This document provides an overview of angel tax and its negative impact on India's startup ecosystem. It discusses how Section 56(2)(viib) of the Income Tax Act, introduced in 2012 to curb black money, unintentionally targeted startups that received legitimate angel investments at a premium. This came to be known as "angel tax" and resulted in many startups receiving tax notices. Although the government took some steps to exempt recognized startups, the process remained cumbersome and few startups received approval. The issue gained attention after tax authorities froze bank accounts of some startups like Travel Khana and Baby Go Go.
The document provides information on secretarial audits required for certain companies under Section 204 of the Companies Act, 2013. It explains that secretarial audits verify a company's compliance with legal and procedural requirements under various laws such as the Companies Act, Securities Contracts Regulation Act, and Foreign Exchange Management Act. Companies meeting certain criteria must provide a secretarial audit report certified by a Company Secretary in Practice. The document outlines the process, documents required, applicable laws, benefits, and penalties for non-compliance.
Lebanese Code of Commerce - Guide to Amendments - 2019Frederic Chemaly
This table compares between the articles of the Lebanese Code of Commerce as they currently are and the amendments introduced by law no. 126. Where applicable, only the changes are reflected, and not the full articles.
Prepared by Frederic Chemaly | frederic@ccny.co | mob: +961 70384466
ALLOWABILITY OF OUTSTANDING INTEREST CONVERTED INTO DEBENTURES AS AN EXPENSE ...DVSResearchFoundatio
The Supreme Court ruled that the conversion of outstanding interest into debentures by the assessee company qualified for deduction under Section 43B of the Income Tax Act. The conversion was done under a rehabilitation plan agreed with institutional creditors to extinguish the interest liability. The Court observed that Section 43B was not meant to affect bona fide transactions, and debentures were different than loans/borrowings under Explanation 3C. It set aside the High Court's decision and allowed the assessee's claim for deduction, noting the conversion was an actual payment of interest rather than postponing the liability.
Compromises, Arrangements & Amalgamations with special reference to Protectio...Corporate Professionals
A presentation ‘Compromises, Arrangements & Amalgamations with Special reference to Protection of Minority & Dissenting Shareholders under Companies Act, 2013 ‘ given by Mr. Chander Sawhney at IICA
Spanish gambling law analysis by olswang llp (c) 2011 june 2011Market Engel SAS
On May 28, the long awaited Gambling Law was finally published in the Spanish Official Gazette, and
came into force the next day.
The new Law (13/2011), dated May 27, on Gambling Regulation ("Law") is the starting point from which
the Spanish gambling legal framework will now be constructed.
This document discusses India's taxation of indirect transfers of assets. It begins by explaining that an indirect transfer refers to transferring shares of a foreign company that holds Indian assets. It then discusses a key 2007 case involving Vodafone that raised this issue. The document outlines subsequent legal developments, including a 2012 retrospective amendment and recent clarifications in the 2015 Finance Bill that provide greater certainty on definitions and exemptions. However, it notes issues like retrospective taxation and procedural difficulties remain. The document also compares India's laws to those of China on taxing indirect transfers.
OBJECTIVE
Compromise and arrangement is a form of Corporate Restructuring where company enters into an agreement with its creditors or members to reorganise the capital structure of the company. The webinar covers the aspects of statutory provisions pertaining to compromise and arrangement under Companies Act, 2013 in detail along with judicial precedents.
This document summarizes the key aspects of the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act of 2010 for entities receiving foreign contributions in India. It outlines that the act regulates acceptance of foreign contributions and hospitality to prevent use for activities detrimental to national interests. It defines foreign contribution and foreign sources, and explains that individuals, associations, Hindu undivided families, trusts and certain companies must register with the central government or obtain prior permission to receive foreign funds. Non-compliance can result in penalties like suspension of registration, imprisonment or fines. The presentation concludes by offering to provide further consultation on obligations under the act.
The document provides information on secretarial audits required for certain companies under Section 204 of the Companies Act, 2013. It explains that secretarial audits verify a company's compliance with legal and procedural requirements under various laws such as the Companies Act, Securities Contracts Regulation Act, and Foreign Exchange Management Act. Companies meeting certain criteria must provide a secretarial audit report certified by a Company Secretary in Practice. The document outlines the process, documents required, applicable laws, benefits, and penalties for non-compliance.
Lebanese Code of Commerce - Guide to Amendments - 2019Frederic Chemaly
This table compares between the articles of the Lebanese Code of Commerce as they currently are and the amendments introduced by law no. 126. Where applicable, only the changes are reflected, and not the full articles.
Prepared by Frederic Chemaly | frederic@ccny.co | mob: +961 70384466
ALLOWABILITY OF OUTSTANDING INTEREST CONVERTED INTO DEBENTURES AS AN EXPENSE ...DVSResearchFoundatio
The Supreme Court ruled that the conversion of outstanding interest into debentures by the assessee company qualified for deduction under Section 43B of the Income Tax Act. The conversion was done under a rehabilitation plan agreed with institutional creditors to extinguish the interest liability. The Court observed that Section 43B was not meant to affect bona fide transactions, and debentures were different than loans/borrowings under Explanation 3C. It set aside the High Court's decision and allowed the assessee's claim for deduction, noting the conversion was an actual payment of interest rather than postponing the liability.
Compromises, Arrangements & Amalgamations with special reference to Protectio...Corporate Professionals
A presentation ‘Compromises, Arrangements & Amalgamations with Special reference to Protection of Minority & Dissenting Shareholders under Companies Act, 2013 ‘ given by Mr. Chander Sawhney at IICA
Spanish gambling law analysis by olswang llp (c) 2011 june 2011Market Engel SAS
On May 28, the long awaited Gambling Law was finally published in the Spanish Official Gazette, and
came into force the next day.
The new Law (13/2011), dated May 27, on Gambling Regulation ("Law") is the starting point from which
the Spanish gambling legal framework will now be constructed.
This document discusses India's taxation of indirect transfers of assets. It begins by explaining that an indirect transfer refers to transferring shares of a foreign company that holds Indian assets. It then discusses a key 2007 case involving Vodafone that raised this issue. The document outlines subsequent legal developments, including a 2012 retrospective amendment and recent clarifications in the 2015 Finance Bill that provide greater certainty on definitions and exemptions. However, it notes issues like retrospective taxation and procedural difficulties remain. The document also compares India's laws to those of China on taxing indirect transfers.
OBJECTIVE
Compromise and arrangement is a form of Corporate Restructuring where company enters into an agreement with its creditors or members to reorganise the capital structure of the company. The webinar covers the aspects of statutory provisions pertaining to compromise and arrangement under Companies Act, 2013 in detail along with judicial precedents.
This document summarizes the key aspects of the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act of 2010 for entities receiving foreign contributions in India. It outlines that the act regulates acceptance of foreign contributions and hospitality to prevent use for activities detrimental to national interests. It defines foreign contribution and foreign sources, and explains that individuals, associations, Hindu undivided families, trusts and certain companies must register with the central government or obtain prior permission to receive foreign funds. Non-compliance can result in penalties like suspension of registration, imprisonment or fines. The presentation concludes by offering to provide further consultation on obligations under the act.
This document provides an overview of the Companies Act 2013 in India. Some key points:
- The Act was divided into 29 chapters and 7 schedules, with 98 sections notified and published on September 12, 2013. The remaining sections will be notified separately.
- The Act applies to companies incorporated in India, insurance companies, banking companies, companies generating/supplying electricity, and other companies governed by special Acts.
- The 98 notified sections cover topics like definitions, share capital, prospectus requirements, meetings, directors qualifications, and penalties for non-compliance.
- The document includes an index of the notified sections mapping them to corresponding sections from the previous Companies Act of 1956.
The document summarizes major corporate law changes that occurred in India in 2015, including amendments to the Companies Act, Negotiable Instruments Act, Arbitration and Conciliation Act, Insurance Act, and the Black Money Act. Key changes were reducing minimum capital requirements for companies, allowing companies to directly commence business without a certificate, making common seals optional, passing related party transactions as ordinary resolutions, and preventing public access to board resolutions. For the Negotiable Instruments Act, jurisdiction for cheque bouncing cases was clarified. The Arbitration Act introduced provisions around arbitrator appointment and disclosures, timelines for awards, and challenge and execution of awards. The Insurance Act allowed 49% FDI and introduced consumer protections. The Black
New Companies Act, 2013- implications on banksHarshul Shah
The document discusses various provisions of the Companies Act that apply to banking companies. It states that the Companies Act applies to banking companies except where inconsistent with the Banking Regulation Act. It also discusses restrictions on companies providing loans for share purchases, prohibitions on share buybacks during loan defaults, and prohibitions on accepting deposits from the public, which do not apply to banking companies. The financial statements of banking companies are not required to be in the form provided in Schedule III of the Companies Act, but in the form required under the Banking Regulation Act.
M&A under New Companies Act, 2013- 04.10.14 FinalHarshul Shah
The document discusses key changes to mergers and acquisitions (M&A) under the new Indian Companies Act compared to the old act. Some high-level points include: approval of M&A schemes now requires board meeting approval; additional documents like a valuation report must be attached with notices; authorities have 30 days to provide representations on proposed deals; thresholds for shareholder objections were introduced; fees paid by transferor companies can now be set off against transferee companies. The process for schemes involving compromises/arrangements and amalgamations is now separated between sections 230 and 232 respectively.
The document is a letter appealing to the Honorable Minister of Finance of India to reconsider certain provisions in the Draft Direct Tax Code Bill 2009 regarding the voluntary sector in India. Specifically, it suggests reconsidering: 1) the procedure for determining tax-exempt income of non-profit organizations (NPOs); 2) treating all receipts as income; 3) requiring 100% of annual income to be applied for charitable purposes; 4) withdrawing the 15% indefinite accumulation provision; 5) prohibiting investment in financial assets; 6) disallowing depreciation; 7) restricting business activities; and 8) reducing donor incentives. The letter provides reasoning and suggested alternatives for each issue.
Compensation paid to accident victims and interest for delayed payment is not...D Murali ☆
Compensation paid to accident victims and interest for delayed payment is not liable to income-tax - T. N. Pandey - Article published in Business Advisor, dated August 10, 2016 - http://www.magzter.com/IN/Shrinikethan/Business-Advisor/Business/
Habibullah & Co. is an accounting firm in India that provides audit, tax, and consulting services. This document discusses India's rules around withholding taxes for non-residents. It explains that companies and non-residents earning India-sourced income must withhold appropriate taxes on payments to non-residents. Several types of payments to non-residents are outlined that require withholding, including dividends, interest, royalties, fees, and capital gains. Non-resident payees must also file an Indian tax return regardless of tax treaty benefits or withholding to demonstrate eligibility for reduced rates. Obtaining a Permanent Account Number from Indian tax authorities helps non-residents reduce withholding rates.
This document provides information on company law in India. It defines what a company is and outlines the key aspects of forming a company including registration requirements. It discusses the types of companies (public, private, one person), shares, debentures, borrowing powers, meetings (board, annual general, extraordinary), and key company documents (memorandum of association, articles of association). Overall, the document serves as a high-level overview of the legal framework for companies in India.
The Multilateral Instrument (MLI) is the latest development in International taxation which would modify the existing bilateral treaties (DTAAs) and implement measures to prevent Base Erosion Profit Shifting (BEPS) strategies. In this Webinar we shall analyse the provisions of Part III of the MLI relating to 'Treaty Abuse'. Articles 6 to 11 are covered under this Part and provide important concepts like Principle Purpose Test (PPT), Limitation on Benefits (LOB) and anti-abuse measures addressing 'Triangular PE' and other treaty-related measures.
What are the key elements of the companies (amendment) bill, 2020DVSResearchFoundatio
The document summarizes key proposed amendments to the Companies Act 2013 in India based on recommendations to decriminalize certain offenses. Some key points:
- It proposes to decriminalize certain offenses that do not involve larger public interest by removing imprisonment and relaxing penalties.
- It empowers the central government to exempt certain classes of companies from the definition of "listed company".
- It reduces timelines for rights issues to speed them up and provides exemptions to certain classes of companies from filing certain resolutions.
- It allows companies with CSR spending obligations up to Rs. 50 lakhs to not constitute a CSR committee and allows eligible companies to set off excess CSR spending against future obligations.
Sebi (lodr) regulations obligations on listing of id rs & securitised de...DVSResearchFoundatio
Key Takeaways:
Equitable treatment to IDR holders
Terms / Structure of IDRs
Information to stock exchange / investors
Terms of Securitised Debt Instruments
1) GAAR (General Anti-Avoidance Rule) was proposed in India's 2013 budget to prevent tax evasion by foreign investors routing investments through tax havens.
2) GAAR aims to target arrangements whose main purpose is tax avoidance, by stopping investments routed through Mauritius and Singapore solely to avoid Indian taxes.
3) However, GAAR's ambiguous language and sudden implementation concerned foreign investors. Its provisions give tax authorities wide powers to invalidate arrangements and determine tax consequences.
Start ups and MSMEs: Registration and Advantages features of Atmanirbhar packageNovojuris
Startups and MSMEs can register on relevant government portals to receive several benefits. Startups must register within 10 years of formation and have annual turnover less than Rs. 100 crore to qualify for benefits like income tax exemptions, self-certification under labour laws, stock options for founders. MSMEs must register based on investment and turnover limits set for micro, small and medium enterprises to prevent delayed payments and access collateral-free loans. The document outlines the registration processes and documents required for each as well as their key benefits.
Objectives & Agenda :
One of the charitable forms of organisation is Trust. It is generally formed for the benefit of public at large (public charitable trusts) or for a specified group of persons (private trusts). Formation of trusts is governed by different legislations and involves various registrations under several Acts. The webinar dwells upon the aspects of formation of trust under relevant legislations, various types of trusts, registration of trusts, taxation of trusts and other relevant aspects of management of trust.
S&A Knowledge Series - Important Disallowances under sec 40A income taxDhruv Seth
Section 40A of the Income Tax Act specifies certain expenses that are not allowed as deductions when computing taxable income. This includes excessive or unreasonable payments made to relatives, and cash payments exceeding Rs. 10,000 for most expenses or Rs. 35,000 for vehicle leasing expenses. There are some exceptions such as payments made to banks or the government. The section aims to prevent overstating expenses to reduce tax liability by disallowing fabricated payments or excessive related party transactions not at arm's length.
Key Takeaways:
- Facts of the case
- Issues and Orders
- Contention of the parties
- Observations of Honourable Supreme Court
- Conclusion and way forward
Doing CIS activity in Guise of Running Real Estate Business: A Case StudyCS (Dr)Rajeev Babel
My Article titled as 'Doing CIS activity in Guise of Running Real Estate Business: A Case Study' published and displayed by the Taxmann. Citation: [2016] 68 taxmann.com 72 (Article)
When non-residents are not required to file tax returns for income earned in ...DVSResearchFoundatio
Key Takeaways:
Charging section for taxability of non-residents
Incomes of non-residents for which no returns to be filed
Conditions to be satisfied for non-filing of returns
Representative assessee and its liability
The issue of taxation on share premium has been of major tax controversy over the past few years and has rightly taxed money launderers and unearthed sham transactions. At the same time it has created hardships for start-ups and corporates in their fund raising and restructuring transactions.
Taxability of Receipts under section 68 of Income Tax Act, 1961.pptxtaxguruedu
Income Tax Act 1961, provides statutory powers to the parliament to levy and collect tax on the income of the persons. The act provides 5 different natures of income called as 5 heads of income under which an income is taxed. Apart from these 5 heads of income there is another category of income which is treated separately and tax accordingly and that is undisclosed income or the black money.
This document provides an overview of the Companies Act 2013 in India. Some key points:
- The Act was divided into 29 chapters and 7 schedules, with 98 sections notified and published on September 12, 2013. The remaining sections will be notified separately.
- The Act applies to companies incorporated in India, insurance companies, banking companies, companies generating/supplying electricity, and other companies governed by special Acts.
- The 98 notified sections cover topics like definitions, share capital, prospectus requirements, meetings, directors qualifications, and penalties for non-compliance.
- The document includes an index of the notified sections mapping them to corresponding sections from the previous Companies Act of 1956.
The document summarizes major corporate law changes that occurred in India in 2015, including amendments to the Companies Act, Negotiable Instruments Act, Arbitration and Conciliation Act, Insurance Act, and the Black Money Act. Key changes were reducing minimum capital requirements for companies, allowing companies to directly commence business without a certificate, making common seals optional, passing related party transactions as ordinary resolutions, and preventing public access to board resolutions. For the Negotiable Instruments Act, jurisdiction for cheque bouncing cases was clarified. The Arbitration Act introduced provisions around arbitrator appointment and disclosures, timelines for awards, and challenge and execution of awards. The Insurance Act allowed 49% FDI and introduced consumer protections. The Black
New Companies Act, 2013- implications on banksHarshul Shah
The document discusses various provisions of the Companies Act that apply to banking companies. It states that the Companies Act applies to banking companies except where inconsistent with the Banking Regulation Act. It also discusses restrictions on companies providing loans for share purchases, prohibitions on share buybacks during loan defaults, and prohibitions on accepting deposits from the public, which do not apply to banking companies. The financial statements of banking companies are not required to be in the form provided in Schedule III of the Companies Act, but in the form required under the Banking Regulation Act.
M&A under New Companies Act, 2013- 04.10.14 FinalHarshul Shah
The document discusses key changes to mergers and acquisitions (M&A) under the new Indian Companies Act compared to the old act. Some high-level points include: approval of M&A schemes now requires board meeting approval; additional documents like a valuation report must be attached with notices; authorities have 30 days to provide representations on proposed deals; thresholds for shareholder objections were introduced; fees paid by transferor companies can now be set off against transferee companies. The process for schemes involving compromises/arrangements and amalgamations is now separated between sections 230 and 232 respectively.
The document is a letter appealing to the Honorable Minister of Finance of India to reconsider certain provisions in the Draft Direct Tax Code Bill 2009 regarding the voluntary sector in India. Specifically, it suggests reconsidering: 1) the procedure for determining tax-exempt income of non-profit organizations (NPOs); 2) treating all receipts as income; 3) requiring 100% of annual income to be applied for charitable purposes; 4) withdrawing the 15% indefinite accumulation provision; 5) prohibiting investment in financial assets; 6) disallowing depreciation; 7) restricting business activities; and 8) reducing donor incentives. The letter provides reasoning and suggested alternatives for each issue.
Compensation paid to accident victims and interest for delayed payment is not...D Murali ☆
Compensation paid to accident victims and interest for delayed payment is not liable to income-tax - T. N. Pandey - Article published in Business Advisor, dated August 10, 2016 - http://www.magzter.com/IN/Shrinikethan/Business-Advisor/Business/
Habibullah & Co. is an accounting firm in India that provides audit, tax, and consulting services. This document discusses India's rules around withholding taxes for non-residents. It explains that companies and non-residents earning India-sourced income must withhold appropriate taxes on payments to non-residents. Several types of payments to non-residents are outlined that require withholding, including dividends, interest, royalties, fees, and capital gains. Non-resident payees must also file an Indian tax return regardless of tax treaty benefits or withholding to demonstrate eligibility for reduced rates. Obtaining a Permanent Account Number from Indian tax authorities helps non-residents reduce withholding rates.
This document provides information on company law in India. It defines what a company is and outlines the key aspects of forming a company including registration requirements. It discusses the types of companies (public, private, one person), shares, debentures, borrowing powers, meetings (board, annual general, extraordinary), and key company documents (memorandum of association, articles of association). Overall, the document serves as a high-level overview of the legal framework for companies in India.
The Multilateral Instrument (MLI) is the latest development in International taxation which would modify the existing bilateral treaties (DTAAs) and implement measures to prevent Base Erosion Profit Shifting (BEPS) strategies. In this Webinar we shall analyse the provisions of Part III of the MLI relating to 'Treaty Abuse'. Articles 6 to 11 are covered under this Part and provide important concepts like Principle Purpose Test (PPT), Limitation on Benefits (LOB) and anti-abuse measures addressing 'Triangular PE' and other treaty-related measures.
What are the key elements of the companies (amendment) bill, 2020DVSResearchFoundatio
The document summarizes key proposed amendments to the Companies Act 2013 in India based on recommendations to decriminalize certain offenses. Some key points:
- It proposes to decriminalize certain offenses that do not involve larger public interest by removing imprisonment and relaxing penalties.
- It empowers the central government to exempt certain classes of companies from the definition of "listed company".
- It reduces timelines for rights issues to speed them up and provides exemptions to certain classes of companies from filing certain resolutions.
- It allows companies with CSR spending obligations up to Rs. 50 lakhs to not constitute a CSR committee and allows eligible companies to set off excess CSR spending against future obligations.
Sebi (lodr) regulations obligations on listing of id rs & securitised de...DVSResearchFoundatio
Key Takeaways:
Equitable treatment to IDR holders
Terms / Structure of IDRs
Information to stock exchange / investors
Terms of Securitised Debt Instruments
1) GAAR (General Anti-Avoidance Rule) was proposed in India's 2013 budget to prevent tax evasion by foreign investors routing investments through tax havens.
2) GAAR aims to target arrangements whose main purpose is tax avoidance, by stopping investments routed through Mauritius and Singapore solely to avoid Indian taxes.
3) However, GAAR's ambiguous language and sudden implementation concerned foreign investors. Its provisions give tax authorities wide powers to invalidate arrangements and determine tax consequences.
Start ups and MSMEs: Registration and Advantages features of Atmanirbhar packageNovojuris
Startups and MSMEs can register on relevant government portals to receive several benefits. Startups must register within 10 years of formation and have annual turnover less than Rs. 100 crore to qualify for benefits like income tax exemptions, self-certification under labour laws, stock options for founders. MSMEs must register based on investment and turnover limits set for micro, small and medium enterprises to prevent delayed payments and access collateral-free loans. The document outlines the registration processes and documents required for each as well as their key benefits.
Objectives & Agenda :
One of the charitable forms of organisation is Trust. It is generally formed for the benefit of public at large (public charitable trusts) or for a specified group of persons (private trusts). Formation of trusts is governed by different legislations and involves various registrations under several Acts. The webinar dwells upon the aspects of formation of trust under relevant legislations, various types of trusts, registration of trusts, taxation of trusts and other relevant aspects of management of trust.
S&A Knowledge Series - Important Disallowances under sec 40A income taxDhruv Seth
Section 40A of the Income Tax Act specifies certain expenses that are not allowed as deductions when computing taxable income. This includes excessive or unreasonable payments made to relatives, and cash payments exceeding Rs. 10,000 for most expenses or Rs. 35,000 for vehicle leasing expenses. There are some exceptions such as payments made to banks or the government. The section aims to prevent overstating expenses to reduce tax liability by disallowing fabricated payments or excessive related party transactions not at arm's length.
Key Takeaways:
- Facts of the case
- Issues and Orders
- Contention of the parties
- Observations of Honourable Supreme Court
- Conclusion and way forward
Doing CIS activity in Guise of Running Real Estate Business: A Case StudyCS (Dr)Rajeev Babel
My Article titled as 'Doing CIS activity in Guise of Running Real Estate Business: A Case Study' published and displayed by the Taxmann. Citation: [2016] 68 taxmann.com 72 (Article)
When non-residents are not required to file tax returns for income earned in ...DVSResearchFoundatio
Key Takeaways:
Charging section for taxability of non-residents
Incomes of non-residents for which no returns to be filed
Conditions to be satisfied for non-filing of returns
Representative assessee and its liability
The issue of taxation on share premium has been of major tax controversy over the past few years and has rightly taxed money launderers and unearthed sham transactions. At the same time it has created hardships for start-ups and corporates in their fund raising and restructuring transactions.
Taxability of Receipts under section 68 of Income Tax Act, 1961.pptxtaxguruedu
Income Tax Act 1961, provides statutory powers to the parliament to levy and collect tax on the income of the persons. The act provides 5 different natures of income called as 5 heads of income under which an income is taxed. Apart from these 5 heads of income there is another category of income which is treated separately and tax accordingly and that is undisclosed income or the black money.
This document discusses concepts related to tax planning and management. It begins by defining tax and outlining the stages of tax imposition. It then distinguishes between tax planning, tax evasion, and tax avoidance. Tax planning involves legally arranging one's finances to minimize tax burden while still meeting social and economic goals. Tax evasion is illegal and involves suppressing income or inflating expenses to reduce taxes owed. Tax avoidance uses loopholes to technically satisfy the law but not the intent. The document concludes by discussing tax management, which involves complying with tax laws and procedures like deducting, collecting, and paying taxes owed.
This document provides information on setting up a fintech company in Colombia. It discusses the regulatory framework for fintechs, including laws governing specialized electronic payment companies (SEDPES), crowdfunding, investments by traditional financial institutions in fintechs, and low-value payment systems. It also describes Colombia's regulatory sandbox, which allows fintechs to obtain a temporary operating certificate to test innovative financial services under SFC supervision for up to two years. Requirements for incorporation depend on the fintech's activities - fintechs conducting financial activities require SFC authorization while those with different activities follow general incorporation rules.
While the financial sector is facing headwinds including increase in non-performing assets resulting in increased losses and shortage of liquidity, the real estate sector too has witnessed a tough time due to disruptions in labour supply, logistics and increasing finance cost on unsold inventory.
The document discusses clarifications provided around India's Black Money Act through a set of Frequently Asked Questions. The Act provides a one-time window for those with undisclosed foreign assets to declare them by paying 60% tax and penalty to avoid prosecution. Only immunity from offenses under Income Tax, Wealth Tax, FEMA, Companies Act, and Customs Act is provided. Declarations do not provide immunity from other Acts like Wildlife Protection Act if the assets were acquired illegally. Immunity is also not provided under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act as that offense requires an underlying scheduled offense to have occurred.
The document discusses clarifications provided around India's Black Money Act through a set of Frequently Asked Questions. The Act provides a one-time window for those with undisclosed foreign assets to declare them by paying 60% tax and penalty to avoid prosecution under the Act. However, immunity only applies to 5 specific Acts and not others. While firms and companies can declare undisclosed foreign assets, immunity from prosecution is only granted to directors for offenses under the 5 Acts.
Here we are with the Thirty fifth successive issue of our monthly ‘Missive’.
We trust you will enjoy reading this Missive, even while soaking in the contents. We would very much appreciate your feedback which consistently helps us in improving and upgrading the contents.
Thanks and regards,
Knowledge Management Team
The Payment of Bonus Act, 1965 requires employers in India to pay annual bonus to eligible employees based on profits. It applies to factories and other establishments with 20 or more employees. The minimum bonus is 8.33% of wages or Rs. 100, whichever is higher. The maximum bonus is 20% of wages. Employers must calculate bonus using a specified formula and maintain registers showing computations. The Act establishes rights for employees to claim unpaid bonus and resolve disputes, and penalties for employers who violate the Act.
The Payment of Bonus Act, 1965 requires employers in India to pay annual bonus to eligible employees based on profits. It applies to factories and other establishments with 20 or more employees. The minimum bonus is 8.33% of salary or Rs. 100, whichever is higher. The maximum bonus is 20% of salary. Employers must calculate bonus using a specified formula and maintain registers showing computations. The Act establishes rights for employees to claim unpaid bonus and resolve disputes, and penalties for employers who violate the Act.
The Indian Constitution incorporates a very elaborate scheme of centre state financial relations. Its chief characteristics are :-
The complete separation of taxing powers between centre and states
Tax sharing between the two
The allocation of funds to the state
2 The tax enumerated in the centre list are leviable by the centre exclusively.
The tax enumerated in the state list are leviable by the state exclusively
Under the Constitution of India Central Government is empowered to levy tax on
the income. Accordingly, the Central Government has enacted the Income Tax
Act, 1961. The Act provides for the scope and machinery for levy of Income Tax
in India. The Act is supported by Income Tax Rules, 1961 and several other
subordinate and regulations. Besides, circulars and notifications are issued by the
Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) and sometimes by the Ministry of Finance,
Government of India dealing with various aspects of the levy of Income tax.
Unless otherwise stated, references to the sections will be the reference to the
sections of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Income tax is a tax on the total income of a
person called the assessee of the previous year relevant to the assessment year at
the rates prescribed in the relevant Finance Act.
Some of the important definitions under Income Tax Act, 1961 are as follows:
The Supreme Court of India ruled in favor of the insured party in a case regarding an insurance claim for sugar bags destroyed by fire while stored at a port. The Court found that the insurance policy, which covered risks until delivery to the final destination in India, was still in effect since the goods had not yet reached their ultimate destinations after arriving at the initial port. The intent of extending coverage and paying an additional premium was to provide coverage for the entire transport of the goods within India.
This document is a project report on tax planning, tax avoidance, and tax evasion. It discusses several cases related to tax planning, including one where the quantum of remuneration or manner of computing remuneration for partners was not stipulated in the partnership deed as required. The report examines the relevant clauses of two partnership deeds to determine if the conditions for deducting remuneration payments under Section 40(b)(v) of the Income Tax Act are satisfied.
The document discusses the key provisions related to Input Tax Credit (ITC) under the GST law in India. It begins by defining ITC and input tax. It then outlines some of the major ITC provisions under the Central GST Act and rules, including those relating to eligibility for ITC, documentation requirements, blocked credits, and time limits. Specific provisions covered in more detail include Section 16 on eligibility and conditions for ITC, Section 17 on apportionment of credit and blocked credits, and restrictions on ITC for works contracts and construction of immovable property. The document provides an overview of the major ITC concepts and sections under the GST law.
In light of a lot of news relating to sham entities garnering funds through fraudulent investment schemes with promise of huge returns mainly in the name of property development and agriculture, SEBI has in the last few years, intensified its scrutiny of investment structures that raise domestic capital on an unregulated basis. Securities Appellate Tribunal recently passed an order upholding SEBI’s findings against Alchemist Infra Reality Limited. The SAT order along with recent pronouncement by the Supreme Court have probed unregulated investment arrangements to conclude whether or not they constitute CIS, as Schemes are required to be registered with SEBI in pursuance to Securities And Exchange Board Of India (Collective Investment Schemes) Regulations, 1999
Baker mc kenzie dec newsletter 2nd partkiranprince_c
The Indonesian government formed a HNWI Tax Office in 2009 to increase tax compliance from high net worth individuals (HNWIs) with over $1 million in assets. Currently there are 1,200 taxpayers registered in this office, all residing in Jakarta. The office monitors HNWI transactions but tax revenue has been small as most income is from salaries and dividends already taxed. The government is considering expanding the number and locations of HNWIs covered by this office.
New regulations were issued to prevent tax treaty abuse by requiring certificates of residency and determining if recipients are the beneficial owners of income. The regulations also outline situations considered misuse and consequences like normal withholding tax rates. Indonesia recently
Prosecution proceedings under the Income tax Act: What lies ahead for foreign...Sandeep Jhunjhunwala
The document discusses amendments made by the Finance Act of 2018 regarding prosecution proceedings for companies that fail to file income tax returns. Specifically, it was previously exempt if tax payable was under Rs. 3,000, but this exemption no longer applies to companies. This means companies could face prosecution even if tax payable is under Rs. 3,000. This may apply to foreign companies receiving income in India. While the intent was to target shell companies, the law does not clearly reflect this and prosecution could be initiated against any company not filing returns. There are concerns this may deter business and that prosecution should only apply to serious/habitual cases of tax avoidance.
The document discusses key issues regarding post-commencement finance (PCF) in business rescue proceedings. It summarizes that PCF refers to financing obtained by distressed companies undergoing business rescue to facilitate restructuring. While PCF is prioritized for repayment under the Companies Act, the proper ranking of PCF claims relative to pre-existing secured creditors requires further clarification. Additionally, it is unclear if PCF creditors could invoke the Insolvency Act to challenge dispositions made to other PCF creditors during liquidation proceedings. Judicial rulings are still needed to provide guidance on interpreting these provisions.
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The perils of angel tax and its effect on Startup ecosystem
1.
2. CONTENTS
PREFACE
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION TO ANGEL TAX
CHAPTER 2
UNDERSTANDING THE ANGEL TAX AND ITS IMPACT ON STARTUP ECOSYSTEM
CHAPTER 3
THE PANACEA
CHAPTER 4
THE PRESENT LAW TO CLAIM EXEMPTION FROM ANGEL TAX BY STARTUPS
CHAPTER 5
DEALING WITH AMBIGUITIES IN FUTURE
CHAPTER 6
CONTROVERSY ON VALUATION
CHAPTER 7
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
3. PREFACE
The Indian Income Tax Act came into existence in 1961 and the Companies Act was enacted
in 1956 and it took Government more than 55 long years to make necessary amendments in the
Acts to trace the tax evaders who were using a sophisticated modus operandi to convert their
black money into accounted money by introduction of Bogus Share Application money. The
generation of black money in any economy is a Taxman’s biggest nightmare. Amongst several
attacks against such laundering of unaccounted money, one of the most important measure was
the introduction of Section 56(2)(viib) in Income Tax Act 1961, which creates a deeming
fiction and which provides that the excess amount received by Private Limited Company over
and above the Fair Market Value of the shares would be deemed as gift liable to tax in the
hands of Company. However this was the same year when the Indian Startup Ecosystem started
flourishing and the Startup companies actually and genuinely received accounted investments
over and above their present book value of shares based on future estimated earnings and other
intangibles like goodwill and brand value from Angel Investors.
While the Government took measures to curb the introduction of Black money, there were
Startups who were fastened with tax liability on genuine raise of capital through Angel
Investors and hence the word “Angel Tax” was coined.
The present Paper on The perils of Angel Tax talks about the journey of Angel Tax and various
measures taken by Government to distinguish the good and the evil and its effect on the Startup
ecosystem.
4. INTRODUCTION
Background of pre-Angel tax era
The provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961, envisages in its ambit various provisions that aim
to prevent the flow of black money and to prevent this illicit money from escaping the clutches
of taxation. Amongst these set of anti-tax evasive provisions, one such Section 68 seeks to
place surveillance on the credits received by an assessee in its books of account. This section
places a tri-onus on the assessee, by placing a requirement of proving the identity, credit
worthiness of the remitter and the genuineness of the transaction so that the taxpayer cannot
introduce his black money in its books of accounts in the garb of bogus loan or bogus share
application money.
Though Section 68 was wide enough to cover every type and form of accommodation entry,
however, many assessee's bypassed the provisions of Section 68 by making use of loopholes
in law and through reliance on many judicial precedents which provided immunity to the
assessee.
Modus operandi used by tax evaders to introduce Black money in books of accounts
The modus operandi to introduce black money into accounted money in a nutshell was to
deposit unaccounted cash in the bank account of shell company and through the use of multiple
bank accounts and passing through several layers of other group shell companies, the money
was ultimately transferred to the beneficiary assessee company in form of share application
money through banking channel. On being confronted during income tax scrutiny, the assessee
company would produce the PAN,ITR, bank statement and Company Law Returns of its bogus
share applicants and save itself from the glitches of Section 68. If Income Officer is not satisfied
with the details, on further litigation, the case would travel to Commissioner of Income
Tax(Appeals) and further to Income Tax Appellate Tribunal and there is likely possibility that
ruling is passed in favour of the assessee on the footing that the Taxpayer Company cannot be
expected to prove the source in the hands of share applicant. Thus, owing to the interpretations
laid down in certain judicial precedents, assesses were able to find an escape route from the
rigors of Section 68.
5. Reference is important to one such decision of Supreme Court in case of CIT v. Lovely
Exports Pvt. Ltd. [2008] 299 ITR 268 (SC) wherein it was held that “The assessee-
company had furnished the necessary details such as PAN No., Income-tax ward no., ration
card of the share applicants and some of them were assessed to tax. The monies were received
through banking channels. In some cases, affidavits/confirmations of the share applicants
containing the above information were filed. It was held that if the share application money is
received by the assessee-company from alleged bogus shareholders, whose names are given to
the AO, then the Department is free to proceed to reopen their individual cases. It was also
held that even if the share capital was bogus the addition should be made in the hands of share
applicants and not the assessee-company”
The Income Tax Department were in a fix because they know that there is no use of taking any
action in the hands of bogus share applicants because they were either shell companies with no
real assets or man of no means in case of individual share applicants and hence no tax could be
recovered out of them. But after more than 50 years of enactment of Income Tax Act, our
Government realized a Catch in this modus operandi of illicitly converting black money into
accounted money.
The Catch
“A tax-evasive promoter of a Company who would wish to introduce unaccounted money into
his books would take care of all documentary evidences through the involvement of agents
managing shell companies to save itself from the glitches of Section 68 however still he would
try to issue the least number of shares of his Company to these bogus share applicants in lieu
of share application money. This is because at the back of his mind, there is always a fear of
losing control over the company as a majority shareholder and director and to maintain that
control over his hard earned company and issuing least possible shares to shell company, the
shares would compulsorily be issued at high premium”
Accordingly, with Finance Act, 2012, the Government of India introduced clause (viib) in
Section 56(2) as a deeming provision to tax premium in order to catch hold of these tax
offenders. With this clause, the Act brought into its ambit all those situations where a company,
not being a company in which the public are substantially interested, received, from any
resident, any consideration for issue of shares, where the issue price of shares exceeded the fair
value such shares.
6. CHAPTER 2
UNDERSTANDING THE ANGEL TAX AND ITS IMPACT
ON STARTUP ECOSYSTEM
***
The bare portion of Section 56(2)(viib)
The Finance Act, 2012 introduced sub-section (viib) in section 56(2) of the Income-tax Act,
1961 (Act) w.e.f. 1-4-2013 which provides for treating 'income from other sources', the
premium received by a Company in which public is not substantially interested, over and above
the fair market value of the shares on their transfer. The provision referred reads thus:
"…….the following incomes shall be chargeable to income-tax under the head "income
from other sources", namely,
***
(viib) Where a company, not being a company in which the public are substantially
interested, receives, in any previous year, from any person being a resident, any
consideration for issue of shares that exceeds the face value of such shares, the aggregate
consideration received for such shares as exceeds the fair market value of the shares:
Provided that this clause shall not apply where the consideration for issue of shares is
received—
(i) by a venture capital undertaking from a venture capital company or a venture capital
fund; or
(ii) by a company from a class or classes of persons as may be notified by the Central
Government in this behalf,
Explanation,-For the purposes of this clause, -
(a) the fair market value of the shares shall be the value-
(i) as may be determined in accordance with such method as may be prescribed; or
(ii) as may be substantiated by the company to the satisfaction of the Assessing Officer,
based on the value, on the date of issue of shares, of its assets, including intangible
7. assets being goodwill, know-how, patents, copyrights, trademarks, licenses,
franchises or any other business or commercial rights of similar nature,
whichever is higher;
(iii) "venture capital company", "venture capital fund" and "venture capital undertaking"
shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them in clause (a), clause (b) and
clause (c) of Explanation to clause (23FB) of section 10;"
This provision is being referred to in common parlance as 'angel' tax
Contents of this provision in simple terms
The clause provides that where a closely held company issues shares to a resident, for amount
received in excess of the fair market value of the shares, it will be deemed to be the income of
the company under the head "income from other sources".
Section 56(2)(viib) is an anti-abuse provision drafted to overcome the dumping of cash funds
in otherwise less valued private companies by any resident taxpayer. Where the sale
consideration received by a private company exceeds the Fair Market Value ('FMV') of such
company, a tax (is imposed on the difference between the two, taxed in the hands of receiver-
private company. The FMV of such private company is required to be computed in accordance
with valuation rule 11UA (2).
The Rule 11UA(2) provides two methods of valuation, i.e., Net Asset Value Method and the
fair market value determined by the merchant banker as per the Discounted Free Cash Flow
method. Earlier, the Chartered Accountant was also allowed to determine the FMV using the
Discounted Free Cash Flow method. However, after the amendment by the Income-tax (Sixth
Amendment) Rules, 2018, w.e.f. 24-5-2018, only merchant banker can determine the FMV.
How Section 56(2)(viib) came to be known as "Angel Tax" and its impact on Startups
There is no authentic record to show how this tax acquired this name for common parlance.
With the rationale of ensuring that the excessive amount received as share premium does not
escape taxation in the guise of accommodation entry and also, to prevent generation and
circulation of unaccounted money, the objective behind introduction of this section was noble.
Brought in with fair intention, the section sought to introduce itself as a "measure to prevent
generation and circulation of unaccounted money". However, the section had a far reaching
impact, adversely affecting the genuine companies as well. Since this section did not provide
any basis or means of distinguishing the bonafide from the malafide, a contra-effect was
8. observed by the start-ups, which, even as on date, places an excessive reliance on the funding
received from liquidating the share capital.
It is essential to state that the start-ups commanded a huge premium over its fair value, owing
to the intangible ideas, patents, trademarks, etc, further clubbed with the prospective sales and
growth potential in the business models of the start-ups. The receipt of this premium was
against the provisions of Sec 56(2)(viib), hence, the start-ups were the most affected by this
section. Since the funding received by the start-ups was known as "Angel Investment", the tax
charged with the introduction of this section came to be known as "Angel Tax".
The rise of voice against Angel tax and demand for relaxation in norms for exemption for
Startups
The above provision had a draconian impact on angel investments in startups ecosystem and
sent shivers down the entire ecosystem.
With the introduction and applicability of Sec.56(2)(viib), many start-ups started receiving
income tax notices, with the authorities vouching to verify the veracity of capital infused by
them. Essentially, the capital introduced in these start-ups demanded a huge premium, which
was on account of the ideas, innovation or prospects, and their proposed execution by these
entities. This dependency of start-ups, on equity, was also accruing to the fact that obtaining
funding though loans was unattractive, mainly due to the requirement of securities and the
interest rate constraints. However, since this section provided a blanket applicability to a
closely held company [company in which public is not substantially interested], without laying
any distinguishing factor between the genuine from the bogus, the start-ups faced a mammoth
challenge tackling the assessing authorities with plethora of explanations and details.
In order to get the issue resolved, Start-ups prompted Commerce and Industry Ministry, which
is the administrator of the Startup India initiative, to take up the matter with the Ministry of
Finance and to ensure issuance of necessary instructions on section 56(2)(viib), with a specific
intent to safeguard the start-ups.
Resultantly, the “Startup” Companies recognized by DIPP and granted “Certificate of
Recognition” were exempted from the clutches of Section 56(2)(viib) provided that they were
given a further “Certificate of Eligibility for tax benefits” by Inter-ministerial Board ( IMB )
Also vide Finance Act 2016, section 80IAC was introduced providing for full tax exemption
for three years in a block of 5 years on profits earned by start-ups that are incorporated on or
after April 01, 2016 and are further approved by Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion
9. (DIPP). Though the initiative seemed incentivizing, yet the results are far from achieving the
desired incentives for start-ups because the Startup Application of DIPP recognized Startups
were forwarded to Inter-Ministerial board for seeking approval for being eligible as a 'start-up'
for tax benefits under Section 80IAC and Section 56(2)(viib).
Thus a common “Certificate of eligibility” from Inter-Ministerial board ( IMB ) was
required for eligibility to take benefit of Section 80IAC and exemption from section
56(2)(viib) in addition of being recognized as Startup by DIPP. However, since the
introduction of approval scheme, only a handful of start-ups have been able to achieve that
certificate. The meetings of Inter-ministerial Board comprising of various members were held
at a long average interval of one month and the minutes of the meeting were uploaded on
“Startup India” website wherein in a span of 2-3 hours, it could be seen that the bureaucrats
could analyze voluminous Startup ideas and would reject 200+ Innovations as non eligible for
tax benefits including angel tax exemption. As per status report published by Startup India in
November 2018, only 90 Companies have been granted the eligibility certificate of tax
exemption out of 14000+ Startups recognized by DIPP. Though the concerns of the
Government were legit, there was an uproar of anger amongst the Startups of India as to how
one Department of Central Government ( DIPP) would consider a Startup idea as innovative
and grant Startup Recognition certificate and another Department of the same Government
would reject the Startup considering it as non-innovative and non-eligible for tax benefit!
Subsequent developments
DIPP issued its Notification dated April 2018 for providing tax benefit to eligible start-ups
wherein the method to obtain tax benefit under provisions of Section 80IAC and Section
56(2)(viib) were split into two separate forms viz Form 1 and Form 2 respectively. It was
envisaged that the purpose of having separate Form 2 would be make the process of exemption
from Section 56(2)(viib) more lenient while keeping the approval for 80IAC strict as earlier .
However, Several conditions were cited for filing Form 2 including the aggregate amount of
paid-up share capital of the applicant-start-up after proposed issue of shares should not exceed
10 crores, the average returned income of the investor should be 25 lakhs or more in preceding
3 years and the net worth should be 2 crores in preceding year. Further, a valuation certificate
from merchant banker specifying the fair market value was required to be filed in Form 2. This
made the process for Startups cumbersome because the investors would like to keep the income
10. data confidential and were not comfortable to share the same with a Startup founder and the
process also proved to be a costly affair because of exorbitantly high fees charged by Merchant
Bankers for Valuation report.
Thereafter, DIPP issued another Notification dated January 16, 2019 wherein the preconditions
of filing Form 2 was further tweaked wherein the limit of last year’s returned income of investor
has been enhanced from 25 lakhs to 50 lakhs combined with the requirement of net worth of 2
crores. The requirement of merchant banker’s valuation report was doneaway with and it was
decided that the application received by DIPP shall be forwarded to CBDT which will grant or
decline approval within 45 days of receipt of such application.
However, the above measures did little help to the Startup fraternity. The issues pertaining to
the Angel Taxation got escalated and snowballed into a major controversy when Travel Khana
and Baby Go Go saw large sums of money being taken out of their bank accounts by the tax
authorities. The management of Travel Khana was baffled when the bank account was depleted
by Rs 33 lakh on account of tax remittance and to further compound the problem Travel
Khana's account with SBI was frozen. Similarly, Start-up Baby Go Go witnessed that Rs 72
lakh had been deducted from the company account by the CBDT. Adding salt to the wounds,
CBDT issued a press release dated 08.02.2019 claiming that all procedures were diligently
followed by the Assessing Officer and the start-ups were to be blamed for non-compliance.
11. CHAPTER 3
PANACEA
***
Introduction of Notification No. 127(E), dated 19-02-2019
Considering the difficulties faced by the start-ups, the Department for Promotion of Industry
and Internal Trade (DPIIT) issued Notification No. 127(E), dated 19-02-2019, suppressing the
last Notification, dated 11-04-2018. Ever since the inception of 'Start-up India' in 2016, there
has not been even a single notification from the government that garnered so much appreciation
from the Indian entrepreneurs. The said latest notification from DPIIT dated 19th February
2019 provided much relief to the troubled Startup ecosystem.
(1) The period for recognition as a start-up stands to increase from 7 to 10 years.
(2) The turnover limit has been increased from the existing Rs 25 crore to Rs 100 crore;
(3) The condition for claiming exemption from Section 56 (2) (viib) has been relaxed;
(4) The limit mentioned above to exclude the investments received from:
A non-resident
A Venture Capital Fund or a Venture Capital Company
Specified company (listed companies whose shares are frequently traded and who
have a net-worth exceeding Rs 100 crore or turnover exceeds Rs 250 crore)
(5) The Prior approval from Inter-Ministerial Board (as per the April 11, 2018
notification), and then from the CBDT in a time-bound 45 days (as per the relaxed
notification on January 16, 2019), has now been replaced with a simple declaration
in Form 2.
(6) The Long Form 2 required for substantiating the higher valuation with supporting
documents and explanations have also been dispensed with.
(7) Now, eligible start-ups are not required to obtain merchant banker valuation report.
12. CHAPTER 4
THE PRESENT LAW TO CLAIM EXEMPTION FROM
ANGEL TAX BY STARTUPS
***
Meaning of start-up for the purpose of Sec.56(2)(viib) and procedure for obtaining
DPIIT's certification
An entity shall be considered as a startup:-
(a) if it is incorporated as a private limited company (as defined in the Companies
Act, 2013) or registered as a partnership firm (registered under section 59 of the
Partnership Act, 1932) or a limited liability partnership (under the Limited
Liability Partnership Act, 2008) in India
(b) Upto ten years from the date of its incorporation/ registration;
(c) if its turnover for any of the financial years since incorporation/ registration has
not exceeded One hundred crore rupees; and
(d) if it is working towards innovation, development or improvement of products
or processes or services, or if it is a scalable business model with a high
potential of employment generation or wealth creation.
Provided that any such entity formed by splitting up or reconstruction of a business already in
existence shall not be considered a 'Startup'.
Procedure for obtaining DPIIT approval
A Startup shall make an online application over the mobile app or portal set up by the DPIIT.
The application shall be accompanied by—
- a copy of Certificate of Incorporation or Registration, as the case may be, and
13. - a write-up about the nature of business highlighting how it is working towards
innovation, development or improvement of products or processes or services,
or its scalability in terms of employment generation or wealth creation.
Exemption for the purpose of Section 56(2)(viib) of the Act
A startup fulfilling the below mentioned conditions, shall file duly signed declaration in Form
2 to DPIIT that the prescribed conditions have been fulfilled. On receipt of such declaration,
the DPIIT shall forward the same to CBDT.
The conditions are:-
(a) The startup shall be recognized by DPIIT
(b) Aggregate amount of paid up share capital and share premium of the startup after issue or
proposed issue of share, if any, does not exceed, twenty five crore rupees.
Restriction on utilization of Investment
The new notification restricts the start-up claiming exemption from angel tax, from investing
in any of the following assets:
1. Land or building, being a residential house, other than that used for the purposes of
renting
2. Land or building, not being a residential house, other than that occupied by start-up
for its business or renting
3. Loans and advances, if start-up isn't engaged in ordinary business of lending of
money
4. Capital contributions made to any other entity
5. Shares and securities
6. Motor vehicle, aircraft, yacht or any other mode of transport, if the cost of such an
asset exceeds Rs. 10 lakhs.
7. Jewellery
8. Archaeological collections, drawings, paintings, sculptures, any work of art or
bullion
14. 9. Any other capital asset.
The period of restriction in making investment in the above mentioned assets shall be of 7 years
from the end of the Financial year in which share are issued at premium. However, the above
conditions are not applicable in case start-up holds the above assets as stock-in-trade, in its
ordinary course of business.
In case the Startup files a declaration in Form-2 and subsequently invests in any of the assets
specified above before the end of seven years from the end of the latest financial year in which
the shares are issued at premium, the exemption provided under section 56(2)(viib) of the Act
shall be revoked with retrospective effect.
Provided that in case the approval is requested for shares already issued by the Startup, no
application shall be made if assessment order has been passed by assessing officer for the
relevant financial year.
15. CHAPTER 5
DEALING WITH AMBIGUITIES IN FUTURE
***
While the majority have hailed the move and government's intent in giving start-ups a nearly
free hand to grow, an undertone of dissent still echoes in the ecosystem.
• There is ambiguity regarding income notices received prior to the notification. These
Startups have to go through the process of long driven litigations.
• Another Dampener is the restriction laid by DPIIT on the end use of the money for the
funding. For example, the start-ups cannot invest in shares and securities. It is common
practice to park the surplus money received in debt mutual funds or a liquid funds and any
prudent business would do so as bank balance in current account does not yield any
returns, however, taking this prudent decision would now make the start-ups ineligible for
the exemption.
• There is no clarity that if out of total funding of say 50 Crores, the mis-utilisation into
investment in shares is to the tune of 5 lakhs whether the total amount of 50 Crores shall
be taxable or only Rs. 5 lakhs. These loose ends will open up new avenues of long driven
litigation for Startups.
• Companies are restricted from making capital contributions to any entity, which means
that a start-up cannot have subsidiaries, which makes it difficult for start-ups with overseas
arms or operating in regulated spaces such as fin-tech and e-commerce. The group of
companies is not just desirable but necessary to comply with regulatory requirements.
• The immunity has been provided against additions contemplated under section 56(2)(viib)
of the I-T Act. No such protection has been extended against Section 68 additions. Section
68 provides that if any sum is found credited in the books of an assessee and the assessee
offers no explanation about the nature and source thereof or the explanation offered by
him is not satisfactory, the sum so credited may be charged to income-tax. Therefore, a
start-up has to prove the genuineness of source of investments. The investor might want
to keep the source of his funds confidential and not share the same with Startup founder.
But If the Startup fails to explain the source of funds in the hands of investors, the
investment can be considered as an unexplained investment and the Assessing Officer can
16. tax such investment by invoking Section 68 in the hands of Startup Company. Further the
tax rate in such case with the introduction of Section 115BBE at the time of
demonetization is as high as 75%
17. CHAPTER 6
CONTROVERSY ON VALUATION
***
The trouble with Valuation is that the taxman is often unable to understand how the startups
are valued. The Startups are valued on the basis of the idea & business potential and not on
basis of the net assets appearing in the balance sheet of the company. As per law, the valuations
are not challenged when the investment is raised from the Non-resident investors or Venture
Capital Funds. However, they get challenged when the funds are raised from the resident
Indian investors, i.e., Angel Investors. Further, the Assessing Officers have issued notices
asking for the details of the angel investors, their source of income, bank statements and copy
of Income Tax Returns. Thus, it is discouraging the angel investment in Startups.
To quote, reference is made to the decision of the Hon'ble Jaipur ITAT in the case of
Rameshwaram Strong Glass (P.) Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer in ITA No. 884 (JP) OF 2016 ,
wherein it was held that where the assessee-company determined Fair Market Value of shares
issued at premium on the basis of DCF Method in accordance with Rule 11UA(2)(b), read
with Section 56(2)(viib) and valuation report was prepared as per guidelines given by the ICAI
and no fault was found in the same, Assessing Officer was unjustified in changing the method
of valuation of shares at premium to Net Asset Value Method. However, in another ruling by
the Hon'ble Delhi bench of the ITAT in the case of Agro Portfolio Pvt. Ltd. In TA No.
2189/Del/2018 (Delhi - Trib.), it was held that to determine the fair market value, the tax
officer could reject the method of valuation adopted by the taxpayer, if the taxpayer failed to
produce evidences to substantiate the basis of data supplied to arrive at the FMV. The said
decision was also followed in recent case of M/s TUV Rheinland NIFE Academy Private
Limited vs. ITO, Bangalore in ITA No. 3160/Bang/2018 and addition of Rs. 19,74,00,000/-
was confirmed just because the projected revenues did not match with the actual revenues.
This is utterly injustice and bad application of law because the Projected revenues are based
on the market conditions and assumptions about future, the investor had agreed upon at the
time of issuance of share application money and the actual are after the lapse of two to three
years based on changed market conditions and the both cannot be compared.
18. Lately, the Income Tax Department has also started issuing the Show Cause Notices to the
valuers asking for the basis on which the valuation certificates have been issued by them.
19. CHAPTER 7
CONCLUSION
***
Capital infusion is one of the key contributors to the growth of a Company. It becomes even
more crucial for start-ups and new business ventures where one of the major sources of finance
comes straight from friends and family who only wish to own equity to a limited extent without
gaining management rights. Technically no tax should be levied on allotment of shares, since
the shares are created when they are allotted and not transferred. On the contrary, Capital gain
is levied on 'transfer' of shares and not creation thereof.
Striking a balance
With the above backdrop, while the new regulations have been brought in with a huge pomp
and show, however, since the regulatory framework suffers from certain lapses, the new system
of exemptions from the application of Section 56(2)(viib) can very well become a reel benefit
instead of accreting some real benefit.. It is time that the government should actually come out
with some effective endeavor to strike out a good balance between plugging out the illicit
monies in the guise of share capital and incentivizing start-ups at the same time.
When entrepreneurs have to go through a tough process for raising capital, any taxes on the
capital raise is likely to kill the start-up ecosystem. India cannot achieve the vision of creating
a digital colony unless we have more active participation from domestic pools of capital. Our
listed companies are sitting on piles of cash and yet, their acquisitions of and investments into
Indian start-ups are paltry. While the respective notifications have brought with it, some light
of hope to the prospective stakeholders, the need of the hour is clarity on the issue that shall
provide the necessary impetus to the early angel investment atmosphere and bring in the
necessary liquidity in the system.
The Start-up's culture in India is already facing a turbulent time, especially in line with the new
trade policies and FDI regulations. Adding another cause of worry in the form of Sec
56(2)(viib), has led to creation of an even stormier environment for the start-ups to survive.
Therefore, whether the tax is Angel Tax or a Demon Tax is something for the government to
decide and the start-ups to face.
20. REFERENCES
1. Government of India Website on Startup India Scheme - https://www.startupindia.gov.in/
2. Definition of Startup as per Notification on Incentives for Start-Ups as per Gazette
Notification no. G.S.R. 180 (E) dated 17.02.2016 -
https://dipp.gov.in/sites/default/files/ru1159.pdf
3. Revised definition and Procedure of recognition of startup as per Notification no. G.S.R.
501 (E). dated 23.05.2017 –[ in supersession of Notification no. G.S.R. 180 (E) ] -
https://www.startupindia.gov.in/content/dam/invest-
india/Templates/public/notification/Overall/1.%20notification_Revised_notification_Start
ups_Notification_23_05_17.pdf
4. Revised definition and Procedure of recognition of startup as per Notification no. G.S.R.
364(E). dated 11.04.2018—[ in supersession of Notification no. G.S.R. 501 (E). ] -
https://dipp.gov.in/sites/default/files/Startup_Notification11April2018_0.pdf
5. Gazette Notification no. G.S.R. 34(E). dated 16.01.2019 – [Partial modification of
Gazette Notification no. G.S.R. 364(E).] -
https://www.startupindia.gov.in/content/dam/invest-
india/Templates/public/notification.pdf
6. Gazette Notification no. G.S.R. 127(E).—dated 19.02.2019 – [in supersession of Gazette
Notification no. G.S.R. 364(E). and G.S.R. 34 (E) ]-
https://www.startupindia.gov.in/content/dam/invest-india/Templates/public/198117.pdf
7. CBDT Notification no. S.O. 1131(E). on section 56(2) for startups dated 05.03.2019-
https://www.startupindia.gov.in/content/dam/invest-
india/Templates/public/CBDT_notification_angel_tax_mar_5_2019.pdf
8. Section 56(2) of Income Tax Act 1961-
https://www.incometaxindia.gov.in/pages/acts/income-tax-act.aspx
9. Rameshwaram Strong Glass (P.) Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer in ITA No. 884 (JP) OF 2016
- https://itatorders.in/assessee/rameshwaram-strong-glass-p-ltd-ajmer-company-
aafcr6561f
10. M/s TUV Rheinland NIFE Academy Private Limited vs. ITO, Bangalore in ITA No.
3160/Bang/2018- https://itatorders.in/appeal/ita-3160-bang-2018-14-m-s-tuv-rheinland-
nife-academy-private-limited-bengaluru-income-tax-officer-ward-7-1-2-bengaluru
21.
22.
23. Any Questions ??
***
If you have any query related to Startup India Scheme, you may reach out to the author by
sending an email at mehul@raseshca.com. He can also be contacted through following social
links.
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Happy Hustling !