MUMBAI (Reuters) - Foreign portfolio investors in India would be subject to the same tax treatment as foreign institutional investors, the country's market regulator clarified on Tuesday.
India had approved new rules in October aimed at streamlining the registration process for foreign investors according to which overseas investors will be classified into a newly created foreign portfolio investors category as long as their equity stake in a company does not exceed 10 percent.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) said it had received approvals from the Department of Economic Affairs and the tax department to extend the same tax benefits to the new class of investors.
SEBI also approved rules announced earlier this year that will allow companies to issue debt through a shelf filing, along with regulations empowering it to monitor investors' call records and conduct searches at companies suspected of wrongdoing.
The approvals came after SEBI's last board meeting for the year.
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The regulator also revised rules that mandated companies to get their initial public offerings graded by a credit rating agency before going to the market.
Investment bankers had opposed the rules that came in three years back, partially blaming the stringent requirement for the dormant IPO market.
SEBI said IPO grading would be voluntary.
(Reporting by Himank Sharma; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)