Cairn Loses $216 Million Vedanta Stake as India Tax Row Deepens
India has sold a part of Cairn Energy’s stake in mining major Vedanta Ltd. as part of a tax dispute.
(Bloomberg) -- India has sold a part of Cairn Energy Plc’s stake in mining major Vedanta Ltd. as part of a tax dispute.
India’s Income Tax Department told Cairn that it sold some seized shares of Vedanta, worth about $216 million, according to a statement by the London-listed company. The department may sell more shares in the future and Cairn’s stake in Vedanta stands reduced to about 3 percent, it said. Separately, the tax department has frozen dividends paid to Cairn by Vedanta totaling about $155 million and has also confiscated $234 million of tax refunds due to the company.
“Cairn will write down the carrying value of its investment in Vedanta which will result in an impairment charge at the half year equal to the value of the total shares notified as having been sold,” the company said in the statement, adding that the actions by India’s tax department are a violation of the U.K.-India Bilateral Investment Treaty.
Cairn has disputed the Indian tax department’s demands and an arbitration is on at The Hague. The company and Indian government both have made their written submissions and final arbitration hearings will take place over two weeks from August 20, the company said. Cairn Energy is seeking $1.3 billion from the Indian government, including the value of its investments in India after they were seized in 2014.
The dispute arose following a restructuring of units by the then Cairn India in 2006 in preparation for the Indian unit’s initial public offering.
To contact the reporter on this story: Saket Sundria in Mumbai at ssundria@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ramsey Al-Rikabi at ralrikabi@bloomberg.net, Abhay Singh, Alpana Sarma
©2018 Bloomberg L.P.