Background

The taxability of capital gains arising from the transfer of shares of a foreign company that derives substantial value from Indian assets (commonly referred to as an indirect share transfer) has been a litigative issue in India.

In January 2012, in the Vodafone case, India’s Supreme Court ruled that the transfer of shares of a company that is incorporated outside India will not be taxable in India. However, the Indian government introduced certain amendments to the tax statute in the Finance Act, 2012, with retrospective effect from April 1, 1962, that the transfer of shares in a foreign entity will be taxable in India, if such shares derive substantial value from assets located in India.

Pursuant to this amendment, the Indian tax authorities issued tax demands in seventeen (17) cases. Vodafone and Cairn invoked arbitration clauses under the bilateral investment protection agreements that India has with the United Kingdom and The Netherlands, respectively, and received favorable awards.

New proposal

The government is now proposing to remove the retrospective amendment. A bill has been passed in the Indian parliament on August 9, 2021 titled, “The Taxation Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2021” (the “Amendment Bill”), which seeks to achieve the following objectives:

    There will be no levy of capital gains tax on indirect share transfers that have been undertaken prior to May 28, 2012 (the “Specified Date”).
 
    No tax assessments will be made, there will be no enforcement of tax demands and no notices will be issued in respect of indirect share transfers that have been undertaken prior to the Specified Date.

    Tax demand orders that have already been raised or assessment orders issued, or penalty levied in respect of indirect share transfers undertaken prior to the Specified Date will be nullified on fulfilment of specified conditions (viz. withdrawal of pending litigations).

    The Indian government will refund all taxes collected, but the refunds will be without interest pay-outs.

Analysis

The move to do away with retrospective tax provisions is clearly aimed at providing more tax certainty to foreign investors in Indian. Although the withdrawal of the retrospective tax provisions is a welcome move, it is subject to conditions such as:

(i)    withdrawal of any pending appeals, writs and special leave petitions, arbitration proceedings, mediations, and conciliations, initiated by the taxpayer;

(ii)    an undertaking to be provided by the taxpayer waiving all its rights to pursue any claim or remedy under any other law in force; and

(iii)    satisfaction of any other conditions that the Indian tax authorities may impose under the Amendment Bill.

In our view, if retrospective taxation dented India’s image, the stubborn refusal to accept the arbitration awards tarnished it further. Press reports suggest that Cairn is seeking enforcement against Indian sovereign assets in New York, Paris, Venezuela, Qatar, Lithuania and Tunisia. Therefore, it remains to be seen whether Vodafone and Cairn will opt to go in for a settlement and withdraw their arbitration enforcement proceedings, as they may stand to lose out on the interest, damages and legal costs already paid.

More importantly, the indirect transfer tax provisions will continue to apply to all transactions done on or after May 28, 2012. The Indian government should have, once and for all, done away with this onerous provision in all cases to show that it genuinely means business.