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How to Update Shareholders' Agreements After India's Corporate Laws (amendment) Bill 2026, Practical Checklist

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: 24 June 2026

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, introduced in the Lok Sabha on 23 March 2026, proposes sweeping changes to the Companies Act 2013 and the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008 that directly affect how founders, investors and general counsel draft and maintain a shareholder agreement India stakeholders rely on for governance and exit rights. The Bill decriminalises a significant number of corporate offences, recalibrates NFRA and audit thresholds, tightens director disclosure obligations under Section 184, adjusts buy-back and merger mechanics, and introduces facilitation measures for LLPs used as alternative investment vehicles.

For any startup or growth-stage company with an existing shareholders’ agreement, these amendments create concrete drafting gaps, clauses that were compliant six months ago may now be misaligned with the statutory baseline. This guide provides a practical, clause-by-clause shareholders agreement checklist, ready-to-paste sample language, and a 90-day implementation timeline so that founders, VCs and in-house counsel can act quickly and precisely.

TL;DR, Six-Point Executive Checklist

Before diving into the detail, use this quick-reference checklist to assess your exposure:

  • Decriminalisation & penalty clauses. Review every indemnity, warranty and representation that references “criminal liability” or “imprisonment”, many underlying offences are now monetary-penalty-only.
  • Director disclosure & duties. Update board-composition, reserved-matter and appointment/removal clauses to reflect amended Section 184 disclosure timing and expanded duties under the Companies Act.
  • NFRA, audit & reporting thresholds. Check whether your company now falls within, or outside, revised NFRA oversight and statutory audit thresholds; adjust audit-cooperation covenants accordingly.
  • ESOP compliance. Align ESOP plan documents, trustee clauses and vesting schedules with updated compliance requirements and disclosure obligations.
  • Buy-back, transfer & pre-emption mechanics. Recalibrate any SHA buy-back triggers, price-floor provisions and pre-emption rights that reference statutory buy-back limits.
  • Deadlock, exit & merger thresholds. Confirm that supermajority requirements, drag-along/tag-along triggers and scheme-of-arrangement thresholds still function as intended under revised merger provisions.

Each of these items is expanded below with specific clause language and negotiation notes.

Summary of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, What Changed

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 amends both the Companies Act 2013 and the LLP Act 2008. According to the PRS India legislative tracker, the Bill was introduced on 23 March 2026 and referred to the Joint Parliamentary Committee for review. It seeks to ease compliance burdens, update regulatory thresholds and modernise the governance framework for Indian corporates and LLPs. The changes most relevant to shareholders’ agreements fall into three clusters.

Key Governance Changes, Decriminalisation and Thresholds

The Bill converts a substantial tranche of corporate offences from criminal sanctions (fine and/or imprisonment) to civil monetary penalties adjudicated through in-house adjudication or the National Company Law Tribunal. As noted in the Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas client alert, this shift follows the government’s multi-phase decriminalisation programme that began in 2020 and now reaches offences related to annual-return defaults, register-maintenance failures and certain disclosure violations. In parallel, the Bill raises the paid-up-capital and turnover thresholds that determine when a company is subject to enhanced governance requirements, including mandatory internal audit, CSR committee constitution, and rotation of auditors.

Audit, NFRA and CSR Changes

The Bill recalibrates the financial thresholds that bring entities within the purview of the National Financial Reporting Authority. As the EY regulatory alert explains, the revised thresholds are expected to remove a number of smaller private companies from NFRA oversight while bringing larger LLPs into scope for the first time. CSR spending thresholds and the timeline for unspent CSR fund transfers are also adjusted. For shareholders’ agreements, these changes affect audit-rights covenants, information-rights clauses and the reserved-matter lists that govern appointment or removal of auditors.

LLP and AIF Facilitation

The Bill introduces amendments to the LLP Act 2008 aimed at making the LLP structure more attractive for pooled investment vehicles, including Category I and Category II AIFs regulated by SEBI. As outlined in the Khaitan & Co. analysis, the amendments clarify the LLP contribution framework, expand permissible partner structures and align certain LLP governance provisions with the Companies Act. For investors structuring through LLP vehicles, the SHA (or LLP agreement equivalent) must now address these expanded statutory provisions explicitly.

Legislative milestone Date Status
Bill introduced in Lok Sabha 23 March 2026 Introduced; referred to Joint Parliamentary Committee
Joint Committee review period April – June 2026 Under review (as of publication)
Expected report / passage (industry estimate) Monsoon Session 2026 Pending, early indications suggest the Bill may be taken up for passage during the Monsoon Session

Disclaimer: this article provides general information, not legal advice. Consult qualified counsel for bespoke drafting tailored to your transaction.

Clause-by-Clause Shareholders Agreement Checklist, What to Update in Your SHA

This is the core section of the guide. For each cluster of statutory changes under the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026, the table below maps the affected SHA clauses, the risk to each party, and the recommended drafting response. Use this as a working checklist alongside your existing shareholder agreement India template.

Board and Director-Related Clauses

Issue: The Bill amends Section 184 of the Companies Act 2013 to modify the timing and scope of director interest-disclosure obligations. According to Vinod Kothari’s practitioner commentary, the revised Section 184 requires disclosure at the first board meeting of each financial year and whenever a material change occurs, a tighter standard than the current annual-disclosure-only reading that some companies follow.

Risk: Founders serving as directors face expanded personal disclosure obligations. Investors relying on nominee-director protections need assurance that their nominees will comply and that non-compliance will not void board resolutions approving reserved matters.

  • Affected SHA clauses: Board composition, director appointment/removal, reserved matters requiring board approval, nominee-director indemnities.
  • Drafting fix (minimal): Add a compliance covenant requiring each director to make timely Section 184 disclosures and to promptly notify the company of any material change in interests.
  • Drafting fix (investor-protective): Include a “validity savings” clause providing that no board resolution shall be voidable solely by reason of a procedural disclosure lapse, provided the director’s interest was known to the board.
  • Sample clause snippet: “Each Shareholder shall procure that its Nominee Director(s) comply with the disclosure requirements of Section 184 of the Act (as amended) within the time periods prescribed thereunder, and shall promptly notify the Board of any material change in interests.”

Indemnities, Representations and Warranties

Issue: The decriminalisation of corporate offences means that many breaches previously carrying criminal sanctions now attract only monetary penalties. This fundamentally changes the risk calculus underpinning indemnity and warranty clauses in any startup shareholder agreement.

Risk: Founders may argue that decriminalised offences should no longer trigger full indemnification. Investors may counter that monetary penalties can still be substantial and that contractual protections should survive regardless of the statutory penalty type.

  • Affected SHA clauses: General indemnity, specific compliance indemnity, warranty schedules, limitation-of-liability provisions, warranty survival periods.
  • Drafting fix (balanced): Replace references to “criminal penalty” or “imprisonment” with technology-neutral language covering “any Liability arising from any statutory penalty, fine, monetary order or compounding imposed under the Act or any Applicable Law.”
  • Drafting fix (investor-protective): Retain a separate, uncapped indemnity carve-out for wilful misconduct or fraud, even where the underlying offence has been decriminalised.
  • Negotiation note: Industry observers expect that the practical effect of decriminalisation will be to shift dispute resolution from criminal courts to NCLT/adjudicating officers, counsel should ensure the SHA’s dispute-resolution clause covers these tribunals.

Audit, NFRA and Reporting Covenants

Issue: Revised financial thresholds for NFRA oversight and statutory audit requirements mean that some private companies previously within NFRA scope may fall outside it, while others, and certain larger LLPs, may now be captured.

  • Affected SHA clauses: Information rights, audit-access rights, auditor appointment as a reserved matter, cooperation-with-auditor covenants.
  • Drafting fix: Add a dynamic threshold clause that ties audit obligations in the SHA to the statutory thresholds “as amended from time to time” rather than hard-coding specific rupee amounts.
  • Sample clause snippet: “The Company shall maintain its books of account and undergo audit in accordance with the requirements of the Act and the rules thereunder as in force from time to time, and shall provide each Investor with access to such audited accounts within [30] days of their finalisation.”

ESOP and Employee-Related Clauses

Issue: The Bill introduces updated compliance requirements for employee stock option schemes, including clearer disclosure obligations and alignment with revised threshold provisions. ESOP compliance India requirements now demand more granular reporting on vesting schedules and tax-withholding mechanics.

  • Affected SHA clauses: ESOP reserve/pool size, dilution protections, trustee appointment, vesting acceleration triggers, post-termination exercise periods.
  • Drafting fix: Ensure the SHA’s ESOP-related reserved matter includes a reference to compliance with “Section 62(1)(b) and the applicable rules as amended” rather than citing a specific vintage of the rules.
  • Negotiation note: Founders typically want flexibility to adjust ESOP terms; investors want anti-dilution protections. A balanced approach is to cap the ESOP pool percentage and require investor consent for increases, while permitting operational changes (vesting schedules, exercise windows) within the approved pool.

Share Transfer, Buy-Back and Pre-Emption

Issue: The Bill adjusts statutory buy-back limits and mechanics. As noted in the AZB & Partners client alert, changes to the buy-back framework affect the ceiling amounts and the procedural route (board resolution vs. special resolution) applicable to different company sizes.

  • Affected SHA clauses: Buy-back triggers, price-floor provisions, right of first refusal, pre-emption mechanics, tag-along rights tied to transfer thresholds.
  • Drafting fix: Where the SHA permits the company to buy back shares from departing founders, update the pricing and procedural mechanics to track the revised statutory framework. Avoid hard-coding buy-back limits; instead, cross-reference the Act.

Deadlock, Exit and M&A Thresholds

Issue: Revised thresholds for schemes of arrangement and amalgamation under the Companies Act affect the supermajority and approval mechanics that underpin many SHA deadlock and exit provisions.

  • Affected SHA clauses: Deadlock resolution escalation, drag-along/tag-along triggers, scheme-of-arrangement cooperation covenants, voting-threshold definitions.
  • Drafting fix: Audit every percentage threshold in the SHA and confirm it still exceeds (or matches) the corresponding statutory threshold. Where the SHA requires a 75% vote for an exit transaction, confirm that this aligns with the revised scheme-approval requirements.
  • Sample clause snippet: “For the avoidance of doubt, references to ‘Special Resolution’ in this Agreement shall mean a resolution passed by a majority of not less than [75]% of the votes cast, or such higher percentage as may be required under the Act as amended from time to time.”

Compliance, Fines and Remediation

Issue: With decriminalisation shifting many offences to monetary penalties, the SHA should address how fines and penalties are allocated between the company and its directors/shareholders.

  • Affected SHA clauses: Compliance covenants, notice-and-cure periods, material adverse change definitions, D&O insurance requirements.
  • Drafting fix: Include a “regulatory penalty” definition broad enough to capture penalties imposed by the MCA, NCLT, adjudicating officers and NFRA. Add a cure-period mechanism that distinguishes between technical non-compliance (curable within 30 days) and wilful misconduct (no cure).

Warranty Survival and Contractual Limitation Updates

Issue: The decriminalisation framework and revised penalty structures may affect how long warranty claims remain viable and whether statutory limitation periods apply differently to monetary penalties versus criminal proceedings.

  • Drafting fix: Review warranty survival periods. Where warranties previously relied on criminal prosecution timelines (which can extend for years), align the contractual survival period with the likely adjudication timeline for monetary penalties, typically shorter. A survival period of 36–48 months from closing, with a longer tail for tax and fraud warranties, remains market standard.

Draft Clause Bank for Your Shareholder Agreement India Update, Ready-to-Paste Language

The following sample clauses are provided in two variants, founder-friendly (FF) and investor-protective (IP), with a short negotiation note for each. Adapt these to your specific transaction; they are starting points, not substitutes for bespoke legal drafting.

  • Clause 1, Director Disclosure Compliance Covenant.

    FF version: “Each Director shall use reasonable endeavours to comply with the disclosure requirements under Section 184 of the Act as amended.”

    IP version: “Each Shareholder shall procure that its Nominee Director(s) make all disclosures required under Section 184 of the Act (as amended) within the prescribed timelines. Failure to do so shall constitute a Founder Default under Clause [X].”

    Negotiation note: Founders should resist making disclosure non-compliance a default trigger; a notice-and-cure mechanism (14 business days) is a reasonable middle ground.
  • Clause 2, Decriminalisation-Adjusted Indemnity.

    FF version: “The Indemnifying Party shall indemnify the Indemnified Party against any Loss arising from any monetary penalty imposed under the Act, subject to an aggregate cap equal to [1x] the Subscription Amount.”

    IP version: “The Founders shall indemnify the Investors against any Loss arising from any statutory penalty, fine, compounding amount or monetary order imposed under the Act or Applicable Law, without any aggregate cap in respect of Losses arising from fraud, wilful misconduct or wilful non-compliance.”

    Negotiation note: The key battleground is the carve-out for wilful misconduct. Industry observers expect most negotiated outcomes to include an uncapped fraud/wilful misconduct carve-out with a cap on all other indemnity claims.
  • Clause 3, D&O Insurance Covenant.

    FF version: “The Company shall maintain Directors’ and Officers’ liability insurance with a reputable insurer in an amount not less than INR [amount].”

    IP version: “The Company shall maintain D&O Insurance with coverage of not less than INR [amount], covering monetary penalties and adjudication costs arising under the Act as amended. The Company shall notify all Investors within [5] Business Days of any claim made or threatened under such policy.”

    Negotiation note: Investors should insist on prompt notification of claims. Founders should negotiate that routine regulatory inquiries below a materiality threshold do not trigger the notification obligation.
  • Clause 4, Auditor Access and Cooperation.

    FF version: “The Company shall permit the statutory auditor to access all books and records as required by the Act.”

    IP version: “The Company shall (a) permit the statutory auditor full access to all books, records, personnel and premises, (b) procure that its management cooperates promptly with any NFRA inquiry, and (c) provide each Investor with copies of any correspondence from NFRA within [10] Business Days of receipt.”

    Negotiation note: Founders should ensure that investor audit-access rights do not extend to commercially sensitive information shared only with competitor-investors; include a “clean team” or confidentiality carve-out.
  • Clause 5, ESOP Pool and Compliance.

    FF version: “The Board may establish and administer an ESOP Pool of up to [15]% of the fully diluted share capital in compliance with Section 62(1)(b) and applicable rules.”

    IP version: “Any increase in the ESOP Pool beyond [10]% of the fully diluted share capital, or any material amendment to the terms of the ESOP Plan (including vesting schedules and exercise prices), shall require prior written consent of Investors holding not less than [majority/75]% of the Investor Shares.”

    Negotiation note: ESOP pool size is a recurring point of friction. The likely practical effect of the 2026 changes is to increase disclosure requirements around ESOPs, making transparency easier to achieve, use this as a negotiation lever to agree on a larger pool with stronger reporting.
  • Clause 6, Buy-Back Mechanics.

    FF version: “The Company may buy back Shares in accordance with Section 68 of the Act (as amended), subject to Board approval.”

    IP version: “Any buy-back of Shares shall be conducted in accordance with Section 68 of the Act (as amended) and shall require prior Investor Consent. The buy-back price shall not be less than the Fair Market Value determined by an Independent Valuer.”

    Negotiation note: Updated buy-back limits under the Bill may widen the scope for board-approved buy-backs; investors should ensure their consent right is not bypassed by the expanded statutory route.
  • Clause 7, Deadlock Resolution.

    FF version: “In the event of a Deadlock, the Parties shall first attempt resolution through good-faith negotiation for [30] days, followed by mediation. If unresolved, either Party may initiate a buy-out at Fair Market Value.”

    IP version: “In the event of a Deadlock persisting for [60] days, the Investors shall have the right (but not the obligation) to issue a Deadlock Buy-Out Notice requiring the Founders to sell their Shares at Fair Market Value less a [10]% discount, or to purchase the Investor Shares at Fair Market Value plus a [10]% premium, at the Investors’ election.”

    Negotiation note: Deadlock buy-out pricing is heavily negotiated. The Russian Roulette and Texas Shoot-Out mechanisms remain common in India, but founders should insist on a minimum negotiation period before any forced-sale mechanism activates.
  • Clause 8, Regulatory Penalty Allocation.

    FF version: “Regulatory Penalties arising from the ordinary course of business shall be borne by the Company. Penalties arising from the gross negligence or wilful default of any Shareholder or its Nominee shall be recoverable from that Shareholder.”

    IP version: “All Regulatory Penalties shall be borne by the Company, provided that the Company shall have a right of recovery against any Director or Shareholder whose act or omission (whether or not constituting wilful default) directly caused the imposition of such Penalty.”

    Negotiation note: Founders should ensure that “ordinary course” penalties, such as minor late-filing fees, are treated as company expenses. The contested ground is penalties arising from good-faith compliance errors versus reckless or wilful non-compliance.

Negotiation Playbook, Balancing Investor Protections India and Decriminalisation

The decriminalisation of corporate offences fundamentally shifts the negotiation dynamics in a shareholder agreement India parties execute at the term-sheet stage. When a breach could lead to imprisonment, investors had powerful leverage to demand robust indemnities. Now that many offences attract only monetary penalties, founders will push to soften indemnity language. Here is a practical framework for both sides.

For investors, three priorities:

  • Preserve the fraud/wilful misconduct carve-out. Decriminalisation does not eliminate fraud as a criminal offence. Insist on an uncapped indemnity for fraud and wilful misconduct, clearly defined.
  • Add a materiality threshold, not a blanket exclusion. Accept that minor regulatory penalties (below INR [threshold]) need not trigger indemnification, but resist any blanket exclusion of decriminalised offences from the indemnity scope.
  • Require D&O insurance as a covenant, not a best-efforts undertaking. With monetary penalties replacing criminal sanctions, D&O insurance becomes the primary risk-transfer mechanism. Make adequate coverage a condition precedent to each tranche disbursement.

For founders, three priorities:

  • Insist on a notice-and-cure mechanism. If an offence has been decriminalised, the founder should have a cure period (14–30 days) to remediate before any indemnity obligation crystallises.
  • Cap aggregate indemnity exposure. Use the decriminalisation shift as leverage to negotiate an aggregate cap (typically 1x–2x the subscription amount) on all non-fraud indemnity claims.
  • Limit warranty survival periods. Argue that with faster adjudication timelines for monetary penalties, warranty survival periods should be shortened from 48–60 months to 36 months for general warranties.

The concession ladder typically progresses: strict liability → material breach → gross negligence → wilful misconduct/fraud. Early indications suggest that most post-2026 negotiations settle at the “material breach” or “gross negligence” level for general indemnities, with a separate uncapped carve-out for fraud.

Compliance Checklist and Implementation Timeline for the Next 90 Days

Use this timeline to coordinate your shareholder agreement India update with broader corporate governance compliance.

Task Owner Deadline
Conduct gap analysis of existing SHA against 2026 Bill provisions Outside counsel / GC Within 30 days
Circulate redline SHA amendments to all shareholders GC Within 30 days
Board resolution approving proposed SHA amendments Company Secretary Days 30–45
Shareholder sign-off on amended SHA All parties Days 45–60
Update ESOP plan documents and trustee appointment letters HR / GC Days 30–60
Review and renew D&O insurance policy; confirm coverage for monetary penalties CFO / Insurance broker Within 30 days
File updated forms with MCA / ROC as required Company Secretary As required by statute
Brief the board on revised director-disclosure obligations GC Next scheduled board meeting

Suggested email subject lines for internal counsel:

  • “Action Required: SHA Update, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 Gap Analysis”
  • “Board Agenda Item: Approval of Amended Shareholders’ Agreement”
  • “D&O Insurance Review: Confirm Coverage for Decriminalised Penalty Exposure”

Comparison Table, Reporting and Audit Obligations by Entity Type After 2026

Entity Type Key 2026 Obligations / Thresholds SHA Drafting Implication
Private company Revised NFRA/audit thresholds, smaller private companies may exit NFRA oversight; modified director-disclosure timing under amended Section 184; adjusted CSR committee constitution thresholds Add dynamic audit-cooperation clause referencing “the Act as amended”; update reserved-matter thresholds; add negotiation note on CSR spend allocation if above threshold
Public company Expanded public-reporting requirements; AGM remuneration-report disclosures; stricter NFRA compliance; continued auditor-rotation requirements Strengthen disclosure representations; include governance-compliance covenant; ensure SHA audit-rights clause does not conflict with expanded statutory reporting obligations
LLP (AIF vehicle) LLP/AIF facilitation measures, expanded permissible partner structures; potential NFRA oversight for larger LLPs; aligned governance provisions with Companies Act If investor vehicle is an LLP, add representation on applicable LLP provisions; include conversion-mechanics clause in case LLP converts to company; cross-reference SEBI AIF regulations

Conclusion, Act Now to Update Your Shareholder Agreement India Stakeholders Rely On

The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 is not a cosmetic reform. It restructures the penalty framework, recalibrates governance thresholds and introduces new compliance mechanics that touch virtually every material clause in a shareholders’ agreement. For founders, VCs and general counsel, the window to update existing agreements is narrow, the likely practical effect of delayed action is misaligned indemnities, unenforceable warranties and governance provisions that no longer track the statutory baseline.

Use the clause-by-clause checklist and draft clause bank above as your starting framework. Prioritise the gap analysis, circulate redlines to your stakeholders within 30 days, and engage experienced corporate counsel to tailor the sample language to your specific transaction. To find corporate lawyers in India with deep experience in shareholder agreements and the 2026 amendments, consult the Global Law Experts directory for qualified specialists who can guide you through implementation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shuva Mandal at Anagram Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. PRS India, The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026
  2. Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA)
  3. Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, Client Alert: Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026
  4. EY India, Regulatory Alert: Corporate Laws Amendment Bill 2026
  5. Vinod Kothari, Corporate Laws Amendment Bill: Easing, Streamlining and Updating the Regulatory Framework
  6. Startup India, Sample Shareholders’ Agreement Template
  7. AZB & Partners, Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 Introduced
  8. Khaitan & Co., Corporate Laws Amendment Bill Analysis

FAQs

Do I need to update my shareholders' agreement because of the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026?
In most cases, yes. If your SHA references specific Companies Act sections that the Bill amends, particularly around director duties, indemnities, audit thresholds or buy-back mechanics, targeted edits are necessary. At minimum, conduct a gap analysis against the six-point checklist above.
The eight primary clause categories affected are: (1) board composition and director appointment, (2) indemnities and representations, (3) warranties, (4) audit-access and reporting covenants, (5) ESOP provisions, (6) share transfer and buy-back mechanics, (7) deadlock and exit provisions, and (8) compliance and remediation covenants.
Replace penalty-type-specific language (e.g., “imprisonment,” “criminal fine”) with broad, technology-neutral formulations covering “any statutory penalty, monetary order, fine or compounding imposed under the Act or Applicable Law.” Maintain a separate, uncapped carve-out for fraud and wilful misconduct.
Update references to Section 62(1)(b) rules to the “as amended” version, review disclosure obligations in the ESOP plan document, confirm trustee appointment letters reflect updated compliance requirements, and ensure the SHA’s anti-dilution protections align with any expanded ESOP pool.
If your company falls below the revised NFRA threshold, statutory NFRA oversight may no longer apply, but contractual audit-access rights in the SHA remain enforceable. Draft audit-cooperation clauses that operate independently of NFRA oversight to preserve investor protections India counsel typically negotiate.
Notify your D&O insurer within 30 days of the Bill’s enactment. Confirm that the policy covers monetary penalties imposed by adjudicating officers and the NCLT (not just court-imposed fines). Check whether the policy’s “insured event” definition needs updating to capture decriminalised-offence penalties.
Yes, decriminalisation changes the statutory penalty, not the contractual right to indemnity. A well-drafted indemnity that covers “any Loss arising from any breach of Applicable Law” will survive decriminalisation. However, if the indemnity is drafted narrowly to reference “criminal proceedings” or “imprisonment,” it may need updating to remain effective.
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How to Update Shareholders' Agreements After India's Corporate Laws (amendment) Bill 2026, Practical Checklist

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