कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Start-up India’s sob story
Financial Express Ahmedabad
|November 19, 2025
FOUNDERS SHOULD BE PERMITTED ESOPs, SUBJECT TO SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL
EMPLOYEE STOCK OPTION plans (Esops) symbolise “skin in the game”, marrying employee economics with shareholder value to democratise start up success. It converts labour into equity, kickstarting a participative and prosperous virtuous cycle. India’s archaic laws on Esops are counterintuitive for the world’s third largest startup ecosystem.
India has the aspiration of a $10-trillion economy with the regulations of a $0.5-trillion economy. The policy mindset is extractive, not expansive. Some aspects of tax laws and practices would make even the colonial British blush. India’s laws on Esops suffer from two fatal flaws: fair market value fallacy; and the promoter prohibition.
The taxation of Esops worldwide is similar. Esops are granted at a nominal price (grant price). When Esops are exercised, the fair market value (FMV) and grant price differential is taxed as “salary income”. When the shares are sold, sale price and FMV differential are taxed as capital gains.
Yet this is broken in India.
Fair market value fallacy
The phrase “fair market value” is a misnomer for startups, as it is neither fair nor there is a market, and the value is hard to realise.
Startups are valued based on future performance, with investors negotiating special rights such as valuation read adjustment (anti-dilution rights) and priority during exits (liquidation preference). This merits the prices they pay for their shares.
This same price forms the FMV for Esops, despite employees not getting the same rights. Private companies offer differential rights, unlike listed companies. Yet boards, auditors, and advisors fail to permit any FMV reduction, fearing scrutiny notices and prolonged litigation.
यह कहानी Financial Express Ahmedabad के November 19, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Financial Express Ahmedabad से और कहानियाँ
Financial Express Ahmedabad
'50% Indian family biz report revenues between $1-30 bn'
NEARLY HALF OF Indian family businesses report annual revenues ranging from $1 billion to $30 billion, with 36% falling within the $1-5 billion range, according to a latest report by Deloitte.
1 mins
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
Budget may unveil...
INDUSTRY WATCHERS ARGUE that future mergers should be designed to avoid combining banks headquartered in the same region, thereby minimising operational disruption.
2 mins
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
The persisting Indo-China border challenge
Beijing’s recent posture is signalling that a buoyed China sees no reason to divorce its strategic posture from its economic one
4 mins
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
Startups ride growing demand for Narrow AI
DEMAND FOR NARROW
1 mins
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
FMCG growth slips in November, but rural gallops
“Inflation has begun to stabilise in the second half of the ongoing fiscal.
1 mins
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
'Pvt investment in biopharma needs govt risk-sharing'
India’s bioeconomy has expanded more than sixteen-fold over the past decade, rising from $10 billion to more than $165 billion in 2024, and is projected to exceed $300 billion by 2030.
3 mins
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
MFs deploy ₹14,215 cr in Nov
THE MUTUAL FUND industry deployed ₹14,215.26 crore in November, according to monthly mutual fund tracker by PrimeMFDatabase.
1 min
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
Delhi AQI at 461 sets record for 2nd-worst Dec day
THE AQI IN Delhi climbed to 461 on Sunday and marked the city’s most polluted day this winter and the second-worst December air quality day on record, as weak winds and low temperatures trapped pollutants close to the surface.
2 mins
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
OpenAI scraps equity vesting policy
OPENAI TOLD STAFF that it was ending its policy requiring employees to work for at least six months at the company before their equity vests, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday, citing unnamed people familiar with the matter.
1 min
December 15, 2025
Financial Express Ahmedabad
Travel insurance pays for non-refundable expenses
YOUR MONEY: FLIGHT CANCELLATIONS
2 mins
December 15, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
