“Press Note 3 was India’s pre-emptive shield in 2020. The 2026 amendment is India’s signal that the shield need not be a wall.”
On March 10, 2026, the Union Cabinet approved landmark changes to India’s foreign direct investment framework by amending Press Note 3 (2020 Series) β a COVID-era rule that had required any investor with even marginal beneficial ownership from a land border country (LBC) to seek prior government approval before investing in India. The amendment introduces a 10% beneficial ownership threshold for the automatic route and a 60-day mandatory decision deadline for key strategic manufacturing sectors β marking India’s most significant FDI policy reform in years.
π° What is FDI and the Automatic Route?
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) refers to investment made by an entity in one country into a business or asset in another country, with the intent of establishing a lasting interest or effective management control. Unlike portfolio investment β which is passive (buying shares on a stock exchange) β FDI involves active participation in the management of the enterprise.
In India, FDI is regulated through the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999, and operationalised through the FDI Policy issued by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
India allows FDI through two routes: the Automatic Route, where no prior government approval is needed (investor simply reports to RBI after investing), and the Government Route, where prior approval is mandatory and used for sensitive sectors like defence, media, and banking.
Think of the Automatic Route as a green signal β a foreign company can invest without asking anyone first. The Government Route is a red signal β you must get permission before proceeding. Press Note 3 moved an entire class of investors (from 7 neighbouring countries) from green to red β permanently. The 2026 amendment converts low-risk cases back to green.
π What Was Press Note 3 (2020)?
Press Note 3 of 2020 Series was issued by DPIIT on April 17, 2020 β a month into India’s first COVID-19 lockdown. It introduced a sweeping amendment: any entity from a country sharing a land border with India, or any entity whose beneficial owner belongs to such a country, must seek prior government approval before investing in India β in any sector, without exception.
The timing was deliberate. Global markets had cratered. Indian startups and listed companies were seeing valuations fall 40β70% within weeks. China, whose economy had recovered faster and whose large state-backed firms were flush with capital, was seen as a risk β capable of quietly acquiring distressed Indian assets at bargain prices. Press Note 3 was India’s pre-emptive shield.
The concept of beneficial ownership (BO) is critical here. A beneficial owner is the natural person or entity that ultimately owns or controls an investment β not just the legal entity on paper. So a Cayman Islands-registered fund with a Chinese pension fund holding even a small stake would trigger PN3, because the beneficial owner included a Chinese entity.
PN3 was not anti-China-specific. It applied to all 7 land border countries equally. A Nepali or Bangladeshi investor also needed prior government approval under PN3. The China angle was the political motivation, but the legal text was country-agnostic. Questions often test whether students understand the universal scope of PN3.
π The 7 Land Border Countries
India shares land borders with seven countries, all covered under Press Note 3: China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, and Afghanistan. Afghanistan borders India through the disputed region of Jammu & Kashmir (Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir). It is important to know all seven β questions have appeared in UPSC Prelims asking students to identify India’s land border neighbours.
Mnemonic: CP-BN-BMA β China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, Afghanistan. Or trace geographically clockwise from northwest: Pakistan β China β Nepal β Bhutan β Bangladesh β Myanmar.
Sri Lanka and Maldives are NOT land border countries. They are maritime neighbours, sharing only sea channels with India. They are not covered under Press Note 3. Also: although Hong Kong is treated as a separate customs territory globally, it was included under the China umbrella for PN3 purposes.
βοΈ Why PN3 Became a Problem Over Time
Press Note 3 achieved its objective in 2020 β it blocked large-scale opportunistic acquisitions. But by 2022β23, its unintended consequences had become hard to ignore. The modern global investment ecosystem is deeply interconnected. A large private equity fund like Blackstone, Sequoia, or Carlyle has thousands of limited partners (LPs) β pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and family offices from dozens of countries. Some of these LPs are from China or have Chinese institutional money.
Under PN3’s strict interpretation, even if a Chinese LP held a 2% stake in a global fund, and that fund wanted to invest in an Indian startup, it needed prior government approval β regardless of the sector, the size of investment, or whether the Chinese LP had any actual decision-making power.
According to data cited in legal research: of 526 FDI proposals submitted under PN3 between 2020 and 2024, only 124 were accepted, 201 were outright rejected (a ~40% rejection rate), and the remainder were stuck in processing with no statutory deadline.
Indian startups competing for global VC funding were disadvantaged. A Singapore or US-based fund with even marginal Chinese LP exposure had to choose between the burden of government approval or deploying capital elsewhere β Vietnam, Indonesia, and Southeast Asia were willing alternatives.
PN3 made no distinction between controlling and non-controlling stakes. A Chinese company buying 51% of an Indian firm (controlling, clear security concern) was treated the same as a Chinese pension fund holding 3% of a global fund that was buying 8% of an Indian startup (passive, no management influence). This lack of proportionality was the core policy design flaw the 2026 amendment sought to correct.
β¨ The 2026 Amendment: What Changed
On March 10, 2026, the Union Cabinet approved two structural changes to Press Note 3, developed by DPIIT and partly informed by recommendations from a high-level committee headed by NITI Aayog member Rajiv Gauba.
Change 1 β The 10% Beneficial Ownership Threshold: Under the amended rules, if the beneficial ownership of a foreign investor entity from a land border country is 10% or less, that investor can now use the automatic route across all sectors β without prior government approval. The BO test is applied at the investor entity level, not traced through to ultimate natural persons, making compliance practically manageable. The definition is aligned with Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) rules.
Change 2 β The 60-Day Decision Deadline: For investments in specified strategic manufacturing sectors, the government must now make a decision within 60 days of receiving a complete application. Covered sectors include: advanced battery components, rare earth permanent magnets, rare earth processing, capital goods, electronic components, and polysilicon and ingot-wafers. DPIIT Secretary Amardeep Singh Bhatia noted this list can be expanded or reduced by a Committee of Secretaries (CoS) headed by the Cabinet Secretary.
What Remains Unchanged: Direct investments by entities incorporated in land border countries β including Chinese companies, Pakistani entities, or Bangladeshi firms β still require prior government approval for any stake, in any sector. The 10% threshold only applies to indirect beneficial ownership through foreign funds.
The 2026 amendment does NOT mean Chinese companies can freely invest in India. If a Chinese entity directly invests in India β even a minority stake β it still requires government approval. The 10% threshold applies only to indirect beneficial ownership through a foreign fund or intermediary entity. This is the most important distinction to remember for MCQs.
| Parameter | Before Amendment (PN3 2020) | After Amendment (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| LBC BO threshold | Any amount (even 0.1%) β Government Route | Up to 10% β Automatic Route |
| Decision timeline | No statutory deadline (open-ended) | 60-day deadline for strategic sectors |
| Direct LBC investment | Government Route mandatory | Unchanged β still Government Route |
| BO definition alignment | Broad / ambiguous | Aligned with PMLA rules |
| Global fund impact | Marginal LBC exposure = full approval required | Up to 10% LBC LP exposure = automatic route |
π Why Now? The Geopolitical & Economic Context
India-China Calibrated Thaw: The Galwan Valley clash of June 2020 had fundamentally reset India-China relations. By late 2024 and through 2025, a measured normalisation began β through backchannel diplomacy, partial troop disengagement along the LAC, and gradual resumption of high-level engagement. The FDI amendment signals that India is willing to separate economic engagement from strategic competition.
Manufacturing Ambitions Need Foreign Capital: India’s PLI (Production Linked Incentive) scheme, semiconductor mission, push on rare earth processing, and EV transition all require significant foreign technology and capital. Several sectors in the 60-day fast-track β rare earths, advanced batteries, polysilicon β are precisely the sectors where China dominates global supply chains and where technical partnerships are most strategically relevant.
Global Investment Competition: Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Mexico have been aggressively competing with India for FDI β particularly from global manufacturers looking to de-risk their China supply chains. A policy that creates unnecessary friction for legitimate global capital was a reputational liability for India.
The Trade Deficit Reality: India’s trade deficit with China widened to approximately USD 99.2 billion in 2024-25 β the largest bilateral trade deficit India has with any country. The amendment reflects a pragmatic acknowledgement that complete economic decoupling from China is neither feasible nor desirable in the short term.
2020 (April): PN3 issued during COVID β 2020 (June): Galwan clash deepens India-China freeze β 2024-25: Diplomatic thaw begins β January 2025: Multilateral banks exempted from PN3 β March 10, 2026: Cabinet approves 10% BO threshold + 60-day deadline amendment.
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DPIIT under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry issues India’s FDI policy notes. RBI regulates the inflow/outflow mechanics under FEMA, but the policy itself comes from DPIIT.
Sri Lanka is a maritime neighbour β it shares no land border with India, only the Palk Strait. The 7 land border countries are China, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, and Afghanistan.
The 10% beneficial ownership threshold is the key number. If a land border country entity holds 10% or less beneficial ownership in a foreign investor fund, that fund qualifies for the automatic route. This threshold is also aligned with PMLA beneficial ownership definitions.
This is the classic exam trap. The 10% BO relaxation applies only to indirect beneficial ownership through a foreign fund. A Chinese company directly investing still needs government approval β the 2026 amendment did not change rules for direct LBC investment.
The 60-day deadline is targeted at specific strategic manufacturing sectors β advanced battery components, rare earth magnets and processing, capital goods, electronic components, and polysilicon. It is not a universal rule for all government-route proposals.