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Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026 private equity India

How India's Corporate Laws (amendment) Bill, 2026 and PN3/SEBI Changes Reshape Private Equity Deals, Exits and Structuring, Practical Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, introduced in Lok Sabha in March 2026, is the most consequential overhaul of India’s Companies Act, 2013 and Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 in nearly a decade, and its implications for private equity in India are far-reaching. Arriving alongside the March 2026 revision of Press Note 3 (PN3), which eases foreign-investor eligibility requirements under India’s FDI policy, and updated SEBI operational circulars governing dematerialisation and settlement windows, the combined regulatory package reshapes how PE sponsors structure entries, negotiate documentation and time exits. This guide distils the three parallel reforms into a single, practitioner-oriented resource for general partners, fund general counsel, CFOs and transaction lawyers working on live or pipeline deals in the Indian market.

Executive Summary: 5 Quick Takeaways on the Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026 and Private Equity India

  1. Buyback thresholds raised and simplified. The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 proposes amendments to Section 68 of the Companies Act, 2013, raising buyback limits for prescribed classes of companies and streamlining the special-resolution route, making share buybacks a more viable PE exit mechanism (Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, PRS India).
  2. Specified trusts can now convert to LLPs. A new conversion pathway allows specified trusts, including certain fund vehicles, to reorganise as LLPs, providing greater flexibility for alternative investment structures (Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, PRS India).
  3. Press Note 3 easing (March 2026) reduces prior-approval friction. The revised PN3, issued by DPIIT, relaxes prior government-approval requirements for a wider category of financial investors, effectively expediting the approval timeline for many cross-border PE transactions (DPIIT Press Note 3, March 2026).
  4. SEBI dematerialisation and settlement updates. Updated SEBI circulars on the dematerialisation window for unlisted companies and shortened settlement cycles affect exit timelines, sponsors must factor these into secondary-sale and buyback execution calendars (SEBI Circulars, 2026).
  5. Immediate action required on live deals. Transaction teams should audit existing shareholder agreements, buyback provisions and PN3 representations now. Waiting for notification of the final rules risks settlement delays and documentation mismatches.

What to do now: Review every live SPA, shareholders’ agreement and exit-planning document against the new provisions outlined below. Where gaps exist, engage counsel to draft amendment letters and updated investor-eligibility representations before MCA notifies the final rules.

What the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 Actually Changes, Legal Summary

Scope and effective dates

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 was introduced in Lok Sabha in March 2026 and proposes amendments to both the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 (PRS India, Bill Text). The Bill contains provisions that will take effect on dates to be notified by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA); different sections may be brought into force at different times. Industry observers expect MCA to issue a phased notification schedule, with core company-law changes, including buyback amendments, likely notified first, and enabling provisions for trust-to-LLP conversions following once subordinate rules are finalised.

Key company-law changes affecting PE

For private equity sponsors, the Bill’s most material company-law amendments cluster around four areas:

  • Share buyback thresholds and process (Section 68). The Bill proposes raising the aggregate buyback ceiling for prescribed classes of companies and introduces new provisos to simplify the special-resolution route. The likely practical effect will be that mid-market and growth-stage portfolio companies, the typical PE sweet spot, can execute buybacks of a larger quantum without requiring protracted board and shareholder choreography (Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, PRS India; AZB & Partners Client Alert).
  • Consideration for buybacks. Amendments address the permissible sources from which buyback consideration may be funded, extending flexibility beyond free reserves and securities premium in prescribed circumstances. This expands the funding toolkit for portfolio companies planning buyback-driven exits (Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas Client Alert).
  • Share-linked instruments. The Bill clarifies the issuance and conversion mechanics for certain share-linked instruments, reducing ambiguity for convertible-preference-share and compulsorily-convertible-debenture structures that PE funds routinely deploy.
  • Conversion of specified trusts to LLPs. An entirely new conversion mechanism enables specified trusts, including certain alternative-investment-fund vehicles and family trusts holding portfolio stakes, to reorganise as LLPs, a form increasingly favoured for its operational flexibility and pass-through taxation characteristics. For a deeper discussion of LLP mechanics, see our guide to LLPs in India.

LLP Act changes relevant to funds

The Bill’s LLP Act amendments go beyond the trust-conversion pathway. They also simplify compliance requirements for smaller LLPs, introduce digital-filing reforms that reduce administrative lag and clarify the rights of partners on winding-up, all of which affect the structuring calculus for PE sponsors deciding between company and LLP vehicles at the fund or co-invest level.

Provision Pre-2026 position 2026 change (practical PE impact)
Share buyback thresholds & approval (Section 68) Buyback subject to specified percentage limits and special-resolution process under Companies Act, 2013 Bill proposes higher buyback ceilings for prescribed companies and streamlined approval, easier statutory route for PE-backed buybacks
Conversion of specified trusts No express conversion path from specified trusts to LLP New conversion mechanism to LLP, clearer restructuring route for fund vehicles
Share-linked instrument mechanics Ambiguity around issuance and conversion of CCDs/CCPS in certain scenarios Clarified conversion mechanics, reduces documentation risk for PE convertible instruments
LLP compliance burden Uniform compliance obligations regardless of LLP size Simplified compliance for smaller LLPs; digital-filing reforms, reduced admin costs for co-invest vehicles

Press Note 3 (PN3 2026) and Foreign Investor Eligibility, Cross-Border PE India

What PN3 changed

In March 2026, the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) issued a revised Press Note 3 that materially alters the prior-government-approval regime for foreign investments. The original PN3 framework, introduced to screen investments from countries sharing a land border with India, had created significant approval-timeline uncertainty for foreign PE funds structured through jurisdictions caught by the restrictions. The 2026 revision narrows the categories of investors requiring mandatory prior approval and introduces a faster-track notification route for financial investors meeting prescribed eligibility criteria (DPIIT Press Note 3, March 2026). For background on the earlier PN3 regime, see our analysis of the easing of Press Note 3 FDI restrictions.

Which foreign investors benefit, and which still need prior approval

Early indications suggest the revised PN3 distinguishes between (a) financial investors, such as regulated PE and venture-capital funds domiciled in or investing through jurisdictions previously caught by PN3, who can now proceed under the automatic route provided they satisfy prescribed eligibility conditions, and (b) strategic or state-linked investors who continue to require prior government approval through the security-screening mechanism. Fund teams should obtain formal legal opinions confirming which route applies to their specific fund entities and feeder structures.

Evidencing eligibility in investment memoranda and SPAs

Transaction documentation should be updated to reflect the new PN3 framework. Specifically:

  • Investment memoranda should include an PN3-eligibility section that discloses the fund’s domicile, beneficial-ownership chain and any land-border-country nexus.
  • SPAs should contain investor representations confirming compliance with PN3 conditions, a condition-precedent for automatic-route eligibility certification and indemnity language covering any post-completion PN3-related challenge.

Practical timeline for approvals, document checklist

The following documents are typically required to evidence PN3 eligibility under the revised framework:

  • Fund structure chart, full ownership chain to ultimate beneficial owners, certified by fund administrator.
  • Regulatory registration certificates, SEBI AIF registration (for domestic funds) or home-jurisdiction regulatory authorisation.
  • PN3 self-certification, board-approved declaration confirming no beneficial ownership by restricted-jurisdiction entities beyond the prescribed threshold.
  • CA/CS certificate, independent professional certification of compliance with PN3 conditions.
  • Legal opinion, external counsel opinion confirming automatic-route eligibility.

Industry observers expect the government-approval process, where still required, to run approximately 8–12 weeks from complete-application submission, though this timeline remains subject to the volume of applications and inter-ministerial coordination. Sponsors with cross-border joint-venture structures should begin the eligibility-assessment process immediately.

SEBI Operational Measures, Dematerialisation Window 2026 and Settlement Mechanics for Private Equity Exits India 2026

SEBI dematerialisation and disposal windows

SEBI’s updated circulars on mandatory dematerialisation of securities in unlisted public companies, combined with shortened settlement cycles for off-market transfers, directly affect how PE exits are executed. Unlisted portfolio companies must ensure all securities, including preference shares and debentures held by PE investors, are held in demat form before any transfer or buyback can settle. Sponsors should confirm that the target company’s Registrar and Transfer Agent (RTA) and depository accounts are fully operational well ahead of any contemplated exit (SEBI Circulars, 2026).

IPO and strategic-sale exit: demat and regulatory steps

For PE sponsors pursuing an IPO exit, SEBI’s pre-filing requirements now include confirmation of complete dematerialisation for all pre-IPO shareholders. Any securities still held in physical form must be converted before the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) filing. For strategic-sale exits, sponsors must factor in the off-market transfer settlement window, which SEBI has progressively shortened. The practical implication is that deal timelines must build in an additional 15–20 business days for demat verification and settlement processing.

Practical steps for secondary sale and buyback settlements

Common friction points on PE secondary sales and buybacks include delayed demat conversion of convertible instruments, discrepancies between the company’s register of members and depository records and incomplete KYC documentation for offshore transferees. A pre-exit demat audit, ideally conducted 60–90 days before the anticipated completion date, can identify and resolve these issues before they delay settlement. Sponsors should also coordinate with the portfolio company’s company secretary and RTA to ensure that any corporate actions (conversions, subdivisions, name changes) are reflected in the depository system in real time.

PE Deal Structuring India: Documentation Changes Sponsors Should Adopt

Preferred equity and convertible instruments after the Bill

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 clarifies the issuance and conversion mechanics for share-linked instruments, which has significant implications for PE deal structuring in India. Compulsorily convertible preference shares (CCPS) and compulsorily convertible debentures (CCDs), the workhorses of Indian PE transactions, can now benefit from more predictable conversion timelines and fewer technical objections during the conversion process. Sponsors should review existing instrument terms to assess whether amendments to the articles of association or instrument terms are needed to align with the new statutory language.

Model clause bank

The following model clauses address the principal documentation updates required. These are illustrative, adapt with counsel for each transaction.

  • Buyback protective language (SHA/investor-rights agreement). “The Company shall, upon written request of the Majority Investors, convene a board meeting to consider a buyback of Equity Shares in accordance with Section 68 of the Companies Act, 2013 (as amended by the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026), up to the maximum permissible limit under applicable law, funded from [free reserves / securities premium / such other source as may be permitted under the 2026 amendments]. The Company shall use its best endeavours to complete such buyback within [90] days of receipt of the Investor Notice.”
  • PN3 investor eligibility representation (SPA). “The Investor represents and warrants that (a) it does not have any beneficial owner resident in, or entity incorporated in, a country sharing a land border with India, that holds an interest exceeding the prescribed threshold under Press Note 3 (as revised in March 2026); (b) it satisfies the prescribed conditions for investment under the automatic route; and (c) it has obtained a legal opinion from Indian counsel confirming the foregoing, a copy of which has been delivered to the Company.”
  • Trust-to-LLP conversion covenant. “If, following the notification of the relevant provisions of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Act, 2026, the Fund Vehicle proposes to convert from a specified trust to a Limited Liability Partnership, the Fund Manager shall provide not less than [60] days’ prior written notice to all investors and shall ensure that such conversion does not adversely affect any investor’s economic rights, voting rights or exit entitlements.”
  • Escrow and settlement timing. “Completion of the sale of Sale Shares shall be subject to confirmation by the RTA that such Sale Shares have been credited in dematerialised form to the Purchaser’s demat account, in accordance with SEBI’s prevailing settlement requirements. If settlement is not completed within [T+5] business days of the Completion Date, either party may extend the Longstop Date by [15] business days upon written notice.”

Negotiation playbook for sponsor and minority positions

The 2026 changes shift negotiating dynamics. Sponsors should leverage the raised buyback thresholds to negotiate stronger put-option mechanics, anchored to the new statutory ceilings. Minority investors, meanwhile, should insist on anti-dilution protections that account for the Bill’s clarified conversion mechanics, ensuring that any mid-term instrument conversion does not erode their economic stake. Both sides should build PN3-eligibility conditions precedent into closing checklists for any transaction involving a cross-border buyer. For broader guidance on structuring exit provisions, see our article on planning exit strategies for joint ventures.

Private Equity Exits India 2026: Route Comparison and Recommendations

Exit route comparison table

Exit route Pre-2026 rules 2026 impact
Share buyback Subject to Section 68 limits; often insufficient quantum for full PE exit; complex special-resolution process Higher ceilings and streamlined process under the Bill make buyback viable for partial or full exits in mid-market deals
IPO Standard SEBI DRHP process; demat required; SEBI pricing norms for OFS Shorter settlement windows and stricter pre-filing demat requirements, sponsors must start preparation earlier
Secondary sale (trade / strategic) Off-market transfer with standard settlement; PN3 prior-approval delays for certain buyers Faster PN3 clearance under revised Press Note 3 for eligible financial buyers; shortened SEBI settlement cycle reduces completion lag
Structured exit (put option / drag-along) Contractual mechanism; enforceability subject to NCLT/arbitral interpretation Clarified conversion mechanics for instruments backing structured exits; model clauses should be updated to reference 2026 amendments

How the Bill changes the buyback-versus-sale calculus

Before the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, share buybacks in India were rarely the primary PE exit mechanism because the statutory ceiling often fell short of the quantum needed for a full exit. The likely practical effect of the raised thresholds is that buybacks now become a credible standalone exit for investments up to a certain size. For larger deals, sponsors will likely use buybacks as a complementary liquidity tool, allowing a partial exit via buyback combined with a secondary sale of the remaining stake. The key structuring question is sequencing: executing the buyback first reduces the number of outstanding shares and can improve the per-share valuation for the subsequent secondary sale.

Cross-border buyer issues, PN3 and tax

Sponsors seeking to exit to a cross-border strategic buyer must navigate both the revised PN3 framework and India’s tax-treaty network. The 2026 PN3 revision reduces friction for eligible financial buyers, but strategic acquirers, particularly those with land-border-country ownership, still face mandatory prior-approval requirements. Tax withholding obligations on the sale consideration, transfer-pricing scrutiny on related-party transactions and treaty-benefit claims under India’s bilateral investment treaties all remain live issues that must be resolved before signing. For structuring options in cross-border contexts, our guide on cross-border joint ventures under India’s FDI regime provides additional context.

Private Equity Taxation India: Finance Act 2025/2026 Considerations for Exits and Structuring

Key tax issues for PE exits

The tax dimensions of the Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026 private equity India landscape are multi-layered. Key issues include:

  • Capital-gains treatment. Long-term capital gains on the sale of unlisted shares remain taxable at the rates prescribed under the Income Tax Act, 1961, as amended by the Finance Act. Sponsors should model exit proceeds under both the domestic-law rate and the applicable double-taxation-avoidance agreement (DTAA) rate to determine the optimal repatriation route.
  • Buyback taxation. The taxation of buyback proceeds has been an evolving area. Finance Act amendments in recent years shifted the incidence of tax on buybacks from the shareholder to the company, sponsors must factor the company-level tax cost into the buyback price when negotiating exit terms.
  • Deemed-dividend exposure. Certain structured-exit arrangements, particularly where the company funds the buyback from accumulated profits, may attract deemed-dividend provisions. Tax due diligence should specifically test for this exposure.
  • Transfer pricing. Where the buyer or seller is a connected person or the transaction involves a cross-border element, transfer-pricing documentation and benchmarking are required. The bill does not alter the transfer-pricing framework, but the increased buyback quantum under the new thresholds means that larger transactions will be subject to transfer-pricing review.

Finance Act 2025/2026 and repatriation considerations

The Finance Act provisions applicable to the assessment year 2026–27 and beyond should be reviewed alongside the Bill. Changes to surcharge rates, the treatment of securities transaction tax (STT) as a set-off against capital-gains tax in certain scenarios and updated DTAA protocols with key PE jurisdictions (Mauritius, Singapore, the Netherlands) all influence the net-of-tax return to investors. Sponsors should engage tax counsel to model the after-tax exit proceeds under multiple scenarios, buyback, secondary sale, IPO, and select the route that maximises net repatriation.

Practical tax due-diligence checklist

  • Confirm the holding period of each instrument to determine long-term versus short-term classification.
  • Verify whether the portfolio company has sufficient distributable reserves to fund a buyback without triggering deemed-dividend provisions.
  • Obtain a certificate from the company’s auditor confirming the tax-compliant sources of buyback funding.
  • Review the fund’s DTAA position and confirm that treaty benefits have not been denied under the General Anti-Avoidance Rules (GAAR) or Limitation of Benefits (LOB) clauses.
  • Model exit proceeds under at least three scenarios (buyback, secondary sale, IPO) to compare after-tax outcomes.

Note: Tax outcomes are deal-specific. The above checklist is a starting framework, sponsors should engage specialist Indian tax counsel for transaction-level modelling.

Immediate Action Checklist and Timeline for Live Deals, Sponsor and Portfolio Company Playbook

Whether a deal is mid-execution or in pipeline, fund teams should take the following steps within the indicated timeframes:

Within 30 days

  • Audit all existing SHAs, investor-rights agreements and exit-mechanism clauses against the buyback, conversion and PN3 changes.
  • Circulate an investor-communication memo summarising the key changes and their impact on fund-level exit planning.
  • Instruct external counsel to prepare a PN3-eligibility opinion for every fund vehicle involved in Indian investments.

Within 60 days

  • Complete a pre-exit demat audit for each portfolio company, confirm that all securities (equity, preference, debentures) are held in dematerialised form and depository records match the register of members.
  • Draft amendment letters for existing SPAs and SHAs to incorporate updated buyback protective language and PN3 representations (see model clauses above).
  • Engage tax counsel to model exit scenarios under the Finance Act 2025/2026 provisions.

Within 90 days

  • Finalise and execute SHA/SPA amendments with counterparties.
  • For any contemplated trust-to-LLP conversion, commence the feasibility study and investor-consent process.
  • Update the fund’s compliance manual and investment-committee templates to reflect the new regulatory framework.
  • Confirm that the portfolio company’s board has passed resolutions acknowledging the new buyback thresholds and authorising management to explore buyback mechanics if requested by investors.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

The convergence of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, the revised Press Note 3 and SEBI’s updated operational framework represents a pivotal moment for private equity deal-making in India. Sponsors and portfolio companies that act early, updating documentation, modelling exit scenarios under the new rules and securing PN3 eligibility opinions, will be best positioned to capture the structuring and exit efficiencies that the 2026 reforms are designed to deliver. Those who wait for final MCA notifications risk being caught with outdated agreements and misaligned timelines when the amendments come into force.

The Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026 private equity India landscape is evolving rapidly, and the window for proactive preparation is now. Engage experienced India-focused PE counsel to audit your portfolio, update your documentation and plan your next exit with confidence.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Pankaj Singla at Mulberry Law LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. PRS India, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 (Full Text PDF)
  2. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), Legislation and Notifications
  3. DPIIT, Press Note 3 (March 2026)
  4. SEBI, Official Circulars and Investor Notices
  5. AZB & Partners, Client Alert: Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  6. Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, Client Alert (Bill Analysis)
  7. EY India, Regulatory Alert: Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  8. Mondaq, The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  9. Finance Act 2025/2026, Government of India, Ministry of Finance

FAQs

Q1: How will the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 affect share buybacks for private-equity-backed companies?
The Bill proposes amendments to Section 68 of the Companies Act, 2013 that raise buyback ceilings for prescribed classes of companies and simplify the special-resolution route. For PE-backed companies, this means buybacks become a viable standalone or complementary exit mechanism for larger transaction sizes than were previously feasible under the statutory limits. Portfolio companies should review their articles of association and board authorisations to ensure they can take advantage of the new thresholds once notified by MCA.
The March 2026 revision of Press Note 3 narrows the categories of foreign investors requiring mandatory prior government approval. Regulated PE and VC funds that satisfy prescribed eligibility criteria, relating to beneficial-ownership disclosure and absence of land-border-country control above the threshold, can now invest under the automatic route. Funds should obtain a legal opinion confirming their eligibility, prepare a PN3 self-certification and include updated investor representations in all new transaction documents.
Yes, and the 2026 amendments make this route significantly more attractive. The raised buyback ceiling means a larger quantum of shares can be repurchased, and the streamlined special-resolution process reduces execution time. However, sponsors must ensure the company has adequate distributable reserves, comply with the company-level buyback tax and coordinate the demat settlement with the RTA and depository within SEBI’s prevailing settlement window.
The Bill itself does not directly alter income-tax provisions, but it affects exit structuring in ways that have tax consequences. For example, a higher-quantum buyback triggers a larger company-level buyback tax. The PN3 changes do not alter tax treatment directly but affect the investor-eligibility pathway, which in turn determines whether treaty benefits can be claimed. Sponsors should model tax outcomes under each exit route with specialist counsel, see the tax-interplay section of this guide for a detailed checklist.
Conduct a demat audit immediately, update PN3 representations in the SPA, re-model the exit under the new buyback thresholds and engage tax counsel to confirm the optimal route. Circulate an amendment letter to counterparties within 30 days to align documentation with the new framework.
All securities must be held in dematerialised form before an off-market transfer can settle. Sponsors should confirm demat status with the portfolio company’s RTA, resolve any discrepancies between the register of members and depository records and ensure KYC documentation for the transferee is complete. SEBI’s shortened settlement cycle means the entire process, from initiation of the off-market transfer instruction to credit of shares in the buyer’s demat account, should be planned with at least 15–20 business days of buffer.
The Bill introduces a new mechanism allowing specified trusts, including certain AIF vehicles, to convert into LLPs. The conversion requires compliance with conditions that will be prescribed by MCA in subordinate rules (yet to be notified). Sponsors considering this route should begin feasibility studies now, obtain investor consent in principle and prepare draft conversion documentation. For an overview of LLP structures in India, our existing guide provides foundational context.

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How India's Corporate Laws (amendment) Bill, 2026 and PN3/SEBI Changes Reshape Private Equity Deals, Exits and Structuring, Practical Guide

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