No Statutory Minimum Capital Requirement
- India does not prescribe a minimum capital for joint ventures
- Especially for private limited companies under the Companies Act
- Capital can be decided mutually by the joint venture partners
- Must be sufficient to meet the business objectives and expenses
- Flexibility allows both small and large ventures to operate
Sector-Specific Requirements
- Certain sectors may have capital thresholds under the FDI policy
- Regulated industries like banking, insurance, and telecom apply limits
- Minimum capital norms are imposed by sectoral regulators
- These requirements override general company law flexibility
- Partners must verify capital norms before incorporation
Contractual Agreement Between Partners
- Capital contribution is mutually agreed upon in the JV agreement
- Can be monetary or in the form of assets, technology, or services
- Reflects ownership and profit-sharing ratios
- Can include initial capital and future funding commitments
- It should be clearly stated to avoid disputes
Types of Capital Contributions
- Equity capital is commonly contributed as shares
- Preference shares or debentures may also be used
- Contributions can include tangible and intangible assets
- May involve transfer of licenses, IPR, or infrastructure
- All contributions must be valued and recorded accurately
Regulatory and Practical Considerations
- Must ensure compliance with FEMA if foreign capital is involved
- Adequate capital helps meet working capital and operational needs
- Proper capital planning is essential for sustainable growth
- Registrar of Companies requires disclosure of the capital structure
- Investors and lenders often assess JV strength by capital base



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