Saturday 16 November 2013
Saturday 9 November 2013
Conversion of Private Ltd company to Public Ltd Company
Simple power point presentation for CS Professional students and executive programme students
Download now
Tuesday 28 May 2013
Priority chapters of Company Secretarial Practice for June 2013 Examination
Priority chapters of
Company Secretarial Practice for June 2013 Examination
Rank
|
Name
of Chapter
|
1
|
Decision making forums and meetings
|
2
|
Directors and Managers
|
3
|
Alteration in the Memorandum and Articles of Association
|
4
|
Company formation and conversion
|
5
|
Issue of securities
|
6
|
Preparation and presentation of Reports
|
7
|
Membership and Transfer / Transmission of Shares
|
8
|
Distribution of Profit
|
9
|
Auditors
|
10
|
Charges
|
11
|
Issue and redemption of Debentures
|
12
|
Company Secretary
|
13
|
Inter-Corporate Loans, Investments, Guarantees and Security
|
14
|
Best Practice
|
15
|
Insider Trading
|
16
|
E-Governance of Company Law (MCA-21)
|
17
|
Allotment of Securities
|
18
|
Filling and fling of Returns and Documents
|
19
|
Global developments in Company Law
|
20
|
Striking off Names of Companies
|
Monday 21 January 2013
SEBI – ‘Offer for sale’ mechanism modified, 5 Regulations including KYC & ICDR approved for amendment
PR No. 17/2013
SEBI Board Meeting
The SEBI Board met in Chennai today and took the following decisions:
1. Review of Offer for Sale (OFS) through stock exchange mechanism.
The Board noted that the OFS mechanism
has been found to be useful by market participants and popular for
offloading shares of promoters in listed companies in order to achieve
minimum public shareholding. As the deadline of June 2013 to achieve
minimum public shareholding is fast approaching and large number of
promoters are expected to offload their shares through OFS route, the
Board has approved the following changes in the OFS mechanism to make it
more economical, efficient and transparent:
a) Margin Requirement for Institutional orders placed in OFS:
(i) Institutions may place orders/bids
with 100% upfront margin and modification/cancellation of such
orders/bids shall be permitted. Custodian confirmation shall be within the trading hours. However, the settlement of funds and securities shall take place on T+1 day.
(ii) Institutions may place
orders without upfront margin in line with secondary market practice.
However such bids/orders cannot be modified /cancelled, except upward
revision in the price or quantity. Confirmation by custodian and settlement shall be as per the rules for secondary market transactions.
b) Visibility of order book:
(i) Cumulative bid quantity of 100%
margined orders as well as non-margined but non-cancellable orders shall
be made available to the market throughout the trading session. The
order book shall display two sets of orders, cumulative orders/bids with
100% margin and cumulative orders/bids without margin.
(ii) Indicative price shall be
disclosed to market throughout the trading session. The indicative price
shall be calculated based on all bids/orders.
2. Amendment to SEBI (Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers) Regulations, 2011 (Takeover Regulations, 2011)
The Board took note of the concerns raised during the implementation of Takeover Regulations, 2011 and approved the following:
(a) Relevant date for making Public Announcement and determination of offer price in cases of combined modes of acquisition
Where the open offer obligations are
triggered pursuant to an agreement or otherwise in combination of any
modes of acquisition, the ‘relevant date’ for making the Public Announcement
and determination of offer price shall be the earliest date on which
obligations are triggered. This will, however, not be applicable if the
subsequent trigger is on account of willful and deliberate act on the
part of the acquirer.
(b) Relevant date for making Public Announcement and determination of offer price in cases of preferential allotment
The information about the impending
preferential allotment comes into the public domain on the date of the
Board resolution which authorizes the preferential allotment and the
market price gets adjusted or may even rise which exposes the
transaction to market risks. Therefore, it has been decided that the
date of board resolution authorizing the preferential allotment shall be
the relevant date for the purpose of triggering open offer obligations
and determination of offer price, instead of the date on which special
resolution is passed under Section 81(1A) of the Companies Act, 1956.
(c) Aligning disclosure requirements under Takeover Regulations with SEBI (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations, 1992
In order to bring parity in disclosure
requirements among various SEBI regulations, the disclosure requirement
with regard to buy or sell two percent by persons holding more than
five percent as specified in Takeover Regulations, 2011 shall be
modified in line with SEBI (Prohibition of Insider Trading) Regulations,
1992.
(d) Clarification on reckoning the period of ninety days in case of increase of voting rights due to buyback by target company
Presently, if the voting rights of a
shareholder, who is not a party to the buyback arrangement, go beyond
the prescribed threshold limit on account of buyback by the target
company, the open offer requirement will not be triggered if voting
rights are brought below the threshold limit within ninety days from the
date on which the voting rights so increase. It has now been clarified
that the period of ninety days will be reckoned from the date of closure
of the buyback offer.
(e) Norms for completion of market purchase of shares made during the offer period
Presently, the Takeover Regulations do
not allow completion of acquisition of shares or voting rights which
triggers the open offer obligations until the expiry of the offer
period. But such acquisition can be completed after the expiry of 21
working days from the date of the detailed public statement, provided
the acquirer deposits 100 percent of the consideration payable in cash
in the escrow account. The regulations also allowed purchase of shares
from stock exchange which required to be completed within two days as
per settlement process, thus creating an anomalous situation.
It has, therefore, now been decided that
market purchases made during the open offer period can be completed
during the open offer period subject to such shares being kept in an
escrow account. Further, these shares can be transferred from the escrow
account to the name of the acquirer after the expiry of 21 working days
from the date of the detailed public statement, provided the acquirer
deposits 100 percent of the consideration payable in cash in the escrow
account.
3. Amendment to the Securities
and Exchange Board of India (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996, with
respect to Infrastructure Debt Fund (IDF) :
(a) Investments of funds received on account of pre-payment of principal or regular repayments of principal to be permitted:
IDF-MFs would be allowed toinvest funds received on account of pre-payment of principal or regular
repayments of principal with respect to the underlying assets of the
IDF in bonds of Public Financial Institutions (PFIs) and infrastructure
finance companies. This can be done only if the AMC is unable to find
the core assets like debt assets or securitized debt of infrastructure
companies, bank loans related to infrastructure, etc. for deployment of
the amounts of principal.
(b) Extension in the tenure of the scheme:
The tenure of the scheme would be
allowed to be extended upto two years beyond the original tenure with
the consent of 2/3rds of its investors by value.
(c) Widening the definition of strategic investors:
The present definition of strategic investors would be widened to include the following categories of investors:
(i) Systemically important NBFCs registered with Reserve Bank of India
(ii) FIIs registered with SEBI which are long term investors, subject to their applicable investment limits
This is in addition to the present categories of investors i.e.
- An Infrastructure Finance Company registered with Reserve Bank of India as Non Banking Financial Company
- A Scheduled Commercial Bank
- International Multilateral Financial Institution
(d) Extension
of New Fund Offer (NFO) period and Specified Transaction Period (STP)
and allowing of the private placement as an alternative:
(i) The NFO period would be
increased to upto 45 days (from upto 15 days) and the STP would be
increased to upto 45 days (from upto 30 days), only with respect to IDF
schemes.
(ii) Private placement to less than 50 investors would be permitted as an alternative. In case of private placement, the mutual funds
would only have to file a placement memorandum with SEBI instead of a
Scheme Information Document and a Key Information Memorandum. However,
all the other conditions applicable to IDFs offered through the NFO
route like kind of investments, investment restrictions, etc. would be
applicable to IDFs offered through private placement.
(e) Review of limits on sponsor owned assets:
An IDF scheme would be allowed to invest
upto 30% of its AUM in assets not below investment grade owned by
sponsor/ associates (as increased from the earlier 20%) subject to the
condition that the sponsor/associate retains at least 30% of the assets
sold to the IDF till the assets are held in the IDF portfolio.
(f) Limits on investments in unrated /below investment grade assets and limits of investment in instruments of a single issuer:
Investments of the IDF scheme in
instruments, irrespective of rating, of a single issuer would be
restricted to 30% of net assets, and overall investment of the scheme in
unrated/below investment grade assets would be restricted to 30% of the
net assets, extendable to 50% with the prior approval of the Boards of
trustee & AMC.
4. Amendment
in Securities and Exchange Board of India (Stock-Brokers and
Sub-Brokers) Regulations, 1992 for the purpose of introducing debt
segment on stock exchanges:
(a) With an
objective to develop corporate bond markets and encourage trading on
stock exchange trading platform, it is proposed to create separate debt
segment on stock exchanges which shall provide for trading ,reporting
,membership, clearing and settlement rules , risk management framework
and other necessary provisions. This will also facilitate Scheduled
Commercial Banks to become members of recognised stock exchanges for the
purpose of undertaking proprietary transactions in the corporate bond
market, as approved by RBI vide circular dated November 5, 2012.
(b) In order to enable direct
membership of banks and other institutional participants (as specified
by their sectoral regulators) in the proposed debt segment, the Board
approved amendments in SEBI (Stock-Brokers and Sub-Brokers) Regulations,
1992 to:-
(i) Include debt segment
in addition to derivatives segment and currency derivatives segment in
the definition of clearing members, self clearing members, trading
members;
(ii) Introduce definition
of “proprietary trading member” to permit specified institutions such
as scheduled commercial banks, primary dealers, pension funds,
provident funds, insurance companies, mutual funds and any other
investors as may be specified by sectoral regulators from time to time
to trade only on their own account in debt segment; and
(iii) Introduce new Chapter
to provide for registration, procedures, fees, obligations and
responsibilities for trading member/ proprietary trading members/self
clearing member/ clearing member of debt segment.
5. Amendment to SEBI [KYC (Know Your Client) Registration Agency] Regulations, 2011
With a view to simplify operations and
in order to align the SEBI [KYC (Know Your Client) Registration Agency]
Regulations, 2011 (KRA Regulations) with the proposal of Central KYC
Registry, Board approved to amend the Regulations. As a result, the
intermediaries would retain the original KYC documents of their clients
and would furnish the scanned images of the KYC documents with proper
authentication to the KRAs.
This proposal will help to reduce the
cost of and delay in movement of documents, saving in warehousing
charges and avoiding physical print out of documents of millions of
existing investors.
6. Amendment to SEBI (ICDR) Regulations, 2009 for enabling two-way fungibility of IDRs
In order to provide liquidity in the
domestic markets, it has been decided to enable partial two-way
fungibility of Indian Depository Receipts (IDRs). It has been,
inter-alia, decided that :
SEBI (ICDR) Regulations 2009 would be amended for enabling two-way fungibility of IDRs.
SEBI will notify guidelines providing a detailed roadmap for the future IDR issuances as well as for the existing listed IDRs.
January 18, 2013
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Attention Students Enrolled for CS June 2018 Examination
Dear CS Students, Those who enrolled for CS examination June 2018 session, download Admit Card from www.icsi.edu well in advance without...
-
Dear CS Students, Those who enrolled for CS examination June 2018 session, download Admit Card from www.icsi.edu well in advance without...
-
In the interest of taxpayers, it has been decided to extend the last date for filing of return in FORM GSTR-3B for the month of April, 2...
-
Join ICSI webcast for June 2018 Exam students on 22nd May, 2018 at 11.00 A.M. Login at https://dezd00medastx.cloudfront.net/belive/icsi/e...