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Distressed asset acquisition in India has entered a new regulatory phase in 2026, driven by convergent changes to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, the FEMA Non-Debt Instrument framework updated in May 2026, revised FDI screening rules introduced through the March 2026 Press Note, and fresh RBI clarifications governing cross-border payment and repatriation mechanics. For foreign private-equity funds, strategic acquirers and their transaction counsel, these changes reshape every stage of a deal, from bid structuring and approval routing through to post-acquisition repatriation planning.
This guide provides a single, practical regulatory crosswalk and a step-by-step deal checklist that answers the central compliance question facing every inbound buyer: can a foreign investor acquire this distressed asset via an IBC sale, prepack or liquidation under the automatic FDI route, and if not, what structure mitigates the risk?
The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, as amended by notifications issued by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA), provides three principal channels through which a foreign investor can acquire a distressed Indian company or its assets. Understanding which channel applies, and what IBC foreign buyer approvals each one demands, is the first decision point in any transaction.
The Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process remains the primary pathway. Once the NCLT admits an application and appoints a Resolution Professional (RP), the RP invites expressions of interest from prospective resolution applicants. A foreign bidder submits a resolution plan to the Committee of Creditors (CoC), which must approve it by a vote of not less than 66 per cent by value. The approved plan is then sanctioned by the NCLT. Key considerations for foreign bidders include:
Where CIRP does not yield a viable resolution plan, the NCLT orders liquidation. The Liquidator conducts a sale of assets, either as a going concern or on a piecemeal basis, through an auction or private treaty process administered under the IBBI (Liquidation Process) Regulations. Foreign buyers can participate directly, but must ensure that any purchase of immovable property or shares triggers the correct FEMA and FDI filings. The liquidation route is often faster for asset-only purchases, though the buyer typically acquires assets free of existing liabilities (subject to the NCLT order), making it attractive for strategic acquirers who want a clean slate.
The pre-packaged insolvency resolution process allows eligible corporate debtors (MSMEs, and under the 2026 amendments, a broader category of debtors meeting prescribed thresholds) to negotiate a resolution plan with creditors before formal admission. A foreign investor can participate as the incoming acquirer in a prepack insolvency, but must pre-validate whether the transaction falls under the automatic or government FDI route before the base resolution plan is filed with the NCLT. Industry observers expect the expanded prepack framework to become an increasingly common channel for distressed asset acquisition in India, given its compressed timelines and lower stigma for operating management.
Outside the formal IBC framework, foreign investors may acquire stressed assets through RBI-guided restructuring frameworks, one-time settlements with lenders or direct negotiations. These transactions still require full FEMA and FDI compliance but bypass the NCLT approval process entirely.
| Approval / Process | Trigger / Typical Scenario | Approving Authority / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| IBC CIRP resolution plan (share or asset sale) | Corporate debtor admitted to CIRP; CoC approves resolution plan involving foreign acquirer | RP → CoC approval (66% by value) → NCLT sanction; post-sanction FEMA/FDI filings required separately |
| FEMA / NDI subscription or transfer (May 2026 updates) | Foreign subscription to equity or NDI; transfer of shares/NDI to a foreign entity | RBI / AD bank notifications and filings under FEMA NDI rules 2026; mandatory reporting and valuation compliance |
| FDI automatic vs government route (Press Note, March 2026) | Sector-specific thresholds; land-border investor; change in beneficial ownership or control triggers | DPIIT / Department of Commerce; government route requires prior approval before closing |
When a foreign buyer submits a resolution plan or bids in a liquidation auction, the RP and NCLT routinely request an expanded documentation pack. Preparing these materials early accelerates CoC evaluation and avoids adjournments:
For a detailed overview of the insolvency filing process, see our guide on how to file for insolvency in India. The 2026 IBC amendments have also introduced changes to resolution timelines and the mandatory admission framework that directly affect bidder planning.
The Foreign Exchange Management Act and the Non-Debt Instrument (NDI) Rules, as updated by the Reserve Bank of India in May 2026, govern how foreign capital enters and exits India for equity and equity-linked transactions. These FEMA NDI rules 2026 are the operational backbone of any foreign investor distressed purchase in India, determining subscription mechanics, transfer pricing floors, reporting deadlines and repatriation permissions.
The May 2026 FEMA amendments introduced several changes that directly affect buying distressed assets in India:
The FEMA/NDI framework treats share acquisitions and asset acquisitions differently, and the distinction carries significant practical consequences for structuring a distressed asset acquisition in India:
Consider a Singapore-based PE fund acquiring a distressed Indian manufacturing company through CIRP. The fund has two structural options. In Option A, it incorporates a new Indian SPV, subscribes to the SPV’s equity (triggering NDI reporting and automatic-route FDI compliance), and the SPV then submits the resolution plan as the acquiring entity. In Option B, the fund directly acquires shares of the corporate debtor under the NCLT-sanctioned plan, with the transfer price set at the CoC-approved amount. Option A provides structural flexibility for future exit (the fund can sell SPV shares offshore), while Option B is simpler but locks the fund into direct Indian equity holdings subject to domestic capital-gains taxation on exit.
The DPIIT’s March 2026 Press Note refined the criteria for determining whether a foreign acquisition falls under the automatic or government FDI route. For FDI approvals on a distressed acquisition, the decision tree is critical because government-route clearance adds weeks to an already time-pressured IBC timeline.
The following questions determine which route applies:
Where a transaction sits on the boundary of the automatic and government routes, experienced deal counsel draft specific protective provisions:
Foreign bidders must plan not only how to get capital into India but also how to get returns out. The repatriation rules in India, governed by FEMA and periodically clarified by RBI circulars, interact with income-tax withholding obligations to create a layered compliance requirement.
If the foreign investor funds the acquisition partly through external commercial borrowings (ECBs), for instance, by lending to an Indian SPV that then bids in the CIRP, the RBI ECB rules 2026 apply. Key parameters include:
Once the distressed asset is acquired and the Indian entity generates returns, repatriation follows prescribed channels:
The following step-by-step checklist consolidates the regulatory requirements into a practical workflow. Timelines are indicative and vary based on sector, transaction complexity and the NCLT bench’s caseload.
| Phase | Key Activities | Estimated Duration | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-bid diligence | Sector/FDI route analysis; documentation pack; escrow setup | 3–4 weeks | Buyer’s counsel + insolvency advisor |
| Bid and CoC process | EOI; resolution plan filing; CoC negotiation and vote; NCLT sanction | 10–12 weeks (CIRP timeline) | RP, CoC, buyer, NCLT |
| Post-award closing | FEMA/NDI filings; FDI clearance; share allotment; escrow release; post-closing compliance | 6–8 weeks (automatic route) / 12–20 weeks (government route) | AD bank, DPIIT, buyer’s counsel, registrar |
The following three worked examples illustrate common structuring approaches for buying distressed assets in India. Each includes a recommended contractual provision that deal teams should consider incorporating.
A Cayman Islands–domiciled fund incorporates a wholly owned Indian subsidiary (SPV) under the Companies Act. The SPV subscribes to fresh equity funded by the fund’s capital call, files the NDI forms with the AD bank and submits the resolution plan as the acquiring entity. The plan includes a regulatory condition precedent: “Completion of this Plan shall be conditional upon the Acquiring Entity receiving all approvals, consents and filings required under FEMA, the NDI Rules and the Consolidated FDI Policy, including confirmation from the Authorised Dealer bank that all prescribed filings have been accepted without objection.”
A European manufacturer participates in a liquidation auction to acquire plant, machinery and intellectual property from the liquidation estate. The buyer uses its existing Indian branch office (registered under FEMA) to hold the assets. The auction terms include an indemnity clause: “The Liquidator represents that the assets being transferred are free from all encumbrances, claims and liabilities, except as expressly disclosed in the Asset Schedule, and shall indemnify the Purchaser against any pre-existing liability not so disclosed.”
A US-based distressed-debt fund acquires a controlling stake in an Indian MSME through the prepack insolvency route. The base resolution plan is negotiated with the promoter and existing lenders before filing with the NCLT. The transaction uses a conditional escrow mechanism: “The Buyer shall deposit the Plan Consideration into an escrow account with [AD Bank], to be released to the Financial Creditors upon (i) NCLT sanction of the Base Resolution Plan, (ii) completion of all FEMA filings, and (iii) receipt of a no-objection certificate from the DPIIT, if applicable.”
For additional context on the cross-border insolvency regime under recent IBC amendments, including recognition of foreign proceedings and cooperation between courts, see our dedicated analysis.
A successful distressed asset acquisition in India in 2026 requires foreign investors to navigate an interlocking set of regulatory frameworks, the IBC for the insolvency process, FEMA and the NDI Rules for investment mechanics, the Consolidated FDI Policy (as amended by the March 2026 Press Note) for route determination, and RBI/ECB circulars for financing and repatriation. The practical effect of the 2026 regulatory changes is that buyers must validate their FDI route earlier in the deal process, file FEMA reports within tighter windows, disclose beneficial ownership more comprehensively and structure escrow and payment mechanisms with greater regulatory precision.
Engaging experienced insolvency and cross-border investment counsel at the earliest stage, ideally before submitting an expression of interest, remains the most effective way to compress timelines, avoid regulatory risk and close the transaction on commercially viable terms.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Abhishek Nath Tripathi at Sarthak Advocates & Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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