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Share Capital & Debentures

(i) Kinds of Share Capital, Voting Rights and others

  • Kinds of Share Capital (Section 43)
  1. Equity Share Capital

– With Voting Rights

– With Differential rights

  1. Preference Share Capital
  • Voting Rights (Section 47)
  1. Equity shareholder has voting rights on every resolution placed before the company
  2. The Voting Right on a poll shall be in proportion to the share an individual holds in the paid-up Preference Share Capital of the Company w. r. t. matters affecting them.
  3. For a matter affecting both Equity and Preference Shareholders, the proportion of voting rights of Equity/Preference shareholders shall be in the same proportion as the paid-up capital in respect of Equity/Preference Shares to the total paid-up capital.
  4. Preference shareholders can exercise their voting rights on all resolutions placed before the Company when dividends payable in respect of class of Preference Shares are in arrears for a period of 2 years or more.
  • Application of premium received on issue of shares (Section 52)

– Transfer Premium to “securities premium account”

– Application of Securities Premium for

  1. Issue of unissued shares of the company to the members of the company as fully paid bonus shares;
  2. Writing off the preliminary expenses of the company;
  3. Writing off the expenses of, or the commission paid or discount allowed on, any issue of shares or debentures of the company;
  4. Premium payable on the redemption of any redeemable preference shares or of any debentures of the company;
  5. Purchase of own shares or other securities under section 68 (buy-back of securities)
  • Prohibition on issue of shares at Discount (Section 53)

– A Company cannot issue shares at discount other than Sweat Equity Shares.

– Any share issued by a company other than Sweat Equity Shares at a discounted price shall be void.

(ii) Issue of Sweat Equity Shares (Section 54)

  • A non-listed Company (not requiring to comply with SEBI regulations on Sweat Equity Shares) shall not issue Sweat Equity Shares to its Directors/Employees at Discount or for consideration other than Cash for providing Know-How or making available rights in the form of IPR’s or Value Additions or whatever name called, unless the issue is authorised by a Special Resolution passed by the Company in the General Meeting.
  • The Special Resolution authorising the issue of Sweat Equity Shares shall be valid for making the allotment within a period of 12 months from date of passing Special Resolution. [Rule 8(3)]
  • Company cannot issue Sweat Equity Shares within 12 months of Commencing its Business. [Section 54(c)]
  • The Company shall not issue Sweat Equity Shares for:

More than 15% of the existing paid-up Equity Share Capital in a year

OR

Shares of the Issue Value of ₹ 5 crores

  • Issuance of the Sweat Equity Shares in the Company shall not exceed 25% of the Paid-Up Equity Capital of the Company at any time.
  • Sweat Equity Shares issued to Directors/Employees shall have a lock-in period of 3 years from the date of allotment.
  • A startup company, may issue sweat equity shares not exceeding fifty per cent of its paid up capital up to five years from the date of its incorporation or registration.
  • The valuation of the Sweat Equity Share price shall be determined by a Registered Valuer as fair price giving justification for such valuation.
  • The amount of Sweat Equity Shares issued shall be treated as a part of Managerial Remuneration if the Sweat Equity Shares are issued to any Director or Manager AND if the same is expensed out as per the Accounting Standards.

(iii) Issue and Redemption of Preference Shares (Section 55)

  • Only redeemable preference shares can be issued in following manner:
  1. Redeemable more than 20 years for infrastructure project specified and defined in Schedule VI on condition that redemption of specified per cent of preference shares on annual basis at the option of the preference shareholder.
  2. Redeemable preference less than 20 years for other companies.
  • A Company defaulting on redemption/payment of dividend on Preference Shares, may issue further Preference Shares in lieu of such defaulting amount, with the consent of the holders of 3/4th in value of such shares along with the consent of the Tribunal.
  • In case of Companies whose financial statements comply with the Accounting Standards prescribed u/s. 133, the premium, if any, payable on redemption shall be provided only out of Profits of the Company, before the shares are redeemed.

(iv) Publication of Authorised, Subscribed and paid-up capital (Section 60)

  • Where any notice, advertisement or other official publication, or any business letter, bill head or letter paper of a company contains a statement of the amount of the authorised capital of the company, such notice, advertisement or other official publication, or such letter, bill head or letter paper shall also contain a statement, in an equally prominent position and in equally conspicuous characters, of the amount of the capital which has been subscribed and the amount paid-up.

(v) Further Issue of Share Capital [Section 62]

  • Every further issue should be proposed to existing Equity Shareholders in proportion to the existing Paid-up Capital.
  • Further shares can be issued under scheme of ESOP/ to other persons than existing Shareholders subject to passing of Special Resolution and such terms as may be prescribed.
  • For issue of shares to persons other than existing shareholders, the price has to be determined by Valuation Report by Registered Valuer.

(vi) Issue of Bonus Shares [Section 63]

  • A Company may issue fully paid-up Bonus Shares to its members, in any manner, out of:
    • Its Free Reserves; OR
    • The Securities Premium Account; OR
    • The Capital Redemption Account.
  • No issue of Bonus Shares shall be made by capitalising reserves created by Revaluation of Assets
  • Bonus Shares shall not be issued in lieu of Dividend
  • No Company shall capitalise-up Bonus Shares, unless:
  1. It has recommendation of the Board, authorised in General Meeting of the Company
  2. Company has not defaulted in payment of interest or principal in respect of Fixed Deposits/Debt Securities issued by it
  3. Company has not defaulted in payment of Statutory Dues of the Employees
  4. Partly paid-up shares, outstanding if any, are made fully paid-up

The company once having announced the decision of its Board recommending bonus, shall not subsequently withdraw the same.

(vii) Restrictions on purchase by company or giving of loans by it for purchase of its shares [Section 67]

  • The restrictions will not be applicable to a private company if following conditions are fulfilled:
  1. No other body corporate has invested any money in its share capital;
  2. Borrowing from banks, Financial Institutions (FIs) or anybody corporate is less than twice its paid-up capital or ₹500 million, whichever is lower; and
  3. It has not defaulted in repayment of such borrowings at the time of purchase of own shares.

(viii) Power of company to purchase its own securities (Buy-back of shares) [Section 68]

  • Company may purchase its own shares or other specified securities (referred to as buy-back) out of
  1. Free reserves;
  2. Securities premium account; or
  3. Proceeds of the issue of any shares or other specified securities but not proceeds of an earlier issue of the same kind of shares or same kind of other specified securities.

Conditions to fulfil for buy-back:

  1. The buy-back is authorised by its Articles;
  2. Special resolutionpassed at a general meeting of the company authorising the buy-back

Special Resolution not required if

(i) buy-back is, ten per cent or less of the total paid-up equity capital and free reserves of the company; and

(ii) such buy-back has been authorised by the Board by means of a resolution passed at its meeting;

  1. Buy-back is twenty-five per cent or less of the aggregate of paid-up capital and free reserves of the company:
  2. The ratio of the aggregate of secured and unsecured debts owed by the company after buy-back is not more than twice the paid-up capital and its free reserves:
  3. All the shares or other specified securities for buy-back are fully paid-up;
  4. Buy-back of the shares or other specified securities listed on any recognised stock exchange is in accordance with the regulations made by the SEBI;
  5. Offer of buy-back shall not be made within a period of one year reckoned from the date of the closure of the preceding offer of buy-back
  6. Every buy-back shall be completed within a period of one year from the date of passing of the resolution;
  7. Declaration of solvency (in Form No SH 10) and Return (in Form No SH 11) to Registrar and SEBI (in case of listed companies) stating that company is capable of meeting its liabilities and will not be rendered insolvent within a period of one year;
  8. Physically destroy the shares or securities within seven days of the last date of completion of buy-back;
  9. No fresh issue of same kind of shares or other securities for a period of six months except by way of a bonus issue or conversion of warrants, stock option schemes, sweat equity or conversion of preference shares or debentures into equity shares;
  10. Provided that where all members of a company agree, the offer for buy-back may remain open for a period less than fifteen days.

– Prohibition for buy-back in certain circumstances (Section 70)

  • A company cannot buy-back shares if it had defaulted in:
  1. Repayment of deposits accepted either before or after the commencement of this Act, interest payment thereon OR
  2. Redemption of Debentures OR Preference Shares OR
  3. Payment of Dividend to any shareholder 
    OR
  1. Repayment of any Term Loan or Interest paid thereon to any Financial Institution or Bank.
  • However, if following conditions are met, then the buy-back shall be permitted:
  1. Default must have been remedied AND
  2. Period of 3 years must have been lapsed after such default ceased to subsist.
  • Buy-back is not allowed in case there is default relating to
  1. Filing of Annual return (Section 92),
  2. Failure to distribute Dividend (Section 127),
  3. Non-compliance relating to the Form and Content of Financial Statements (Section 129) and
  4. Default relating to Provisions of Declaration of Dividend (Section 123)

(ix) Debentures (Section 71)

  • Secured Debentures can be issued by Companies subject to terms and conditions prescribed in Rules 18(1),
  • For issue of Secured Debentures, its Date of Redemption shall not exceed 10 years from the date of issue. Secured Debentures issued for Infrastructural Projects may exceed for a period more 10 years but shall not exceed 30 years.
  • Convertible Debentures can be issued only when Special Resolution is passed for the same in the general meeting.
  • Conditions for appointment of Debenture Trustee Prescribed in Rules 18(2).
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