RBI, Sebi tightens checks on overseas flows as currency pressure mounts
What happened
RBI and SEBI have tightened scrutiny on overseas investments amid currency pressure and foreign outflows. RBI issued at least 10 queries over three weeks examining whether funds were routed overseas without clear business purpose or tangible asset backing. Focus areas include family offices using ODI route, inflated offshore asset valuations, and potential misuse of investment structures. Overseas direct investment rose 11% to $48.39 billion in FY25, while individual remittances reached $28.9 billion. Current LRS limit remains $250,000 annually per individual.
Why it matters
The heightened regulatory oversight reflects concerns over mounting pressure on the Indian rupee from oil price surges and foreign capital outflows. While India maintains a partially open capital account, regulators are scrutinizing whether current investment flows genuinely serve business purposes or constitute disguised capital flight. The focus on family offices is particularly significant as they often structure as corporates to access higher ODI limits compared to individual LRS caps. This regulatory tightening represents enhanced oversight rather than policy rollback, aiming to distinguish legitimate cross-border expansion from speculative or wealth management activities that could exacerbate currency pressure. The timing coincides with broader measures like higher precious metal import taxes to conserve foreign exchange reserves. Both RBI and SEBI are examining opaque structures, aggressive valuations by merchant bankers, and instances where overseas investment arms serve capital market exposure rather than strategic expansion. This calibrated approach seeks to maintain investment facilitation while preventing potential abuse of liberalized remittance frameworks during periods of external sector stress.
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