New Delhi [India], May 6: India’s International Financial Services Centre at GIFT City, Gujarat, has been operational since 2015. In its first decade, it has attracted over 175 Fund Management Entities, facilitated the relocation of offshore funds, and built an exchange infrastructure that now trades derivatives, equities, and debt instruments in foreign currency — all within Indian sovereign territory but outside India’s domestic regulatory perimeter. Yet most commentary on GIFT City remains trapped in two registers: promotional material that reads like a brochure, or sceptical analysis that treats IFSC incentives as too good to be true. Neither register is useful. What is useful is a precise, provision-by-provision examination of what the law actually says — and what it means for the global asset management industry.
