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Dipak kumarr (Managing Director )     07 December 2015

Investment in shares by a pvt / public ltd company

Respected Sir / Madam - Regards ! 

kindly give your advise for the following;

1) can a PVT ltd / Public Ltd Company do Investment of Purchasing Shares of other Companies, listed, unlisted, sister concern or other non-related companies, from the existing shareholders, related shareholders and same Directors.

Kindly advise  

Thanking you with regards ,

Dipak kumarr

email: aparajeet1980@gmail.com



Learning

 2 Replies

Adv. Yogen Kakade (+ 91 9225510883)     07 December 2015

Hi,

A PVT ltd / Public Ltd Company can do the Investment of Purchasing Shares of other Companies unless it is specifically mentioned about the listing or rules and regulations about such investments mentioned in the articles of your company.

Adv. Yogen Kakade

Jurycon Incorporation

Advocates & Consultants
Email: juryconincorporation@gmail.com
Web: www.juryconn.in  

Dr Katta Venkata Rama Krishna (Retd Sr Director Govt of India/ Advocate)     14 December 2015

The method of buying and selling shares in a company will depend on a number of factors. In particular it depends on whether the company is a publicly listed company.

If the company is publicly listed, its shares will be listed on the stock exchange and different rules apply to the sale and purchase of the shares. If the company is a private company, the rules about buying and selling shares are set out in the company's constitution and in the COMPANIES ACT 1993.

Protection of existing shareholders through "pre-emption" rights

It is quite usual for a company's constitution to contain "pre-emption" rights for existing shareholders, requiring existing shares to first be offered to the existing shareholders before they can be offered to non-shareholders. The purpose is to maintain the ranking of existing shareholders so that their voting and distribution rights are not diminished.

The COMPANIES ACT 1993 also provides for existing shareholders to have pre-emptive rights over the issuing of new shares by the company. The Act states that any new shares must first be offered to existing shareholders on a proportional basis so that the shareholders' existing voting and distribution rights are maintained. The offer to the existing shareholders must remain open for a reasonable time.

However, it is open for the company's constitution to negate, limit or modify this statutory pre-emptive right over new shares.

Company may buy its own shares in certain circumstances

A company is permitted to buy its own shares if certain requirements are met. Aside from some special situations (such as where dissenting shareholders exercise "minority buy-out" rights), the COMPANIES ACT 1993 gives company boards a general power to make offers to existing shareholders to buy their shares, provided the following requirements are met.

The board of directors cannot make an offer to buy shares unless this is permitted by the company's constitution. If so, the board may make an offer to all shareholders to buy a proportion of their shares, in such a way that the acquisition would maintain each shareholder's relative voting and distribution rights. Alternatively, the board may make a special offer to one or more shareholders to acquire their shares, provided all shareholders have consented to this or the offer is permitted under the constitution.

The board may not offer to buy shares unless it has passed a resolution stating:

  • that acquiring the shares is in the company's best interests
  • that the terms of the offer and the consideration for the shares are fair and reasonable to the company
  • that the board is not aware of any relevant information that has been withheld from shareholders

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