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What are the limitations of an OPC?

Restriction on Ownership

  • Only a natural person who is an Indian citizen and resident can incorporate an OPC.
  • A person can form only one OPC at a time.
  • Foreign nationals or non-resident Indians are not allowed to incorporate an OPC.
  • Body corporates such as companies or LLPs cannot form an OPC.
  • The same individual cannot be both a member and a nominee in different OPCs.

Limited Fund-Raising Options

  • OPCs cannot issue equity shares to the public or list on stock exchanges.
  • They are not permitted to raise capital from venture capitalists or angel investors.
  • Investment opportunities are limited to loans or private placements.
  • This limits expansion for capital-intensive businesses.
  • It can impact the company’s ability to scale rapidly.

Restrictions on Business Activities

  • OPCs are barred from engaging in Non-Banking Financial Investment activities.
  • They cannot carry out investment in securities or financial services as their primary business.
  • Certain regulated sectors do not allow OPC participation.
  • Activities involving large-scale public interaction are often better suited for other company forms.
  • Conversion is required if the company wishes to diversify into such restricted areas.

Compliance and Conversion Mandates

  • OPCs must convert into a private or public company upon exceeding prescribed financial thresholds.
  • Mandatory conversion is triggered if paid-up capital exceeds ₹50 lakh or turnover exceeds ₹2 crore for three consecutive years.
  • The conversion process involves additional documentation and ROC approval.
  • Continued operation beyond limits without conversion attracts penalties.
  • It imposes a ceiling on long-term growth unless the company transitions.

Operational and Structural Constraints

  • Only one member is allowed, limiting the scope for collaboration.
  • Board-level diversity and strategic oversight are minimal.
  • The nominee cannot be changed frequently without due procedures.
  • OPCs are not ideal for businesses requiring multiple stakeholders.
  • Dependence on a single individual increases operational risk in emergencies.

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