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The impact of the Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026 on M&A in India is already commanding the attention of every deal team with an active or pipeline transaction touching the Indian market. Introduced in Parliament in March 2026, the Bill proposes more than 100 targeted amendments to the Companies Act, 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008, spanning revised fast‑track merger thresholds, a new framework for IFSC foreign‑currency share capital, relaxed buyback mechanics and rationalised CSR obligations. For cross‑border acquirers, domestic sellers, and their advisors, the practical consequences are immediate: share‑purchase agreements drafted even six months ago may already be missing critical representations, closing conditions and indemnity triggers that the Bill’s provisions now demand.
This article serves as a transaction playbook, structured around the deal documents, timelines and compliance filings that practitioners must update right now.
Industry observers expect the Bill to receive assent during the current parliamentary session, making advance preparation essential rather than optional. Whether you are a foreign PE sponsor routing capital through an IFSC vehicle, a promoter exploring a fast‑track merger for a mid‑market subsidiary, or counsel advising on SPA redlines, this guide delivers the checklists, comparison tables and sample clause frameworks you need to act decisively.
Before diving into statutory detail, deal teams should bookmark these immediate action items. The Companies Act amendment 2026 touches every phase of the transaction lifecycle, from structuring through post‑closing compliance.
The Bill is not a single‑theme reform. It introduces changes across corporate governance, capital markets, restructuring and compliance that, taken together, reshape the regulatory architecture for M&A transactions. The table below isolates the provisions with the most direct transactional impact.
| Amendment | What Changes | Immediate M&A Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Fast‑track merger thresholds (Section 233) | Upper limits increased: share capital up to ₹20 crore; turnover up to ₹200 crore | Many more mid‑market targets and post‑acquisition subsidiary mergers now qualify for the fast‑track route, potentially cutting approval timelines significantly |
| IFSC foreign‑currency share capital (new Section 43A) | IFSC companies may issue and maintain share capital in a permitted foreign currency and prepare financial statements accordingly | Eliminates a structural friction for foreign sponsors routing acquisitions through GIFT City SPVs; reduces currency conversion risk and simplifies accounting |
| Buyback relaxations (Section 68 and related provisions) | Procedural requirements eased to make buybacks a more flexible capital‑return tool | Sellers must disclose and warrant buyback history; buyers gain new levers for post‑acquisition capital restructuring |
| CSR threshold adjustments | Net‑profit and turnover thresholds recalibrated | Due diligence must reassess which group entities trigger CSR obligations; affects financial covenants and indemnity baskets |
| Single NCLT jurisdiction rationalisation | Consolidated tribunal handling for schemes of arrangement and mergers | Reduces forum‑shopping risk and administrative delays; simplifies multi‑entity restructurings |
| Treasury share governance | New rules governing treatment and disclosure of treasury shares | Affects valuation mechanics, dilution calculations and representation schedules in SPAs |
These six pillars form the analytical spine of the article. Each is explored in deal‑document terms below, with specific drafting guidance for buyers, sellers and advisors navigating cross‑border M&A India 2026 transactions.
For foreign acquirers, the most structurally significant provision in the Bill is the proposed Section 43A, which permits companies incorporated in India’s International Financial Services Centre (IFSC), currently located in GIFT City, Gujarat, to issue and maintain share capital denominated in a permitted foreign currency. The provision also contemplates that such IFSC companies may prepare their books of account and financial statements in that foreign currency. Early indications suggest this will substantially reduce the friction that has historically discouraged PE sponsors and multinational corporates from routing Indian acquisitions through IFSC vehicles.
While the Bill’s text establishes the framework, the operational mechanics will depend on subordinate rules that the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) is expected to notify. In the interim, deal teams should prepare by addressing the following:
A typical inbound acquisition routed via an IFSC SPV would follow this indicative sequence: (1) incorporate the SPV in GIFT City and obtain IFSCA registration; (2) issue share capital in the chosen foreign currency once Section 43A is notified; (3) execute the downstream acquisition of the Indian target using funds received in the SPV; (4) file post‑acquisition returns with the Registrar of Companies and IFSCA. Foreign investor compliance India obligations, including beneficial ownership declarations and annual compliance certificates, remain applicable and should be tracked on a dedicated compliance calendar.
The likely practical effect of the Bill’s threshold changes will be to channel a materially larger share of mid‑market M&A into the fast‑track merger route under Section 233 of the Companies Act, 2013. The comparison below illustrates the shift.
| Topic | Old Rule | New Rule (Bill 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Fast‑track merger, share capital ceiling | Up to ₹5 crore | Up to ₹20 crore |
| Fast‑track merger, turnover ceiling | Up to ₹50 crore | Up to ₹200 crore |
| NCLT jurisdiction | Multiple benches; potential overlapping jurisdiction for multi‑state entities | Rationalised single‑bench jurisdiction, reduces procedural delays for schemes of arrangement |
The expanded fast‑track eligibility window means that many post‑acquisition subsidiary integrations, previously forced through the conventional NCLT route, can now be completed more rapidly. Industry observers expect the combined effect of higher thresholds and consolidated jurisdiction to reduce average scheme‑approval timelines by several months for qualifying transactions.
The Bill’s reforms demand a systematic review of share‑purchase agreement templates. Practitioners who fail to update their standard‑form documents risk leaving significant regulatory risk unallocated. Below is a clause‑by‑clause framework for the key contract provisions that deal teams should update.
Conditions precedent in SPAs for cross‑border M&A India 2026 transactions should now expressly address:
Buyers should negotiate specific indemnities covering pre‑closing non‑compliance with any provision affected by the Bill, particularly CSR shortfalls, improper buybacks and IFSC accounting irregularities. Recommended positions include:
Where the target has IFSC operations or ongoing buyback obligations, an escrow or holdback mechanism provides effective protection. Practitioners should consider:
Two representative scenarios illustrate how the Bill’s provisions translate into concrete deal terms.
Scenario A, Inbound PE Buyout via IFSC SPV. A Singapore‑based PE fund establishes an SPV in GIFT City to acquire a controlling stake in an Indian SaaS company. Under the new Section 43A framework, the SPV issues share capital in US dollars. The SPA includes a bespoke representation that the SPV’s foreign‑currency share capital has been issued in a “permitted foreign currency” as defined by MCA notification, and a condition precedent requiring IFSCA confirmation of the SPV’s registration. The escrow holdback is set at 8% for 15 months, with release tied to the target’s first annual return filed under the new IFSC accounting standards.
Scenario B, Domestic Strategic Acquisition with Fast‑Track Merger. An Indian conglomerate acquires a wholly‑owned subsidiary of a foreign group with share capital of ₹18 crore and turnover of ₹180 crore. Under the old thresholds, this entity exceeded the fast‑track limits. With the Bill’s expanded ceilings, the acquirer structures a post‑closing fast‑track merger of the target into an existing group company. The SPA’s conditions precedent include confirmation of fast‑track eligibility as at the effective date, and the merger scheme is pre‑drafted before signing, compressing the post‑closing integration timeline.
In both scenarios, the critical practitioner insight is the same: deal documents must be drafted with the Bill’s provisions in view even before formal enactment, using legislative‑change triggers and escrow mechanics to allocate transitional risk.
Once a transaction closes under the new framework, the following filings and compliance actions should be tracked systematically:
Deal teams should map the following risks specific to the Bill’s transitional period and build corresponding mitigants into their transaction documents:
| Risk | Likelihood | Practical Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Uncertainty on IFSC foreign‑currency bookkeeping standards | Medium | Pre‑close covenant requiring target to provide audited IFSC accounts; escrow holdback until accounts reconciled post‑notification of subordinate rules |
| Delayed notification of Section 43A subordinate rules | Medium–High | Legislative‑change condition precedent in SPA; long‑stop date extension mechanism if MCA notification is delayed beyond a specified date |
| Incorrect assessment of fast‑track merger eligibility | Low–Medium | Seller indemnity for any misrepresentation of share capital or turnover figures; bring‑down certificate at closing |
| Retroactive CSR obligation triggered by recalibrated thresholds | Medium | Specific CSR indemnity with separate basket and 36‑month survival; require target to pre‑calculate CSR exposure under new thresholds before signing |
| Regulatory enforcement action during escrow period | Low | Escrow trigger clause covering MCA/IFSCA/NCLT proceedings; notice and cure mechanism with defined response window |
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 is not a cosmetic update. It recalibrates the structural foundations of M&A in India, from the thresholds that determine which merger route is available, to the currency in which IFSC share capital can be denominated, to the compliance obligations that drive indemnity negotiations. Deal teams that treat the Bill as a distant legislative event rather than an immediate drafting priority risk exposure to unallocated regulatory risk.
Practitioners should take three steps now: (1) circulate updated SPA redline memoranda to all clients with active Indian transactions; (2) model fast‑track eligibility under the new thresholds for every pipeline deal; and (3) engage auditors and IFSC counsel on Section 43A implementation planning. The legislative text remains subject to change, verify the latest position via PRS Legislative Research and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs before finalising any transaction documents.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Lira Goswami at Associated Law Advisers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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