A non-resident Indian (NRI) is an Indian citizen or a person of Indian origin who stays abroad for employment, business or vocation outside India, or stays abroad under circumstances indicating an uncertain duration.
An FII is an institution established or incorporated outside India which proposes to invest in Indian securities and is registered with SEBI.
An OCB includes overseas companies, partnership firms, societies and other corporate bodies owned predominantly by non-resident persons of Indian nationality or origin outside India.
The investments shall carry the right of repatriation of capital invested and capital appreciation so long as the investor continues to be a resident outside India. In the case of an FII, the designated branch of the authorised dealer may allow remittance of net sale/maturity proceeds (after payment of taxes) or credit the amount to the Foreign Currency account or Non-Resident Rupee account of the FII, maintained in accordance with the approval granted to it by the RBI. In any other case, where the investment is made out of inward remittance or from funds held in the NRE/FCNR account of the investor, the maturity proceeds/repurchase price of units (after payment of taxes) may be credited to the NRE/FCNR/NRO/NRSR account of the non-resident investor maintained with an authorised dealer in India
Where the purchase of units is made on a non-repatriable basis, the maturity proceeds/repurchase price of units (after payment of taxes) will not qualify for repatriation and may be credited to the NRO/NRSR account of the non-resident investor. Where the investment is made out of funds held in a NRSR account, the maturity proceeds/ repurchase price of units (after payment of taxes) may be credited to the NRSR account maintained by the investor with an authorised dealer in India. Similarly, investments in units purchased in Rupees, where the investor was a resident of India and subsequently becomes a non-resident, will not qualify for repatriation of repurchase proceeds of units. The entire income distribution on the investment will, however, qualify for full repatriation. Investors are advised to contact their banks/tax consultants if they desire remittance of the income distribution on units abroad.
The investments shall carry the right of repatriation of capital invested and capital appreciation so long as the investor continues to be a resident outside India. In the case of an FII, the designated branch of the authorised dealer may allow remittance of net sale/maturity proceeds (after payment of taxes) or credit the amount to the Foreign Currency account or Non-resident Rupee account of the FII maintained in accordance with the approval granted to it by the RBI. In any other case, where the investment is made out of inward remittance or from funds held in NRE/FCNR account of the investor, the maturity proceeds/repurchase price of units (after payment of taxes) may be credited to NRE/FCNR/NRO/NRSR account of the non-resident investor maintained with an authorised dealer in India.
Under Section 2(42A) of the Income Tax Act, units of the fund held as a capital asset for a period of more than 12 months immediately preceding the date of transfer, will be treated as a long-term capital asset for the computation of capital gains, thus qualifying for the long-term capital gains tax rate. In all other cases, it would be treated as a short-term capital asset and would be taxed at the short-term capital gains tax rate.
As per Section 10(35) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, income received from mutual fund units specified under Section 10(23D) is exempt from income tax in India and the mutual funds are subject to pay distribution tax in debt oriented schemes. Hence all dividends are tax-free in the hands of non-resident investors and no TDS is applicable on the same.
Yes. Submission of PAN card copy (irrespective of the amount of investment) is mandatory for all existing as well as prospective investors including joint applicants / holders, guardians and NRIs for investing with Mutual Funds from January 1, 2008.
An application is required to be made in Form 49A (download form).
Yes. Income generated from investments (dividend, in this case) done on a non-repatriable basis qualify for full repatriation.
Yes. unlike banks where a POA holder cannot open an account on behalf of the NRI, in a mutual fund the POA has the authority to invest on behalf of the investor and sign documents for initial and additional purchases as well as redemptions. While applying for purchase of units the POA holder needs to submit the original POA or a copy duly notarised should be submitted. The Power of attorney should contain the signature of both the first holder and the POA holder. Only when the POA is registered does the POA holder have the right to transact on behalf of the NRI investor. His signature will be verified for processing any transaction/request.
Yes. The same rules apply for nominees to resident Indian accounts. An NRI can be a nominee to an account which is in the name of a resident Indian.
Sr No | AMC Name | Restricted Country |
---|---|---|
1 | Axis | USA, CANADA & Other High Risk Countries Declared by FATF |
2 | Baroda Pioneer | USA, CANADA |
3 | Bharti Axa | USA, CANADA |
4 | BNP PARIBAS | USA,CANADA |
5 | Canara Robeco | USA,CANADA |
6 | Edelweiss | High Risk African Countries |
7 | Escorts | USA, CANADA |
8 | FRANKLIN TEMPLETON | USA,CANADA |
9 | HDFC | USA, CANADA |
10 | HSBC | USA,CANADA |
11 | ICICI | Canada |
12 | IDBI | All countries (NRI Investtment not allowed) |
13 | IDFC | Canada |
14 | India bulls | USA, CANADA |
15 | Invesco | USA,CANADA |
16 | JM Financial | USA,CANADA |
17 | LIC | USA, CANADA |
18 | Mahindra & Mahindra | USA, CANADA |
19 | Mirae | USA,CANADA |
20 | Motilal Oswal | USA, CANADA |
21 | Peerless | USA,CANADA |
22 | Principal | USA,CANADA |
23 | Quantam | USA,CANADA |
24 | Sahara | All countries (NRI Investtment not allowed) |
25 | Tata | USA,CANADA |