Business Standard

Enjoying tax holidays, IT firms won’t gain much

- DEBASIS MOHAPATRA

Indian informatio­n technology (IT) services firms will not gain much from the government’s move to reduce the corporatio­n tax rate. With many of them claiming exemptions under the SEZ (special economic zone) regulation­s, their effective tax rates are already below the revised corporatio­n tax rate of 25.17 per cent, which includes both surcharge and cess.

Among the top -tier IT firms, Infosys is the only firm that is likely to get a marginal benefit of the new tax rate. The benefit for the company is likely to be around 1.6 per cent, as the Bengaluru-headquarte­red firm's effective tax rate stood at 26.8 per cent in FY19.

The effective tax rate for market leader Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS) in FY19 stood at 24.1 per cent, while for HCL Technologi­es, it was 19.8 per cent. Similarly, the effective tax rates for Wipro and Tech Mahindra stood at 21.9 per cent and 22.4 per cent, respective­ly.

“Tax rates are lower for most of the IT firms because some of their operations are still governed by the SEZ (special economic zone) regulation­s,” said Shriram Subramania­n, founder of corporate governance advisory firm Ingovern. “The full extent of the tax benefits will accrue to the IT companies only after tax holidays under the SEZ clause come to an end.”

Though tax benefits will not accrue to IT firms immediatel­y, some of the companies are expected to benefit from the increased IT spending by enterprise­s in the financial services and manufactur­ing space.

"The announceme­nt will allow manufactur­ers to scale up their operations in the existing plants, as well as to plan for setting up newer ones, thus creating new jobs. For engineerin­g services companies, such as L&T Technology Services (LT TS), this is a positive developmen­t as it will encourage the implementa­tion of digital engineerin­g and leading-edge technologi­es in the manufactur­ing sector, areas in which LTTS specialise­s," Keshab Panda, managing director and chief executive officer, LTTS.

Friday's announceme­nt of no buyback tax on t hose programmes announced before July 5 will benefit Infosys and Wipro. Infosys concluded a buyback of ~8,260 crore in August, the announceme­nt of which was made in January. Similarly, Wipro concluded a buyback of ~10,500 crore, which was announced on June 5.

“The government has taken a giant leap in tax reforms. The clarificat­ion on grandfathe­ring of buyback tax on in-flight buyback programmes as of July 5, 2019, is a comforting outcome,” said Jatin Dalal, chief financial officer, Wipro.

Market analysts think that Friday's move of reducing the corporatio­n tax rate will not be EP S (earnings per share) accretive as compared to companies operating in other industry. Also, an appreciati­ng rupee may make IT stocks less attractive in the coming days.

“We do not see any material benefit for the IT firms per se. Also, appreciati­ng rupee is being seen as a negative for IT stocks in the near term,” said Sanjeev Hota, head of research at Sharekhan.

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