Saturday, 28 February 2015

Ghost of Vodafone exorcised, at least partially


After almost 3 years of ambiguity, the Indian government finally proposed to clarify how it intends to tax the income arising on indirect share / interest transfers. It may be recalled that the Explanation, introduced in 2012 but made applicable retrospectively from 1961, sought to tax in India any income arising from transfer of shares in a foreign company if those shares derived their value substantially from assets located in India. This was to counter the Vodafone type cases in which no tax was paid in India on some mega acquisitions as the shares changed hands outside India at a holding company level. The Government having lost its case before the Supreme Court had decided to change the rules of the game with retrospective effect. What it did not do was to clarify what it meant by ‘substantial value’.

To illustrate, if shares in a company M in Mauritius (which is a holding company of Company I in India) are sold, will this sale be taxable in India even if M derived only 25% of its value from the Indian holding and the rest from its investments in other countries?

In view of the ambiguity, investors and their advisors involved in an M&A deal were often forced to take a conservative stand and considered a transaction to be taxable in India even when the foreign holding company derived as little as 20%  of its total value from Indian holdings. This meant protracted negotiations when it came to withholding of tax arising upon transactions, onerous indemnities given by the sellers and a general feeling of a tax sword hanging on everyone’s head.

Now Finance Bill 2015 proposes to define ‘foreign company / entity shares / interest deriving substantial value directly or indirectly from assets located in India’ as only those where the fair value of such Indian assets  -

1.       Is valued at Rs. 10 crore or more; and

2.       Represents at least 50% of the total assets owned by the foreign shares / entity

The value for this purpose will be a fair value of the Indian assets, without reducing liabilities, as on the end of the accounting year concluded just before the date of the transaction. If however, the book value of assets of the foreign company / entity on the date of transfer exceeds the book value at the accounting year end by 15%, then the fair value on the date of the transaction will have to be considered.

To illustrate, Company M in Mauritius holds assets in India and China and their respective fair values are 8 crore and 42 crore on 31 March 2015. There are no other assets held by M. If shares in Mauritius company were sold on 1 April 2015, there would not be any India tax arising as the value of India assets is less than 10 crore and they also do not represent 50% or more of the total assets of M, which add up to 50 crore.

Further, even if the above thresholds were breached, i.e., Indian assets amounted to more than 10 crore and represented more than 50% of value of all assets held by M, the selling shareholder of M would still not have to bother about Indian tax, as long as they do not, and did not hold at any time in last 12 months preceding the date of transfer:

a)      the right of management or control in M; or

b)      voting power or share capital or interest exceeding five per cent in M.

The proposed explanations would bring a much awaited solace to the M&A scene in India, in cases where deals involve indirect transfer of shares / interest in Indian companies.