Is Section 47 deferral always available for the flip?
Section 47(xx) provides deferral for share-for-share exchange subject to specific conditions including the foreign company being incorporated in a Specified Territory (currently limited to certain jurisdictions), Indian shareholders receiving only shares in the foreign company (no cash component), and other procedural requirements. Where conditions are not satisfied (most commonly when the foreign jurisdiction is not Specified, or when cash consideration is included), the share exchange is taxable at full capital gains rates. The Specified Territory limitation has driven structural preferences toward Singapore (which is Specified) over Cayman (which is not).
What is the typical timeline for a flip?
For a typical flip with no unusual complexity, the timeline from decision to flip-complete is 4 to 8 months. Phases: pre-flip strategic analysis (4 to 6 weeks); foreign parent incorporation and pre-flip documentation (6 to 10 weeks); restructuring execution and Indian-side filings (4 to 8 weeks); and post-flip operational setup (4 to 6 weeks running in parallel). Flips with complications typically extend to 9 to 15 months.
What is the cost of a flip?
Flip costs typically include corporate restructuring legal fees (multi-jurisdiction), tax structuring and certification fees, regulatory filings, foreign parent incorporation, and post-flip operational setup. For a typical Series A-stage company flip to Delaware or Singapore, the all-in cost is typically in the range of $50,000 to $200,000 depending on complexity, with the upper range for complex IP migration, multiple Indian investors, or cross-border tax structuring. Ongoing post-flip costs are typically $25,000 to $75,000 per annum.
Are there alternatives to the flip?
Yes. The principal alternatives include the IFSC GIFT City structure (onshore-offshore positioning with regulatory and tax advantages, increasingly attractive for technology companies); the dual-headed structure (parallel Indian and foreign entities with operational coordination); and the partial restructuring (foreign subsidiary of the Indian parent for specific functions while retaining the Indian parent structure). Each alternative has its own trade-offs against the full flip.
Does the flip require Indian institutional investor consent?
Yes. The flip is a material restructuring that typically requires the consent of existing institutional investors under SHA provisions on reorganisation, change of structure, and material changes. Investor consent is typically negotiated as part of pre-flip planning, with the investor's position in the flipped structure (foreign parent equity holding, anti-dilution provisions, exit pathway alignment) being the principal subject of negotiation.
What is the post-flip founder tax position?
Post-flip, the founder typically continues to be an Indian tax resident with Indian compensation (Indian-source income taxed in India). The founder's holding in the foreign parent is a foreign asset requiring Schedule FA disclosure. Founder ESOP grants from the foreign parent are taxed under Section 17(2)(vi) at exercise. Eventual sale of foreign parent shares triggers capital gains taxation in India with Foreign Tax Credit available against any foreign-side tax. For founders relocating abroad post-flip, RNOR window planning becomes relevant.