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Tax for Super-Rich in India Snares Unsuspecting Foreign Investors

Overseas investors may struggle to circumvent India’s plan to tax the very rich.

Tax for Super-Rich in India Snares Unsuspecting Foreign Investors
Guests are seen in the lobby at the Taj Mansingh Hotel in New Delhi. (Photographer: Amit Bhargava/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Overseas investors may struggle to circumvent India’s plan to tax the very rich as the option proposed by the tax authorities to sidestep the levies isn’t easy to implement.

With frightened investors wiping off 2.9 trillion rupees ($42 billion) from the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex since the budget on July 5 through Wednesday, tax officials have suggested that global funds convert themselves from trusts -- a structure followed by several foreign funds that invest in India -- to corporates as a way to avoid paying the higher surcharge.

Nature of IncomeExisting tax rate (in %)Proposed rate (in %)
Short-term capital gains on listed equity17.9421.37
Short-term capital gains on listed derivatives35.8842.74
Long-term capital gains on listed equity11.9614.25
Interest income on debt securities5.98 (INR bonds), 23.92 (others)7.12 (INR bonds), 28.5 (others)
Source:Dhruva Advisors

The devil’s in the detail. “Under General Anti-Avoidance Rules, tax authorities can question the move and even deny tax benefits to an entity if the change in the structure is purely led with an intention to avoid tax,” said Punit Shah, a partner at Mumbai-based tax consultants Dhruva Advisors LLP.

Here are some other deterrents:

  • FPI trusts need to provide non-tax reasons for changing the structure under the GAAR
  • Investors need to re-evaluate costs and benefits of alternative arrangements as the choice of a particular structure is driven by administrative convenience or local rules
  • A change in structure will require the transfer of current holdings to another company
  • NOTE: About 40% of FPIs registered in India and operating as trusts are likely to be impacted by the proposal, though there could be many that are inactive, according to Dhruva Advisors

The government has maintained that it is not specifically targeting overseas investors and that the increase in surcharge applies to individuals and entities -- including funds -- who invest in local assets through structures like trusts.

That hasn’t stopped global investors from selling about $243 million of shares this week, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

To contact the reporters on this story: Nupur Acharya in Mumbai at nacharya7@bloomberg.net;John Xavier in Mumbai at jxavier20@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Divya Balji at dbalji1@bloomberg.net, Anto Antony, Ravil Shirodkar

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