RBI Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting on February 6, 2026, the Reserve Bank of India announced regulatory relief for smaller non-banking financial companies (NBFCs):

  • ·      NBFCs that do not have access to public funds
  • ·      No customer interface
  • ·      And have total assets not exceeding ₹1,000 crore

This measure is part of a broader effort to ease compliance burdens and promote ease of doing business for smaller, low-risk NBFCs under a scale-based regulatory framework.

Small NBFCs are proposed to be exempted from the mandatory registration requirement with the RBI.

WHY THIS CONCERNS ?

UNDER THE PRESENT REGIME

Before this announcement, RBI registration (a Certificate of Registration or CoR) was mandatory for all entities meeting the NBFC definition under the RBI Act irrespective of scale. This included those without significant public fundraising or customer lending.

PERIODIC REPORTING IS MANDATORY UNDER CURRENT REGIME

The registration requirement typically triggers ongoing regulatory obligations, such as 

  • periodic reporting, 
  • governance, 
  • prudential compliance, and
  •  supervisory oversight.                                     Because of this, many small firms — including family offices and pooled investor vehicles — found it expensive or operationally cumbersome.

WHAT THE PROPOSED EXEMPTION AIMS TO?

  • ·      Reduce compliance cost and administrative load for genuinely small, non-public NBFCs
  • ·      Encourage market entry and financial innovation among smaller players
  • ·      Segment regulation by risk, aligning supervisory intensity with systemic significance

WHAT Conditions HAVE TO BE MET FOR EXEMPTION?

It’s not a blanket deregulation of all small NBFCs. The exemption specifically applies to NBFCs that meet all the following three criteria:

  • ·      No access to public funds
  • ·      No customer interface (directly)
  • ·      Asset size ≤ ₹1,000 crore
WHAT IS CUSTOMER INTERFACE?
Para 6(4) of under the RBI (NBFCs – Registration, Exemptions and Framework for Scale Based Regulation) Directions, 2025 (“RBI Master Directions”) defines customer interface as  “interaction between the NBFC and its customers while carrying on its business” In essence, customer interface exists where an NBFC directly deals with customers in the course of its business, such as sourcing borrowers, communicating loan terms, collecting repayments, or addressing grievances. The concept focuses on direct dealing/direct public engagement between the NBFC and its customers in the conduct of its business. Entities engaged in capital market transactions such as trading in shares, investments etc are not seen as having customer interface.

That means NBFCs that do take public funds (deposits, public money) or have direct customers (e.g., NBFC-MFIs, NBFC lenders with branch networks) are not exempt from registration.

  • ·      Easing of regulatory processes (e.g., easier branch expansion for some NBFCs).

Thus, the registration exemption reform is complementary to broader goals: balancing regulatory oversight with facilitation of smaller non-bank credit intermediation.

The above draft proposals will be implemented once RBI issues further guidelines on the above.

 

R V SECKAR, FCS, LLB 79047 19295

Monday, February 2, 2026

RECENT CHANGE IN BUYBACK TAXATION-HIGHER TAXATION OF SHARE BUYBACKS FROM “DIVIDEND INCOME” TO “CAPITAL GAINS.”

RECENT CHANGE IN BUYBACK TAXATION-HIGHER  TAXATION OF SHARE BUYBACKS FROM “DIVIDEND INCOME” TO “CAPITAL GAINS.”


WHAT IS NEW ?

In Union Budget 2026, India has shifted the taxation of share buybacks from “dividend income” to “capital gains.” For promoters, this means a higher levy: corporate promoters face an effective tax rate of 22%, while non-corporate promoters (individuals, trusts, etc.) face 30%. This change aims to curb tax arbitrage and protect minority shareholders.

KEY CHANGES IN BUYBACK TAXATION (BUDGET 2026)

OLD REGIME (PRE-2026):

    Buyback proceeds were treated as dividend income.

    Companies paid a buyback distribution tax (BBT), while shareholders were exempt.

    Promoters often used buybacks to avoid higher dividend taxation.

NEW REGIME (2026 ONWARDS):

    All shareholders: Buyback proceeds are taxed as capital gains.

    Promoters: Additional levy introduced to discourage tax arbitrage.

    Corporate promoters (domestic companies): Effective tax rate 22%.

    Non-corporate promoters (individuals, HUFs, trusts, foreign entities): Effective tax rate 30%.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PROMOTERS

    HIGHER TAX BURDEN:

Promoters now directly bear capital gains tax, unlike the earlier system where companies absorbed the buyback tax.

    REDUCED ARBITRAGE:

 The government aims to close loopholes where promoters preferred buybacks over dividends to minimize tax.

    STRATEGIC SHIFT:

Promoters may reconsider capital allocation strategies, balancing dividends vs. buybacks.

    MINORITY SHAREHOLDER PROTECTION:

 Ensures fairer treatment, aligning buyback proceeds with capital gains taxation.

SPECIAL DIVIDEND BY PROCTOR & GAMBLE

Proctor & Gamble announced a special dividend of Rs 25 out of total dividend of Rs 195 mainly to avoid share buyback and pay higher taxes.

HOW WILL IT HELP THE CORPORATES ?

·      It is not part of the regular dividend policy

·      It should not be annualised or extrapolated

·      It helps return cash without committing to higher future payouts

KEY TAKEAWAY

Promoters in India now face direct capital gains taxation on buybacks, with 22% for corporates and 30% for non-corporates, marking a decisive policy shift to discourage tax arbitrage and protect minority investors

R V SECKAR FCS, LLB 79047 19295