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Vodafone's tax woes key risk for Idea merger: Experts

The total tax demand stands at Rs 14,300 crore, which includes interest and penalty

Pigeons fly past Vodafone branding outside a retail store in London. Photo: Reuters
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Pigeons fly past Vodafone branding outside a retail store in London. Photo: Reuters

Dev ChatterjeeDilasha Seth Mumbai | New Delhi
Vodafone Plc’s Rs 14,000-crore tax dispute with the government remains a key risk in the merger of its Indian subsidiary with Idea Cellular. The British telecom company had sought advice on how to deal with the retrospective tax in case it went ahead with the merger, tax experts said.

“Apart from breaching revenue, subscriber and spectrum caps in a few circles, Vodafone’s unresolved tax issues are a risk in the transaction. Who will control the merged entity could be another deal breaker,” said a tax lawyer. 

“Vodafone Plc has sought clarity on the past tax issues so that these should not cloud the merger process,” the lawyer added. 

The case pertains to a Rs 7,990 crore demand raised by the government on Vodafone International Holdings for failing to deduct tax on capital gains made during its acquisition of a 67 per cent stake in Hutchison Essar. Vodafone did not pay the tax because it was an offshore deal, however, the government argues Vodafone is liable because the deal involved transfer of an underlying Indian asset. 

The total tax demand stands at Rs 14,300 crore, which includes interest and penalty.

After the Vodafone case, the government made it mandatory for every merger and acquisition transaction to seek approval from the income tax department.

In the Budget for 2016-17, the government had announced a scheme to settle retrospective tax disputes by waiving interest and penalty if companies paid the tax demand. The scheme opened on June 1 and  closed on December 31 last year. Vodafone did not take the option and is pursuing international arbitration against the tax demand.

"The merger is between Vodafone India and Idea Cellular, while the international arbitration case involves Vodafone International. These are different legal entities, so the tax case should not have any bearing on the merger. There is no ground for the tax department to raise an objection to the deal,” said an income tax department official.

The merger will also result in Vodafone’s stake falling below 51 per cent as both Idea and Vodafone are expected to have equal shareholdings in the merged company. The two companies are also seeking an investment partner.  

Another tax expert pointed out that while it was technically not possible to block the deal, the tax department could resort to arm-twisting. Rahul Garg, leader, direct taxes, PwC, said the arbitration would have no bearing on the merger as it did not pertain to the merging entities.