Published: 14 April 2026 | 4:00 PM IST
Every year, thousands of Indian retail investors lose money not because the economy turned, not because competition intensified, but because the very promoters they trusted quietly siphoned wealth through the back door. The mechanism? Related Party Transactions — one of the most underappreciated red flags in Indian equity investing.
Today we decode RPTs from the ground up: what they are, why SEBI cares deeply about them, how promoters misuse them, and — most importantly — how you can scan any annual report in under 10 minutes to know whether the company you’re looking at is clean or compromised.
What Are Related Party Transactions?
A Related Party Transaction (RPT) is any business deal between a listed company and a “related party” — which includes promoters and their families, directors, key managerial personnel (KMPs), subsidiaries, associate companies, and any entity in which these individuals have a significant influence.
Think of it this way: if Ramesh Gupta is the promoter of ABC Ltd, and ABC Ltd buys raw materials at inflated prices from a company owned by Ramesh Gupta’s wife — that is a Related Party Transaction. On paper, it’s a “normal business deal.” In reality, it’s the promoter extracting money from the listed company — money that should have been profit for all shareholders.
RPTs are not inherently illegal or wrong. Many legitimate transactions happen between related parties — a parent company may genuinely source goods from a subsidiary on commercially fair terms, or lease office space from a promoter-owned entity at market rates. The problem arises when RPTs are used to tunnel wealth out of the listed entity at the expense of minority shareholders.
Why Related Party Transactions Matter to Every Indian Investor
India has a unique ownership structure. Unlike the US, where companies are largely professionally managed, the majority of Indian listed companies are promoter-driven — promoters often hold 50–70% of equity. This concentrated ownership can be a strength (aligned long-term thinking) or a massive weakness (promoter enrichment at minority expense).
SEBI has recognized this risk for decades. The regulator has progressively tightened RPT rules — most recently through the 2025 Industry Standards overhaul that became mandatory from September 1, 2025. Under the revised framework:
- Transactions exceeding ₹500 crore or 5% of annual consolidated turnover require enhanced board and audit committee scrutiny
- Shareholders must approve all material RPTs, with related parties excluded from voting
- Even transactions “for the benefit of” a related party — even if technically with a third party — are now classified as RPTs
- SEBI has launched an RPT Analysis Portal where investors can directly view a company’s related party transaction history
Despite these regulations, creative promoters continue to find loopholes. That’s why every serious Indian investor must develop the skill of reading RPT disclosures in annual reports.
The Five Classic RPT Wealth-Transfer Patterns
1. Overpriced Purchases from Promoter-Owned Entities
The listed company buys goods, services, or assets from a promoter-owned company at prices significantly above market rates. The excess payment effectively transfers money from the listed company to the promoter’s private entity. Look for: consistently high purchase prices from related entities with no independent price benchmarking disclosed.
2. Underpriced Sales to Promoter-Owned Entities
The listed company sells products or assets to a promoter entity at below-market prices. The promoter’s private company then resells at market rates, capturing the margin. Look for: sales to related parties at abnormally low gross margins compared to third-party sales.
3. Inter-Corporate Loans at Below-Market Interest
The listed company extends loans to promoter entities at 0% or very low interest — effectively providing free capital. These loans sometimes never get repaid. Look for: large “loans and advances to related parties” growing year over year, with no meaningful interest income accruing.
4. Lease and Rent Inflation
The company leases office space, factories, or equipment from promoter-owned real estate entities at inflated rentals. Every rupee of excess rent is a transfer from listed-company profits to the promoter’s pocket. Look for: rent expenses to related parties that significantly exceed market benchmarks for comparable properties.
5. Management Fees and Consulting Charges
A promoter entity charges the listed company a “management fee” or “brand royalty” that bears no clear relationship to services rendered. This is particularly common in franchise-style businesses or companies where the promoter holds intellectual property in a separate entity. Look for: vague descriptions like “consultancy fees” or “brand royalty” paid to promoter-controlled entities.
How to Audit RPTs in an Annual Report — A 10-Minute Framework
Every listed company’s annual report contains a mandatory disclosure of related party transactions, typically in the Notes to Accounts (usually Notes 35–45 depending on the company). Here is your quick audit checklist:
Step 1: Identify the Universe of Related Parties
Find the “List of Related Parties” in the notes. Count the entities. A legitimate business may have 10–30 related parties (subsidiaries, JVs, key personnel). If you find 60–80 related parties including dozens of obscure private entities with similar names to the promoter family, that is itself a yellow flag.
Step 2: Map Transaction Volume to Revenue
Total up all RPT purchase and sales values. Express them as a percentage of total revenue. If more than 20–30% of a company’s revenue or purchases flow through related parties, it warrants deeper scrutiny.
Step 3: Check the “Arms-Length” Declaration
SEBI requires companies to certify that all RPTs are on an “arms-length basis.” Check whether the company has provided independent valuation reports or comparable market price benchmarks. If the certification is one line with no supporting evidence, treat it with skepticism.
Step 4: Track Loans and Advances Year-Over-Year
Go to the schedule of loans and advances. Look specifically at amounts owed by related parties. Track this over 5 years. Growing, unrecovered inter-company loans are one of the highest-risk signals in Indian accounting.
Step 5: Cross-Check with Cash Flow Statement
If RPTs are genuine operating transactions, they should show up in the cash flow from operations. If the company shows inflated revenue via related-party sales but poor cash conversion, it could indicate circular transactions without genuine economic value.
Titan Biotech — An Example of Clean RPT Governance
Not every company with related party transactions is a red flag. Consider Titan Biotech Ltd (NSE: TITANBIO), currently trading at approximately ₹410 with a market capitalization of around ₹1,947 crore and promoter holding of 55.78%.
Titan Biotech’s RPT disclosures reflect what clean governance looks like. The company’s related party transactions are primarily with subsidiaries for normal operational purposes — amounts are modest relative to total revenue. The promoter shareholding has been stable, there are no growing inter-company loans, and the company’s strong free cash flow generation (supported by its 15%+ revenue CAGR over a decade) demonstrates that profits genuinely accrue to the listed entity — not being siphoned through back channels.
When a company has healthy ROCE, strong operating cash flow, clean auditor relationships, and minimal/normal RPTs, it reflects a promoter who is building the business for all shareholders. This is one of the many reasons Titan Biotech stands out as a governance-conscious, quality compounder in the Indian specialty biotech space.
SEBI’s 2025 RPT Framework — What Changed
The September 2025 implementation of SEBI’s revised Industry Standards represents the most significant tightening of related-party rules in Indian corporate history. The “benefit of related party” expansion closes a major loophole: previously, a transaction with a third party that indirectly benefited a promoter was not classified as an RPT. Now it is.
The new framework also requires companies to explain the business rationale for every material RPT, provide price discovery methodology, and disclose alternatives considered. When you see thin, boilerplate disclosures with no business rationale — that is a red flag regardless of SEBI compliance.
Green Flags vs Red Flags — Quick Reference
Green Flags: RPTs are with wholly-owned subsidiaries for normal operations. Transaction volumes are small relative to total revenue. Independent valuation reports are disclosed. Cash flow from operations is robust and exceeds reported net profit. Loans to related parties are minimal or nil.
Red Flags: Large purchases from promoter-controlled entities with no market price benchmarking. Growing unsecured loans to related parties with no repayment history. Revenue from related parties forms a majority of total revenue. Divergence between reported profits and cash generation. Auditor qualifications relating to RPTs. Promoter stake declining while RPT volumes increase.
Building RPT Analysis Into Your Investment Process
The most robust Indian investors treat RPT analysis as a non-negotiable part of their pre-investment checklist. When screening stocks on Screener.in or Trendlyne, shortlist candidates based on financials. Then, before any investment decision, pull the last three annual reports and spend 10 minutes on the RPT notes using the framework above.
India has 5,000+ listed companies. You never have to invest in one where the promoter’s loyalty to minority shareholders is in question. Remember Manish Goel’s core insight: a stock is only as strong as its weakest link. You can have the world’s best revenue growth, a pristine balance sheet, and fantastic margins — but if the promoter is quietly extracting wealth through RPTs, the minority shareholder is investing in a business that benefits someone else. Never let RPTs be the hole in your investment bucket.
Key Takeaways
- RPTs are business dealings between a listed company and promoter-connected entities — not inherently illegal but frequently misused
- The five classic wealth-transfer patterns: overpriced purchases, underpriced sales, inter-corporate loans, inflated rent, and vague management fees
- Use the 10-minute RPT audit: identify related parties, map transaction volume to revenue, check arms-length evidence, track loans year-over-year, cross-check with cash flows
- SEBI’s 2025 framework significantly tightened RPT rules — but investors must still read disclosures critically
- Titan Biotech demonstrates that clean RPT governance and strong business quality coexist — that is the standard to hold every company to
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Disclaimer: The author (Manish Goel) is a SEBI Registered Research Analyst (INH100004775) and Multibagger Shares is a SEBI Registered Investment Advisor (INA100007736). This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Please consult a SEBI registered advisor before making investment decisions.