NO
CAPITAL GAINS ON TRANSFER OF ‘EXCHANGEABLE BONDS’ OUTSIDE INDIA
The
Finance Ministry has said that exchange of foreign currency exchangeable bonds
(FCEBs) into shares would not give rise to any capital gains that would be
liable to income tax in India.
Similarly, FCEBs transferred outside India by an investor who is resident outside India to another investor resident outside India would not give rise to capital gains
liable to tax in India,
the Finance Ministry has said in its FCEB scheme announced few days back. The
FCEB scheme has been designed to help Indian promoters raise money abroad by
issuing foreign currency bonds against the value of their investments in shares
of listed group companies. The bonds are described as ‘exchangeable’ bonds as
investors abroad could exchange them into equity shares or warrants of the
listed group company before their redemption. Although the FCEB scheme spells
out taxation treatment on exchangeable bonds, some tax experts point out that
the scheme lacks clarity on how the cost of acquisition of shares should be
computed for income tax purposes when such shares are sold by an investor in
the stock exchanges. It is now widely perceived that sale of shares that were
received by a foreign investor through exchange under the FCEB scheme would
attract tax in India.“There is no clarity in the FCEB scheme on how the
cost of acquisition would be computed for the foreign investor on the shares
exchanged under the scheme and, subsequently, sold in stock exchange. “Such
shares when sold in stock exchanges would lead to capital gains if they are
sold by the foreign investor within 12 months from the date of exchange. While
this seems to be an oversight, in the absence of clarity this could lead to
litigation,” Mr Hiresh Wadhwani, Tax partner, Ernst & Young India, told Business
Line. – www.thehindubusinessline.com