Buyers Of Govt Companies Will Have To Give Complete Information
Buyers of govt companies will have to give complete information about the final beneficiary owners.
Foreign and Indian bidders wishing to buy govt stakes in companies like BPCL, Air India, and BEML will have to provide complete information about the final beneficiary owner.
Only after giving this information will they get security clearance to bid. Such bidders will also have to state through self-declaration for security clearance, how and to what extent QIP has a presence in China and Pakistan.
The Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (Deepam) has released the format for the application related to security clearance for the bidder.
Buyers of govt companies will have to give complete information: Deepam is managing the sale of stakes in government companies.
As per the issued format, the bidders for more than 10 percent stake in the bidding company will get security clearance only when they give information about the patrons, parents, promoters, and the owners who ultimately benefited from the deal.
If the bidding company is a sole buyer, it will have to provide the government with information such as the nationality, address, guardian, unique identification number, and passport number of its directors and partners.
Along with this, they will also have to provide information about 10 percent or more stake, voting rights, or distributed dividend recipients ie QIP, and shareholders.
QIP, if there is a group, it will have to give the names, share fees, address, and registration details of all the members.
The draft states that if the QIP wants to set up a special purpose vehicle, or SPV, for acquisition, the judicial jurisdiction in which it will be formed will have to be briefed about the potential directors, including the overall information.
Indian commodities are increasing in America, exports to America in December increased by 14.2 percent
Demand for Indian goods has increased rapidly in the US market. This is the reason why Indian exports to the US have been increasing continuously for the last four months. I
n December last year, the increase was 14.2 percent over the same period a year ago. However, due to the Corona epidemic, exports to the US decreased from April to August last year.
Due to this, exports to the US fell by 11.3 percent in the April-December period of the current financial year compared to the same period in the previous financial year.