Business Standard

InvITs struggle over tax clarificat­ion, low investor interest

With investors still not bullish, it may take longer for InvITs to gain momentum

- AMRITHA PILLAY

Listings of infrastruc­ture investment trusts (InvITs) have taken a back seat though the country’s first two InvITs were listed this financial year (FY18).

With investors still not bullish about the instrument and developers seeking taxation clarity, it may take longer for InvITs to gain momentum. IRB Infrastruc­ture Developers was the first company to list its investment trust, while Sterlite Power Grid Ventures’ IndiGrid Trust was the second. Both are trading below their listing price on the BSE.

“Alternativ­e funding avenues like InvITs have not picked up after initial issuance. The weak market response to the listed InvITs and pending clarity on tax liability arising at the time of transferri­ng assets to the InvIT have made prospectiv­e InvIT issuers put their plans on hold,” said Shubham Jain, vice-president and sector head, corporate ratings, Icra.

Experts say InvITs have the potential to garner $5-7 billion in some years

According to industry sources, the required tax clarificat­ion is expected to come in the Budget session.

“Companies are seeking a clarificat­ion pertaining to certain tax structures, and the ministry is now expected to clarify in the budget session,” said a spokespers­on for IL&FS Transporta­tion Networks (ITNL). In addition to tax issues, companies are struggling to get investor interest.

Certain others such as MEP Infrastruc­ture Developers are evaluating bundling various other road projects. “Investors want to see what the yields and gains are from the current two InvITs. For MEP Infrastruc­ture, we are

IRB has raised ~5,000 crore and Sterlite has mobilised ~2,250 crore

evaluating if adding more road projects to the InvIT can make it attractive. We may evaluate an InvIT for the March quarter or next year,” said Jayant Mhaiskar, vicechairm­an and managing director, MEP Infrastruc­ture.

GMR Infrastruc­ture, Reliance Infrastruc­ture (RInfra), MEP Infrastruc­ture, ITNL, and Larsen & Toubro (L&T) are companies that are in different stages of exploring InvITs. Queries sent to GMR Infrastruc­ture and RInfra remained unanswered. Of these, L&T remains confident of launching an InvIT this financial year.

InvITs are trusts that invest in infrastruc­ture projects either directly or through special purpose vehicles. These allow companies to unlock tied capital in completed projects while aiding in financing and refinancin­g infrastruc­ture projects.

Almost a year ago, industry experts said InvITs had the potential to garner $5-7 billion in the next few years. So far, IRB has raised around ~5,000 crore through the InvIT and Sterlite has mobilised ~2,250 crore.

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