Can GIFT City PMS Invest in Indian Stocks? FEMA and LRS Rules Explained
Discretionary Portfolio Management From Gift City Part :4
Introduction: FEMA and Capital Controls in GIFT City PMS
Access to a GIFT City IFSC Portfolio Management Service (PMS) by an Indian resident is not merely a matter of securities regulation. Rather, it is fundamentally governed by foreign exchange law under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA).
Accordingly, any investment by an Indian resident into a GIFT City PMS must comply with the outbound remittance framework prescribed under FEMA and administered by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
This article examines:
- how the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) applies to GIFT City PMS structures, and
- why, despite the apparent flexibility under Regulation 73(3) of the Fund Management Regulations, such PMS structures are effectively restricted to outbound investments
Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) Framework
The Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), introduced under:
- the Foreign Exchange Management (Current Account Transactions) Rules, 2000, and
- subsequent RBI Master Directions
permits a resident individual to remit up to:
USD 250,000 per financial year
for specified permissible purposes, including investment in foreign securities.
LRS and the IFSC: Regulatory Position
Importantly, the RBI has clarified through successive circulars that:
Indian residents may remit funds to IFSC-based entities within the overall LRS limit.
However, this permission is not unconditional.
Specifically, the investment must be made in securities or financial products issued by entities resident in the IFSC — and not in securities issued by entities resident in India (outside the IFSC).
Accordingly, this restriction becomes central to understanding the structural limitations of GIFT City PMS.
The LRS Account Route for GIFT City PMS
In practice, the fund flow for a GIFT City PMS investment typically follows a structured path:
- The Indian resident remits funds from an Indian bank account under LRS
- The funds are transferred to the IFSC Fund Management Entity (FME)
- The FME onboards the client and establishes a discretionary PMS account
- The FME deploys capital into permitted global securities
- Upon exit, the FME repatriates proceeds to the investor’s Indian bank account
Important Clarification: LRS Limits Remittance, Not Portfolio Size
It is critical to distinguish between remittance limits and portfolio value.
The USD 250,000 cap applies only to annual outward remittance, not to the total size of the PMS portfolio.
Therefore:
- the portfolio may grow beyond USD 250,000
- appreciation and reinvestment can significantly increase value
- multi-year remittances can result in a substantially larger offshore portfolio
KYC, TCS and Compliance Requirements
LRS transactions involve layered compliance obligations across jurisdictions.
At the Indian Bank Level
- KYC verification by the remitting bank
- Authorised Dealer (AD) reporting obligations
Tax Compliance
- Tax Collected at Source (TCS) under the Income Tax Act
- Typically 20% on remittances above prescribed thresholds (excluding specified exemptions)
At the IFSC FME Level
Independently, the FME must comply with:
- KYC and AML requirements
- Suitability and client profiling obligations under IFSC regulations
In practice, the FME will:
- verify that funds were remitted under LRS
- confirm compliance with permissible purposes
However, LRS compliance remains the responsibility of the investor and the Indian bank—not the FME.
Round-Tripping Constraints and the Outbound-Only Design
Although Regulation 73(3) of the Fund Management Regulations appears broad, its practical application is significantly constrained.
The regulation permits investment in:
- IFSC securities
- Indian securities
- foreign securities
However, from a FEMA perspective, this flexibility is largely illusory for Indian-resident investors.
Textual Permissibility vs Practical Reality
At a textual level, the regulation suggests that a GIFT City PMS can invest in Indian securities.
However, in practical terms, the position differs materially.
For an Indian resident investing under LRS:
- Textual answer: Yes
- Regulatory reality: Effectively No
FEMA Round-Tripping Restriction
The LRS framework explicitly restricts the use of remitted funds.
Once funds leave India:
- they must remain deployed in offshore assets
- reinvestment into Indian securities creates a circular flow
This is commonly referred to as round-tripping.
Accordingly:
- remitting funds abroad
- and reinvesting them into Indian equities
would violate the underlying intent of FEMA regulations.
Structural Limits Under FEMA (Overseas Investment Rules, 2022)
Under Rule 19(3) of the Overseas Investment Rules, limited round-tripping structures may be permitted.
However, this exception is narrow.
Specifically:
- it applies to layered subsidiary structures
- it does not clearly accommodate single-client PMS accounts
As a result, a resident-funded PMS structure does not comfortably fit within this exception.
FPI Registration Barrier
In addition, investment into Indian listed securities by offshore entities generally requires:
Foreign Portfolio Investor (FPI) registration
However, GIFT City PMS structures present complications:
- they are not pooled vehicles
- each account is client-specific
Therefore:
- a single-client PMS cannot easily qualify under the FPI framework
- the structure raises regulatory concerns
Importantly, no clear regulatory guidance supports such usage.
Tax Consequences: No Structural Advantage
Even if such a structure were implemented, it would not yield tax benefits.
The IFSC tax holiday:
- does not apply to Indian-source income
Consequently:
- capital gains on Indian securities remain taxable in India
- taxation applies directly at the investor level
Thus, there is no tax efficiency advantage over domestic investment routes.
The Outbound-Only Conclusion
Therefore, when analysed holistically, the regulatory framework leads to a clear conclusion.
Although Regulation 73(3) appears to permit investment in Indian securities, the combined effect of:
- FEMA round-tripping restrictions
- structural limitations under the FPI regime
- and the absence of tax advantages
makes such investments practically unworkable.
Accordingly, for Indian-resident investors using LRS, a GIFT City PMS operates as an outbound-only investment vehicle.
Final Strategic Positioning
In light of these constraints, the appropriate positioning becomes clear.
A GIFT City PMS should be structured as:
- a vehicle for offshore diversification
- a platform for accessing global markets
- a complement—not a substitute—for domestic portfolios
Therefore:
- Indian securities exposure should remain within SEBI-regulated domestic structures
- GIFT City PMS should focus exclusively on international assets
This approach is not only compliant but also aligned with its intended purpose.
Conclusion
The interaction between FEMA, LRS, FPI regulations, and Indian tax law creates a tightly controlled framework for outbound investment.
Within this system:
A GIFT City PMS is not designed to route Indian capital back into Indian markets.
Instead, its role is clearly defined:
- to enable compliant offshore investment
- to facilitate global portfolio diversification
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. Can Indian residents invest in GIFT City PMS under LRS?
Yes. Indian residents can invest under the LRS framework, subject to the USD 250,000 annual limit and FEMA compliance.
2. Can LRS funds be used to invest in Indian stocks through GIFT City PMS?
No. Despite apparent regulatory flexibility, FEMA round-tripping restrictions effectively prohibit such structures.
3. What are FEMA round-tripping restrictions?
They prevent Indian residents from sending funds abroad and reinvesting them back into Indian securities, thereby avoiding circular capital flows.
4. What is the maximum investment allowed under LRS?
USD 250,000 per financial year per individual. However, portfolio value can exceed this over time.
5. Does GIFT City PMS provide tax benefits for Indian investments?
No. Indian-source income remains taxable under domestic tax laws.
6. Is FPI registration required?
Yes, for investing in Indian listed securities. However, this is not practical for single-client PMS structures.
7. What is the ideal use of GIFT City PMS?
It is best used for global diversification and offshore investment exposure.
8. Can GIFT City PMS invest in both Indian and foreign securities?
While theoretically possible, regulatory and tax constraints make it effectively outbound-only for Indian residents.
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