Retail & E-commerce Sector Solutions: Foreign Subsidiary Compliance
Integrated Chartered Accountant advisory models targeting regulatory filing requirements for Retail & E-commerce entities via specialized Foreign Subsidiary Compliance audits.
Understanding the Retail & E-commerce Sector
Every industry carries specific risk structures, inventory pipelines, and compliance regimes. For companies operating in the Retail & E-commerce field, regular audits and tax optimizations must align with the corresponding business operational pace.
The retail and e-commerce sectors operate in high-volume, thin-margin environments characterized by complex inventory management, returns processing, and multi-state GST obligations. Whether managing physical retail chains or online direct-to-consumer (D2C) brands, businesses require clean accounting control pipelines. We provide comprehensive retail taxation and auditing services to optimize working capital.
We specialize in setting up automatic sales ledger reconciliations, matching purchase transactions with digital marketplace records, and performing inventory audits to secure margins.
Our Core Retail & E-commerce Tax ServicesWe address the specific accounting, taxation, and logistics challenges of modern retailers:
- Marketplace Reconciliations: Matching monthly sales reports, commission details, and returns from online platforms (Amazon, Flipkart, Shopify, etc.) with internal accounting ledgers.
- GST TCS u/s 52 & Income Tax TDS u/s 194O: Monitoring and reconciling Tax Collected at Source (TCS) collected by e-commerce portals under GST, and verifying TDS deductions made u/s 194O of the Income Tax Act.
- Multi-State GST Setup: Registering and filing returns for warehouses and fulfilment centres located across multiple states, managing Additional Place of Business (APOB) registrations.
- Inventory Valuation (AS-2): Setting up inventory tracking methodologies, applying cost formulas (FIFO or Weighted Average), and auditing physical stock at warehouses.
E-commerce operators apply multiple transaction-level deductions, making cash flow tracking difficult:
Application of Foreign Subsidiary Compliance
By integrating our robust Foreign Subsidiary Compliance framework, we resolve complex compliance queries, perform transactional audit checks, and assist in submitting direct or indirect tax representations before appropriate statutory authorities.
Establishing and managing a foreign subsidiary in India requires navigating corporate law, FEMA regulations, and RBI compliance rules. Transactions between an Indian subsidiary and its foreign parent organization are subject to strict transfer pricing rules and reporting requirements. We provide cross-border corporate compliance advisory services to help international organizations operate smoothly in India.
Our FEMA and corporate law team advises overseas parent companies on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) guidelines, repatriation of profits, and mandatory reporting, ensuring compliance with local regulatory authorities.
FDI Reporting & RBI FIRMS Portal FilingsAll inbound foreign equity investments must be reported to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) through the Foreign Investment Reporting and Management System (FIRMS) portal:
- Form FC-GPR (Foreign Collaboration-General Permission Route): This form must be filed within 30 days of issuing share capital to foreign entities, supported by valuation certificates issued by a Chartered Accountant.
- Form FC-TRS (Transfer of Shares): Used to report transfer of equity shares between a resident and a non-resident of India, filed within 60 days of the transfer or payment receipt.
- Annual FLA Return (Foreign Liabilities and Assets): Every Indian company that has received FDI or holds assets overseas must file the FLA return directly with the RBI by July 15 every year. This return reports the company's financial positions and market valuations.
Transactions between the Indian subsidiary and the foreign associated enterprise must be conducted at Arm's Length Price (ALP) to prevent tax base erosion:
When the Indian subsidiary raises debt funding from its foreign parent or overseas lenders, it must comply with ECB guidelines:
- Obtaining a Loan Registration Number (LRN) from the RBI before drawing down funds.
- Filing monthly ECB-2 returns to report loan utilization, interest accruals, and principal repayments.
- Adhering to All-in-Cost ceilings and average maturity period guidelines issued by the RBI.
CA Abhijeet Dolase & Associates