Mukesh Ambani said to cut future tax bill with Reliance revamp

By Saket Sundria and PR Sanjai

India's richest man is looking at ways of insulating his family's holdings in Reliance Industries Ltd from the government’s efforts to tax some long-term capital gains, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Mukesh Ambani's plan to revamp his stake in the nation’s second most-valuable company, by transferring shares between entities affiliated with his family, is aimed at reducing their potential bill following changes in Indian levies, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private matters. The move may help contain liabilities from the sales at about $45 million compared with nearly $4.5 billion if they were to do a similar deal after April 1 once the tax changes take effect, according to Bloomberg calculations.

Ambani owns 46.5 per cent of Reliance via at least 55 entities related to him or members of his family. The revamp will contain the family’s tax liabilities should the founders sell stake at a later date. India will levy a 20 per cent tax on the sale of certain shares held by individuals or limited liability partnerships from next month. A number of companies are weighing similar transactions to protect against future obligations, said Amit Maheshwari, a partner at accounting firm Ashok Maheshwary & Associates.

"Any prudent company would like to hedge its potential risks," said Maheshwari. "This is merely a pre-emptive measure to avoid tax liabilities," on any transaction from April 1, he said.

Securities Tax
India currently levies no tax on gains from shares held for longer than a year by individuals or limited liability partnerships. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in February announced a change to these rules beginning April 1. Entities, which didn’t pay the so-called securities transaction tax at the time of purchase, will be taxed as much as 20 per cent on profits from the sale of these shares.

Fifteen firms affiliated to Ambani will transfer as many as 1.2 billion Reliance shares to eight firms, any time after March 8, the company said in an exchange filing last week. Both the buyers and sellers of Reliance’s shares, valued at about 1.5 trillion rupees as of Friday’s closing price, will pay the securities transaction tax of 0.1 per cent of the value of the deal.

A Reliance Industries spokesman did not respond to an email and calls on his mobile seeking comment.

The entities participating in the planned Reliance transaction are part of the owner group, exempting it from rules under India’s takeover code that would trigger an open offer to minority stakeholders, according to the company’s filing. The purchase price will be the market price prevailing on the transaction date. However, it won’t exceed a 25 per cent premium over 1,100.78 rupees a share, the weighted average market price for Reliance shares over the past 60 trading days.

Most companies involved have held Reliance shares for at least six years and acquired them at a nominal price, without paying any securities transaction tax, the people said. A sale after March 31 would mean a significant capital gain that would fall under the new tax rule.

The selling firms will each retain at least 100 shares of Reliance, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Entities related to the Ambani family have carried out similar share transfers at least twice before, without changing the owners total shareholding.
Stay on top of business news with The Economic Times App. Download it Now!
FROM AROUND THE WEB

Yes, you can retire early with SIP!

Birla Sunlife MF

Save tax with pride, invest in ELSS

Principal Mutual Fund

This summer, a cricketing vacation awaits you

JanaLakshmi Bank

MORE FROM ECONOMIC TIMES

Think PAN is only for tax purposes? Find out

Entertainment

Science & Technology

From Around the WebMore from The Economic Times

See how one fridge changed the lives of many

Rajnigandha Silver Pearls

Know the 5 ways to relieve labour pain

HUGGIES

Get higher returns in less time

TomorrowMakers

रणजी ट्रॉफीः श्रेयस अय्यर शतक से चूके

NETWORK18 MEDIA & INVESTMENTS LIMITED

Corporate & Industry

Donald Trump signs revised travel ban, excludes Iraq

Cold putter prevents McIlroy from challenging in Mexico

Wenger puts more pressure on himself with Sanchez decision