AuthorUmakanth Varottil

NCLT Rules on Maintainability in the Tata-Mistry Case

Background The action on the legal front in the Tata-Mistry episode has been playing out in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) over the last few weeks. This is on account of an action for oppression and mismanagement initiated by two Mistry companies (the Mistry Group) that are shareholders of Tata Sons against the company as well as its directors and officers. The action was brought under...

Call for Papers: Indian Journal of Tax Law

[Announcement from the Indian Journal of Tax Law] The Indian Journal of Tax Law (‘IJTL’) is a biannual journal dealing with taxation. The Journal is published by an independent organization of students from National Law University Odisha. IJTL is India’s first student edited, peer reviewed law journal focusing on taxation. The journal is focused towards enabling innovative academic research and...

Disclosure of all ‘actions’ against foreign promoters under ICDR Regulations

[Guest post by Nikunj Agarwal, a fifth-year B.A., LL.B (Hons.) student at Dr. RML National Law University, Lucknow] In recent years, India witnessed a steady increase in foreign investment in the Indian economy. The preceding year also saw many private equity funds and other institutional investors making an exit through the initial public offering (IPO) route. However, legal issue amounting to a...

Abolition of the Foreign Investment Promotion Board

The economic liberalization that began in India in 1991 brought with it a substantial increase in foreign direct investment (FDI) since then. Those involved in, or following, these developments, since the 1990s will remember the rather significant role played by the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) in approving FDI into the country. Foreign investors (or their Indian partners or investee...

Supreme Court Reinforces Sanctity of a Takeover Offer

In what circumstances can a takeover offer, once made, be withdrawn? This issue has occupied the attention of the Supreme Court in two previous cases, Nirma Industries v. Securities and Exchange Board of India and Securities and Exchange Board of India v. Akshya Infrastructure Pvt. Ltd. In these cases, the Supreme Court took a strict view and held that the acquirers were not permitted to withdraw...

The Introduction of Interest Rate Options In India

[The following guest post is contributed by Niharika Choudhary, who is a 4th year student at the National Law University, Jodhpur] Introduction Trade in financial derivatives has led to an enormous growth of the Indian financial system. New instruments have proliferated and trading volume has exploded. The use of financial derivatives has transformed the way financial institutions deal with risk...

Regulating India’s FinTech

[The following guest post is contributed by Vaibhav Parikh, who is a business lawyer associated with the Aditya Birla Group] “Disruption” is often used as a generic term to describe situations where smaller and newer companies with fewer resources are able to successfully challenge established incumbent businesses and upset status quo. Although a case has been made that it brings visibility to an...

A New Book on India’s Intellectual Property Dilemmas

[Guest post by Prashant Reddy (Research Fellow, School of Law, Singapore Management University) and Sumathi Chandrashekharan (Senior Resident Fellow, Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy) on their new book] About four years ago, in a game-changing case, the pharmaceutical giant Novartis AG, lost the rights to their patent in India covering one of their best-known chemotherapy drugs, Gleevec, after a...

Integrated Reporting by Indian Companies

[The following guest post is contributed by Nivedita Kannan, who is an associate company secretary with a keen interest in corporate law. She can be reached at [email protected]] The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), by way of its circular issued on 6 February 2017 (Circular), advised the top 500 listed companies in India to adopt Integrated Reporting on a voluntary basis from...

The Death of the “Absolute Interest”

[The following guest post is contributed by Aditya Swarup, who is an Assistant Professor at the Jindal Global Law School] In the seemingly complex world of corporate finance, creditors often face questions on the kind of security that ought to be taken by the them to support the loan to the borrower, answers to which depend on the relationship between debt and equity of the company. A further...

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