Karan Talwar Noorul Hassan According to a recent Thomson Reuters M&A report, M&A deals in India were lowest in the last four years at $23.8 billion for January-September 2013. However, total cross-border M&A involving India grew 36.7% to $19.3 billion, driven by a 178% spike in outbound M&As, while inbound deals slipped 2.3% to $10.8 billion from the first nine months of 2012. The Companies Act, 2013 (the Act) has replaced the archaic 50 year old company law in India. The new Act promises to revamp the landscape of corporate restructuring and M&A in India, with fast track mergers between small companies and holding-subsidiary companies coupled with simplified procedures. More importantly, section 234 of the new Act now allows both inbound and outbound mergers and amalgamations with foreign companies as opposed to the earlier law, which specifically disallowed a foreign company from being a transferee company. The term foreign company has been defined as any company or 'body corporate' incorporated outside India, whether or not it has a place of business in India. However, only foreign companies established in jurisdictions yet to be notified by the government shall be allowed to merge with Indian companies.
October 30 2013