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An Indian public limited company shows "PLC" in its CIN, needs at least seven members and three directors, and the CIN's first letter reveals whether it is stock-exchange listed (L) or not (U). Order the official record for any Indian public company: identity, status, capital and directors, in minutes.
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Between private companies and listed giants sits a broad Indian middle class: unlisted public limited companies — group holding entities, NBFC shells, legacy family conglomerates. They carry the gravitas of "Limited" without market scrutiny, which makes the register record the primary source on them: status, capital, directors and filing recency.
The CIN does the sorting for you — L or U, industry code, state, vintage — before you read a single other field.
The official record for the public company: full identity with CIN, status, registered office, capital figures and director roster as published, delivered as structured data plus a branded PDF by email in minutes. From €4.99, one-time payment.
No. "Limited" (without "Private") marks a public company under the Companies Act; listing is separate. The CIN answers it instantly: L-prefixed companies are listed, U-prefixed are unlisted public companies — a large and often misjudged category.
Stricter governance than Pvt Ltds: minimum three directors, no cap on members, freely transferable shares, tighter disclosure. That regime is why the public/private distinction on the record matters for risk assessment.
Name, CIN, listing marker, incorporation date, status, registered office, authorised and paid-up capital and directors with DINs as officially published — structured data plus a branded PDF.
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