Poging GOUD - Vrij
The Flip Side
Business Today
|June 17, 2018
The Walmart-flipkart deal is a possible nightmare for the tax department t given the complex holding structure of the indian e-commerce giant.
THE NEWS OF THE Walmart-Flipkart deal has set tongues wagging. It is expected to run into a tax tangle in India as experts predict that a Hutchison-Vodafone like scenario could emerge given that the Walmart-Flipkart deal will involve many overseas entities.
In the $16-billion deal, US-based retail giant Walmart is buying 77 per cent in Indian e-commerce company Flipkart, in which a majority share is held by a Singapore-registered entity, Flipkart Singapore. Shares in this entity are, in turn, held by different investors – prominently, Softbank (almost 23 per cent), Tiger Global (20.5 per cent) and Naspers (13 per cent). Chinese firm Tencent holds around 6 per cent stake, while promoters Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal together hold close to 11 per cent.
The deal is being structured in such a way that some of these investors would transfer their shares to Walmart, thus creating a situation where most of the shareholders would be non-residents of India. Sample this: Softbank has invested $2.5 billion in Flipkart through its Jersey-based Vision Fund (its investment, reportedly, is now valued at $4 billion), while Tiger Global is a Mauritius entity.
Even in the case of the Vodafone-Hutchison deal of 2007, the former acquired 67 per cent stake in Hutchison-Essar Ltd from Hong Kong-based Hutchison Group for $11.2 billion through a maze of subsidiaries based in the Netherlands and Cayman Islands. No tax was paid on this deal to Indian authorities owing to the overseas nature of the transaction.
The pertinent question now is whether the capital gains made in the Flipkart share sale by non-resident investors are taxable in India or are we heading for another round of protracted tax dispute as seen in the Vodafone case?
Wading through Ambiguity
Dit verhaal komt uit de June 17, 2018-editie van Business Today.
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