The landscape of foreign portfolio investment in India is currently undergoing its most significant structural realignment in a decade. As of late 2025, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has moved beyond mere oversight, implementing a transparency-first regime that effectively bridges the gap between direct Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) and those utilizing the Offshore Derivative Instrument (ODI) route.
Through the landmark December 2024 Circular and subsequent 2025 amendments, the regulator has targeted regulatory arbitrage while simultaneously rolling out the “red carpet” for low-risk, long-term capital through the SWAGAT-FI framework.
The New Disclosure Paradigm: Eliminating Anonymity
The primary objective of the 2025 reforms is to ensure that the “look-through” requirements for ODIs mirror those of direct FPIs. By November 17, 2025, SEBI mandated that ODI subscribers meet the same granular disclosure triggers as direct funds.
The Concentration & Size Triggers
The following table outlines the specific thresholds that now mandate the disclosure of every natural person with an economic interest, without the benefit of materiality thresholds:
| Trigger Category | Threshold Limit | Compliance Requirement |
| Concentration Criteria | >50% of Indian Equity AUM in a single corporate group | Full granular disclosure of UBOs up to the natural person level |
| Size Criteria | >INR 50,000 Crore (~USD 6 billion) total India equity AUM | Look-through disclosures for the entire investor group. |
| Exemption | Government funds, SWFs, and Public Retail Funds | Only grouping norms apply; exempt from granular look-through |
Data Insight: The relaxation of the Size Criteria from the previous INR 25,000 crore to INR 50,000 crore in early 2025 was a strategic move to focus enforcement on “mega-funds” while reducing the compliance drag on mid-sized institutional investors.
Structural Engineering: The “Cash-Only” ODI
Effective December 17, 2025, SEBI fundamentally altered the DNA of ODIs. The regulator has effectively “securitised” these instruments, removing the layers of derivative complexity that once defined them.
Derivative Restrictions and Hedging Mandates
The transition from synthetic exposure to physical backing is now absolute. The new framework enforces a strict 1:1 correlation between the instrument issued and the underlying cash asset. This move eliminates the “leverage play” that was previously accessible to offshore investors through the derivative route.
Comparative Structural Shift:
| Feature | Pre-December 2025 Regime | Post-December 2025 Regime |
| Underlying Assets | Cash equities, Debt, or Derivatives | Cash securities only (No derivatives) |
| Hedging Mechanism | Dynamic hedging using Futures & Options | One-to-one physical backing |
| FPI Registration | Common pool for Proprietary & ODI trades | Dedicated "ODI" suffixed registration |
| Proprietary Trading | Permitted in the same registration | Strictly Prohibited in ODI-dedicated funds |
SWAGAT-FI: The Fast-Track for Trusted Capital
To counterbalance the tightening of ODI norms, SEBI notified the SWAGAT-FI (Single Window Automatic and Generalised Access for Trusted Foreign Investors) framework on December 1, 2025. This initiative is designed to reward “low-risk” investors with administrative ease.
Key Liberalisations for SWAGAT-FIs
The framework merges the FPI and Foreign Venture Capital Investor (FVCI) pathways, significantly enhancing investment flexibility. As of June 2025, registered FPIs in India have reached 11,913 with assets under custody hitting INR 80.83 lakh crore. SWAGAT-FI targets the “trusted” segment of this pool.
- Removal of Investment Caps: SWAGAT-FIs are exempt from the 66.67% (unlisted) and 33.33% (listed/debt) allocation limits previously imposed on FVCIs.
- Extended Registration Validity: Registration validity and KYC review cycles have been extended from 3 years to 10 years, aligning with global best practices.
- Consolidated Registration: A single-window, automatic access route that eliminates duplicative documentation for investors holding both FPI and FVCI licenses.
Critical Compliance Timelines (The Road Ahead)
As we look toward 2026, market participants must navigate a series of “hard” deadlines to avoid portfolio liquidation or trading freezes.
| Date | Milestone/Deadline | Impact on Investors |
| 17th November 2025 | Effective date for Granular Disclosures | ODI subscribers must begin reporting UBOs if thresholds are met. |
| 17th December 2025 | Derivative Ban Implementation | All non-compliant derivative-linked ODIs must be restructured. |
| 15th February 2026 | End of 90-day Realignment Period | Final date for existing ODI subscribers to reduce concentration. |
| 1st June 2026 | SWAGAT-FI Full Implementation | New Amendment Regulations come into force for FPI/FVCI convergence. |
The Subject Matter Expert View: Unresolved Frictions
While the reforms are robust, two primary areas of friction remain for the global asset management community:
1. The “Accidental” Breach
The 50% Concentration Criteria is applied at an Indian corporate group level. For specialized sector funds (e.g., a Global Tech Fund), a surge in the market cap of a single Indian conglomerate can trigger a breach overnight. Experts suggest a Value-based or AUM-linked relief would be more equitable than a flat percentage-based trigger, preventing forced liquidations of high-performing assets.
2. Manual Exit Obstacles
Despite the digitalisation of entry through the India Market Access Portal, the “exit” remains cumbersome. Currently, there is no statutory timeline for account closure or license surrender. A move toward a 30-day “Deemed Closure” policy would provide the certainty that institutional investors require for capital repatriation.
SEBI’s 2025 regulatory overhaul is a clear pivot toward a “High-Trust, High-Transparency” market. By eliminating the hedging flexibility of ODIs and mandating granular UBO disclosures, the regulator has essentially neutralized the “opaque” advantages of P-Notes.
However, the introduction of SWAGAT-FI signals that India is not becoming more restrictive, but rather more selective. The road ahead will likely see a migration of global capital from synthetic products toward direct, “trusted” FPI registrations. For the professional investor, the cost of compliance has risen, but it is accompanied by the promise of a more stable, predictable, and institutionally-aligned Indian capital market.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information existing at the time of preparation and we take no responsibility to update it with the subsequent changes in the law. The article is intended as a news update and Affluence Advisory neither assumes nor accepts any responsibility for any loss arising to any person acting or refraining from acting as a result of any material contained in this article. It is recommended that professional advice be taken based on specific facts and circumstances. This article does not substitute the need to refer to the original pronouncement.
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