Business Standard

Govt’s push to attract offshore fund managers fails to take off STUMBLING BLOCK

- PAVAN BURUGULA

Overseas funds are not showing any enthusiasm in relocating their fund managers to India despite a relaxed regulatory regime and several incentives provided by the government.

According to experts, tough eligibilit­y conditions and a high compliance burden were acting as impediment­s.

Since the beginning, all major foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) were wary of having their fund managers located in India as they would then become a tax resident here and hence, the money being managed would be subjected to multiple taxes. Also, the fund cannot avail any treaty benefits based on the place of incorporat­ion.

In a bid to simplify this structure, the government had amended Section 9 of the Income-Tax (IT) Act underlying 13 conditions, which if fulfilled would make a fund manager eligible for relaxation­s. The conditions include the requiremen­t to have at least 25 members, with none of the investors owning more than 10 per cent. Further, the fund should not have any business connection with India and should have a minimum monthly corpus of ~100 crore.

THE HURDLES

Funds should have at least 25 members, with none of the investors owning more than 10% Should not have any business connection with India Have minimum monthly corpus of ~100 crore

The 25-member rule seems to be the biggest hurdle, as a majority of the funds that invest in India are fundof-funds. Thus, although the number of end-investors is much higher, the number could be less than 25 at the fund level. Besides, many smaller FPIs who operate on a corpus of a few wealthy investors will not be able to meet these norms.

On the other hand, broadbased funds, even though they can meet these criteria, would not be willing to shift as their fund managers handle investment­s in multiple countries and hence, it doesn’t have any business rationale.

“The provisions of Section 9A of the I-T Act, 1961, provide immunity to investment funds from taxation in India by virtue of business connection on account of their relationsh­ip with fund managers in India. However, the conditions prescribed for availing such benefits are stringent, particular­ly the requiremen­t that an investment fund should have a minimum of 25 members who are not connected persons. This leaves the benefit for only large and broad-based funds,” said Amit Singhania, partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas.

All the major Indian FPIs either operate out of their place of incorporat­ion or have created special investment vehicles in tax-friendly jurisdicti­ons such as Mauritius, Singapore and Luxemburg. Even as India’s tax arrangemen­ts with these countries are changing, FPIs still prefer to operate from these locations due to reduced compliance burden and ease of doing business.

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