New Straits Times

INDIA TAXMEN GOING AFTER INVESTORS

Notices sent following survey to assess penetratio­n rate of virtual currency trade

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INDIA has sent tax notices to tens of thousands of people dealing in cryptocurr­ency after a nationwide survey showed more than US$3.5 billion (RM13.78 billion) worth of transactio­ns have been conducted over a 17-month period, said the income tax department.

Tech-savvy young investors, real estate players and jewellers were among those invested in bitcoin and other virtual currencies, said tax officials after gathering data from nine exchanges in Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru and Pune.

Government­s around the world are grappling with how to regulate cryptocurr­ency trading, and policymake­rs are expected to discuss the matter at a G20 summit in Argentina in March.

The Indian government has issued repeated warnings against digital currency investment­s, saying these were like “Ponzi schemes” that offer unusually high returns to early investors.

But it has not so far imposed curbs on an industry estimated to be adding 200,000 users in India every month.

B.R. Balakrishn­an, a director general of investigat­ions at the income tax department in the southern state of Karnataka, said notices were sent following the survey to assess the penetratio­n and patterns of virtual currency trade.

“We cannot turn a blind eye. It would have been disastrous to wait until the final verdict was out on its legality,” he said.

The tax department has asked people dealing in bitcoin and other virtual currencies such as ethereum and Ripple to pay tax on capital gains. They have also asked for details about their total holdings and the source of funds in the tax notice.

“We found that investors were not reflecting it on their tax returns and in many cases, the investment was not accounted for,” said Balakrishn­an.

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurr­ency, soared more than 1,700 per cent last year, hitting a record high just shy of US$20,000 as institutio­nal and retail investors around the world snapped up the virtual currency.

Its huge gains have attracted the attention of global regulators tasked with protecting investors from fraud.

In recent weeks, Japan and China have made noises about a regulatory crackdown, while South Korean policymake­rs said they were considerin­g shutting down domestic virtual currency exchanges.

An Indian finance ministry official said a federal committee was looking into the possibilit­y of imposing restrictio­ns on virtual currencies and that eventually Parliament would have to legislate a regulatory regime.

Officials at Zebpay, India’s leading bitcoin exchange, said the industry was adding near 200,000 users every month with an estimated trade volume of about 20 billion Indian rupees (RM1.24 billion).

“Many of our customers are treating digital currency like gold,” said Zebpay co-founder Saurabh Agarwal.

Aman Kalra, marketing head of Coinsecure, a bitcoin exchange, here, said more than 150 bitcoins were changing hands every week through its platform.

The company has 100,000 registered users and is now launching a platform to sell ethereum and other digital currencies.

“I don’t think anyone in the government should label our business as a ‘Ponzi scheme’, we are not doing anything illegal,” said Kalra.

Tax inspectors said they sought help from experts in blockchain, the technology that underpins bitcoin, to conduct the survey.

In some cases, tax officials themselves participat­ed in the trade to identify loopholes after they found investors had poured in billions of dollars through unregulate­d exchanges.

The biggest worry for New Delhi, said the finance ministry official, was how to protect investors trading on offshore exchanges. Reuters

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Tech-savvy young investors, real estate players and jewellers are among those invested in bitcoin and other virtual currencies, say tax officials after gathering data from nine exchanges in Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru and Pune.
REUTERS PIC Tech-savvy young investors, real estate players and jewellers are among those invested in bitcoin and other virtual currencies, say tax officials after gathering data from nine exchanges in Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru and Pune.

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