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FDI Easing Not For Chinese firms; To Benefit Entities With Minority Chinese Holding: Report
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As per the amended press note 3, investors with non-controlling LBC beneficial ownership of up to 10 per cent shall be permitted under the automatic route.

The Union Cabinet on March 10 made changes in the press note 3 of 2020. Under the press note, investors from countries sharing land borders with India had to seek mandatory approval to invest in any sector.
Overseas companies having Chinese shareholding of up to 10 per cent will be eligible to invest in India under the automatic route across sectors; however, the relaxed FDI norms will not apply to entities registered in China/Hong Kong or other countries sharing land borders with India, a senior official said on Wednesday.
Earlier, foreign firms with shareholders from these land border nations owning even a single share had to seek mandatory approval to invest in India in any sector.
The Union Cabinet on March 10 made changes in the press note 3 of 2020 in this regard. Under the press note, investors from countries sharing land borders with India had to seek mandatory approval to invest in any sector.
“All the restrictions for investors from land bordering countries (LBCs) are still applicable. There is no relaxation so far as entities or investors in LBCs are concerned. This relaxation is only for entities in non-LBCs and having beneficial owners from LBCs below 10 per cent and non-controlling stake… so there are no relaxations so far as investments from LBCs are concerned,” Joint Secretary in the department for promotion of industry and internal trade (DPIIT) Jai Prakash Shivahare told reporters here.
He further explained that if a firm from a country sharing a land border with India provides technology and holds even one per cent stake, through which it may exercise some form of control, the investment will still require approval through the government route.
As per the amended press note, investors with non-controlling LBC beneficial ownership of up to 10 per cent shall be permitted under the automatic route as per the applicable sectoral caps, entry routes, and other conditions.
Such investments will be subject only to the reporting of relevant information or details by the investee entity to the DPIIT.
The government has, however, announced an expedited clearance to foreign direct investment (FDI) proposals of companies from China and other countries sharing land borders with India.
Proposals for LBC investments in specified sectors and activities of manufacturing in capital goods, electronic capital goods, electronic components, polysilicon and ingot-wafer, advance battery components, rare earth permanent magnets and rare earth processing shall be processed and decided within 60 days.
DPIIT Secretary Amardeep Singh Bhatia said that this list can be expanded or reduced by a committee of secretaries headed by the cabinet secretary.
At present, about 600 applications are under the press note 3.
When asked what would happen to those applications, the secretary said many would fall under either of the two categories – below the 10 per cent threshold and the expedited mechanism.
Those covered under the below-10 per cent limit can proceed with the investment after the notification is issued and subsequently file the required information, while those who want to come under the expedited mechanism can resubmit their applications.
A specific mechanism has been laid down for expedited approvals to ensure that the 60-day timeline is followed, as it would provide certainty to probable investors, Bhatia said.
“Now we are providing a non-PN3 route for those which are below the threshold of ownership and control…If a company from LBC wants to invest in India, in that case, the PN3 route will apply,” he said, adding that the concept of beneficial ownership (BO) is relevant for companies that are located outside the land border-sharing nations.
He added that companies like BlackRock were seeking the easing of the press note. The benefit of the expedited process can be availed by a company outside LBCs also.
“In the expedited process, some steps have been done away with…but broadly, as far as the security clearances are required, political clearance is required, that process will remain in place,” the secretary said.
He informed that a portal is being prepared so that applicants can file the information and go ahead with their investments.
For others, like in specified sectors, there is a separate provision in the portal that is being made so that they will get clearances within 60 days.
When asked about the criteria followed to identify the specified sectors, he said, in these areas, “we found that we need to increase manufacturing in India”.
“We need manufacturing to take place in India, whether it is a sewing machine or whether it is an Industry 4.0 machine which are assembling solar cells, or whether it is switchgear and so on. So, these are areas in which we feel there is a large scope of partnership, and joint ventures…But having said that, this is not a watertight compartment,” Bhatia said.
That is why the flexibility is there to add or subtract sectors.
The changes approved by the cabinet will be notified by the DPIIT and the Department of Economic Affairs. After that, it will come into effect.
“We will try to get it done as soon as possible,” he added.
(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed – PTI)
March 11, 2026, 18:08 IST
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Pharma bets a little-known form of cholesterol will underpin its next blockbuster heart drugs
Pharma thinks it’s found the next frontier in preventing heart attacks.
Novartis, Amgen and Eli Lilly are among the drugmakers betting that slashing levels of a particularly bad form of cholesterol could deliver the next blockbusters in cardiology. All three of the pharmaceutical giants are in late-stage trials to test whether drugs that cut Lp(a) can protect people from heart attacks.
If they can, the opportunity could be massive: an estimated one in five people worldwide have elevated Lp(a), and there’s not much they can do to lower it. Evidence from human genetics suggests the idea could work, but drugmakers don’t know for sure. That makes the first late-stage trial results from Novartis, expected later this year, important for the entire pipeline.
“History has taught us you can’t make assumptions,” said Dr. Steve Nissen, chief academic officer of the Heart, Vascular & Thoracic Institute at Cleveland Clinic who is the principal investigator of Novartis’ Phase 3 Horizon trial of pelacarsen, the company’s experimental drug to lower Lp(a). “We thought raising HDL would be beneficial and that didn’t work, so I think we have to keep an open mind.”
Lp(a), or lipoprotein(a), was first discovered in 1963. It’s a more dangerous cousin to the well-known LDL cholesterol because it simultaneously clogs arteries and promotes blood clots, posing two risks with just one particle. Almost 50 years after Lp(a) was discovered, researchers found that people who have high levels of it had a more than twofold higher risk of heart attack than those who don’t.
How much Lp(a) a person has circulating in their body is almost entirely determined by their genes. Lifestyle factors like diet and exercise don’t influence Lp(a) levels like they do LDL levels, leaving people with few good options to reduce it.
Currently, doctors encourage people to focus on the factors they can change, such as lowering their LDL cholesterol, decreasing blood pressure, treating obesity and diabetes and exercising. Those strategies can help protect people from high Lp(a) for some time, Nissen said. New medicines could treat people for a longer time.
Novartis, Amgen and Lilly have already proven their experimental drugs slash levels of Lp(a) by more than 80%. Now, they will need to show that translates into tangible benefits. If that happens, the drugs could reach annual sales of $5.6 billion by 2032, according to consensus estimates from Evaluate, a pharmaceutical commercial intelligence firm.
“We don’t know how much you have to lower levels,” Nissen said. “We don’t know how high you have to be to benefit from getting your level lowered. Estimates of how much you have to lower levels to prevent events based upon genetic studies are highly variable, so we don’t have an answer, and we won’t have an answer until on the date that we unblind the trial.”
That should happen around the middle of the year, Novartis CEO Vas Narasimhan said on the company’s fourth-quarter earnings call in February. The trial is studying whether Novartis and its partner Ionis’ drug pelacarsen prevents outcomes like heart attacks and strokes in people with elevated levels of Lp(a) who already have cardiovascular disease. Novartis delayed the readout by a year because people weren’t experiencing events as quickly as the company expected in the yearslong trial.
Narasimhan has said that might have to do with the fact that researchers were managing participants’ other risk factors. He said Novartis is still excited to see the data and to potentially create “an entire new class of medicines that can help a whole group of patients that have no other option.”
Novartis’ drug uses a different mechanism than its next closest competitors from Amgen and Lilly. Those drugs, Amgen’s olpasiran and Lilly’s lepodisiran, looked more potent in mid-stage trials, leading to larger Lp(a) reductions.
Amgen’s pivotal trial results were expected later this year or early next before the company also pushed back the timeline. The company now says it plans to provide an update on timing in early 2027.
Jay Bradner, Amgen’s executive vice president of research and development, said it’s impossible to say why it’s taking longer for enough people to have heart attacks to analyze the results without seeing the data.
“The clarity of the signal from population genetics and the encouraging signs from [earlier trials] render this a very smart bet,” said Bradner. The forthcoming results from Novartis will provide direction on how Lp(a)-targeting drugs can affect clinical outcomes, he said, adding that he’s “very bullish about the hypothesis.”
Lilly expects to share data from its Phase 3 trial of lepodisiran in 2029. All of the trials are designed slightly differently, which could create variation in the results, said Dr. Michelle O’Donoghue, a cardiologist at the Mass General Brigham Heart & Vascular Institute and the principal investigator of Amgen’s Ocean(a) trial of olpasiran.
“So there’s reason to think that the magnitude of the benefit might be different across the different programs,” she said.
Despite the focus from drugmakers, few doctors test their patients’ Lp(a) levels. Less than 1% of adults were tested for it in the U.S. in 2024, and testing was concentrated in a handful of states, according to one study of electronic health records.
Screening involves a routine blood draw like what’s used to measure other types of cholesterol. Leading cardiology organizations recently started recommending every adult be tested for Lp(a) at least once in their life. Currently, some doctors are reluctant to screen people for a problem when they don’t have any medicines to offer them to treat it, Nissen and O’Donoghue said.
The Family Heart Foundation plans to advocate for adding Lp(a) to the standard lipid test that measures other types of cholesterol like LDL, said the organization’s CEO, Katherine Wilemon. Living with elevated Lp(a) and another genetic heart condition herself, Wilemon has pushed for more screening since experiencing a heart attack at 38 and founding the organization in 2011.
She said the Lp(a) drugs have already helped raise awareness about testing. If the treatments succeed in clinical trials, more screening could follow. Morningstar analyst Jay Lee thinks it could take time to build the market, especially since Novartis’ pelacarsen would initially be used for people with high Lp(a) levels and a history of cardiovascular events.
Amgen and Lilly are already testing whether drugs could protect people with elevated Lp(a) from having that first event. Those results are still years away, with Lilly’s trial expected to read out in 2029.
In the meantime, Lilly isn’t waiting to make more bets. The company is testing a daily pill, and it acquired a company that wants to use gene editing to slash Lp(a) levels with a one-time treatment.
“We’ve got a bunch of shots on goal,” Cleveland Clinic’s Nissen said. “We hope at least one of them ends up in the back of the net.”
Investors are skeptical, said Goldman Sachs analyst Asad Haider. They’re nervous what the delay in Novartis’ trial means for the drugs, and they’re concerned that even if the drugs work, it could take years for them to become mega-blockbusters, he said.
“That’s why this Novartis trial is going to be so important in how people think about the unlock,” Haider said.
Wilemon from the Family Heart Foundation thinks the market for the drugs is there. She sees screening as the most important issue and access as the second one. She points to PCSK9 inhibitors, powerful drugs that slash levels of LDL cholesterol, which struggled for years to gain traction until drugmakers lowered their prices.
But before uptake comes the data — and she said she and the whole Lp(a) community are crossing their fingers Novartis’ drug works.
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