Preferential Allotment Valuation Under the Companies Act 2013 in India
When a company issues shares to a select group of investors — strategic partners, venture capital funds or promoters — outside the normal rights issue process, it is doing so under Section 62(1)© of the Companies Act 2013. This mechanism, known as a preferential allotment, allows targeted capital infusion but carries a non-negotiable requirement: the issue price must be determined by an IBBI-registered valuer. A CA certificate, a term sheet price or a mutually agreed figure between promoter and investor does not satisfy this requirement.
The Valuation requirement exists for a precise reason — to prevent shares from being issued at a nominal or below-market price to a favoured investor at the expense of existing shareholders. But beyond the Companies Act, the same allotment simultaneously creates a tax floor under the Income Tax Act, a FEMA pricing obligation for foreign investors, and for listed companies, a SEBI ICDR pricing constraint. Each framework has its own Valuation standard and professional requirement — and all of them are anchored to the quality of the underlying valuation report.
Key Takeaways
Section 62(1)© requires mandatory Valuation by an IBBI-registered valuer for unlisted companies — Rule 13(2)(g) of the Share Capital and Debentures Rules
The valuation must document method selection rationale, independence, absence of conflict of interest, and management representations relied upon
For listed companies, SEBI ICDR VWAP norms set the pricing floor; Regulation 166A additionally requires an independent valuer report for control-changing or large allotments
Conversion pricing for CCPS and CCDs must be fixed upfront in the offer document based on a valuation report — it cannot be deferred to the time of conversion
Cross-border allotments require a separate FEMA FMV certificate in addition to the Section 62 valuation report — the two documents cannot substitute for each other
Income Tax Section 56(2)(x) creates an independent tax floor at FMV — making a defensible valuation report essential for every preferential allotment regardless of Companies Act requirements
What Is the Valuation Requirement Under Section 62(1)©?
Statutory Basis
Rule 13(2)(g) of the Companies (Share Capital and Debentures) Rules 2014 mandates that for a preferential allotment under Section 62(1)©, the price of shares or other securities shall be determined on the basis of a valuation report from an IBBI-registered valuer. The valuation must comply with Section 247 of the Companies Act read with the Companies (Registered Valuers and Valuation) Rules 2017 and applicable IBBI Valuation Standards.
Section 62(1)© is a departure from the pre-emptive rights principle of rights issues. Because a preferential allotment bypasses general shareholder rights — issuing shares to a selected party rather than offering them proportionately to all — the law requires an independent valuation to ensure the issue price is not illusory or artificially suppressed. This protects minority shareholders from being diluted at below-market prices without recourse.
The valuation report must contain specific disclosures: the registered valuer’s declaration of independence and absence of conflict of interest, the basis of management projections relied upon, the justification for the method selected, and a clearly stated value conclusion with supporting workings. The explanatory statement annexed to the special resolution notice must then include the issue price along with a reference to the registered valuer’s report as its basis.
Rights Issue vs. Preferential Allotment — Valuation Applicability
What Valuation Methods Apply to Preferential Allotment?
Rule 13(2)(g) does not prescribe a single formula. The IBBI-registered valuer selects from internationally accepted approaches, documents the selection rationale, and applies the chosen method in accordance with IBBI Valuation Standards. A report that simply states a value without justifying the methodology is non-compliant and vulnerable to regulatory challenge.
Three Accepted Valuation Approaches Under Section 62
DCF (Income Approach): Best for growth-stage and cash-flow-generating businesses. Projects free cash flows, discounts at a risk-adjusted WACC, and derives equity value after net debt adjustment.
NAV (Asset Approach): Best for asset-heavy businesses, investment holding companies and real estate entities. Equity value = fair market value of total assets minus total liabilities.
Market Multiple Approach (Market Approach): Best for companies with identifiable listed peers. Values the business using EV/EBITDA, P/E or EV/revenue multiples from comparable companies or recent transactions.
For early-stage startups common in Series A and B preferential allotments, a DCF with scenario analysis (base, optimistic and pessimistic cases) is the standard approach — since comparables are limited and asset values do not reflect going-concern worth.
For income tax purposes, Rule 11UA additionally prescribes NAV as the floor method for FMV of unquoted equity shares in specified transactions making NAV a mandatory cross-check even when DCF is the primary method used in the Section 62 report.
What the Valuation Report Must Contain
Declaration of independence and absence of conflict of interest
Basis and source of management projections relied upon
Justification for method selected and methods rejected
Value conclusion with date of Valuation
Compliance reference to IBBI Valuation Standards and Section 247
How Does SEBI ICDR Govern Preferential Allotment Valuation for Listed Companies?
Closing Summary: What Section 62 Valuation Actually Requires
Preferential allotment Valuation under Section 62 is not a checkbox exercise — it is a substantive analytical requirement with consequences across the Companies Act, income tax and FEMA simultaneously. An IBBI-registered valuer must independently determine the issue price, justify the methodology, document assumptions, and — for convertible instruments — fix the conversion pricing upfront. For listed companies, Regulation 166A adds a control premium dimension that VWAP alone cannot satisfy. For cross-border allotments, FEMA requires a separate FMV certificate. Getting the valuation right protects the company, existing shareholders and the incoming investor from regulatory challenge, tax additions and post-allotment disputes.
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