Documents to retain
- sector memo
- beneficial-owner chart
- valuation report
- term sheet and definitive agreements
- FIRC/KYC and bank advice
- board/shareholder approvals and FIRMS acknowledgement
The consequence of holding foreign funds without timely corporate action.
Allotment or Refund after Receiving Foreign Investment is relevant for founders, CFOs, company secretaries, investors and transaction advisers. This guide explains the consequence of holding foreign funds without timely corporate action and converts the legal framework into a practical decision path.
| Step | Control |
|---|---|
| 1 | Classify the business and sector route. |
| 2 | Screen investor, citizenship and beneficial ownership. |
| 3 | Select the instrument and pricing method. |
| 4 | Prepare transaction and corporate documents. |
| 5 | Receive funds and complete allotment/transfer. |
| 6 | File the correct FIRMS form and update annual/downstream controls. |
Foreign funds remain in the share-application account while commercial terms are renegotiated. The company should not ignore the statutory timeline.
Identify the person, transaction date and exact legal event before applying a limit or form.
No. Operational acceptance does not cure an impermissible underlying transaction.
Keep the legal-source note, transaction documents, bank trail, valuation/approval where relevant, filing acknowledgement and closure evidence.
Refresh it when residence, ownership, control, amount, activity, instrument terms or law changes.
Do not begin with a form, portal or commercial label. Identify the person, purpose, instrument and transaction date; confirm the substantive route; complete payment, reporting and evidence; and refresh the analysis when facts or law change.