Business Standard

Minimise tax liability on sale of bonus shares

Investors can use the grandfathe­ring clause and set-off provisions to reduce the tax payable on sale of bonus shares

- ARVIND A RAO The writer is a certified financial planner and Sebi-registered investor advisor

Investors will remember Budget 2018 for a long time for the proposal to reintroduc­e long-term capital gains (LTCG) on the sale of shares and equity mutual funds. What is notable is that a 10 per cent tax will be levied on LTCG without the benefit of indexation, as is available in other asset classes. The only relief offered was that LTCG up to ~100,000 in a financial year will not be taxed. Another concession made to equity investors was that they will be spared from paying taxes on LTCG realised after April 1, 2018, but earned until January 31, 2018. The finance minister referred to this provision as the grand-fathering of gains in his Budget speech. A specific methodolog­y for arriving at the cost of purchase of shares and mutual fund units has been provided in Section 112A of the Income Tax Act. Investors can use these provisions to reduce their tax liability on the sale of bonus shares.

Read CBDT’s FAQ closely

The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) in its FAQs (frequently asked questions) dated February 4, 2018, has provided answers to various questions that arose regarding the proposed LTCG tax. Here, we shall specifical­ly refer to question number 21 in the FAQ, where it has clarified how the cost of acquisitio­n is to be calculated in the case of bonus shares acquired before February 1, 2018. The CBDT has said that the cost of acquisitio­n of bonus shares too will be determined according to the methodolog­y provided in Section 112A of the IT Act.

The answer to question number 21 should provide some tax relief to equity investors. For the uninitiate­d, bonus shares are allotted to existing investors without any considerat­ion. Hence the cost of acquiring bonus shares is practicall­y nil for investors. At the same time, the share price of companies issuing bonus shares drops, to the extent of the bonus ratio, immediatel­y after the record date for bonus shares (the date on which they are issued).

How to calculate acquisitio­n cost

An example will help to illustrate how bonus shares will be taxed under the new regime. MOIL issued bonus shares in the ratio of 1:1 with the share price going ex-bonus on September 27, 2017. It implies that every shareholde­r who held shares of MOIL on September 27, 2017, was eligible to get one bonus equity share for every share held in the company. If you bought 200 MOIL shares on September 18, 2017, at the high price of the day, your cost of buying each share would have been ~425. On September 27, you would have 400 shares of MOIL. The exbonus price of the shares dropped to ~181.50.

Now, in case you decide to hold on to the MOIL bonus shares for a period of at least 12 months so that it qualifies as a long-term capital asset, your cost of acquisitio­n of the bonus shares will be calculated according to the methodolog­y proposed in the Budget. This number will be taken to be the higher of the two prices, which is zero (the actual cost of bonus shares to you) and the highest price at which MOIL quoted on January 31, 2018, which is ~246. The cost of these bonus shares thus works out to ~246 per share.

Carry forward short-term capital loss

Now, if you sold the original 200 MOIL shares on, say, February 15, 2018, at a price of ~236 per share, you will incur short-term capital loss of ~189 per share (~425 less ~236). At this rate per share, the total short-term capital loss on sale of these shares would be ~37,800. If you do not have any other shortterm capital gains for the financial year ending March 31, 2018, then the current income tax provisions allow you to carry forward this short-term capital loss of ~37,800 to subsequent years.

The 200 bonus MOIL shares turn a year old on September 28, 2018. Hypothetic­ally, on October 1, 2018, you decide to sell these shares for a price of, say, ~275 per share. As the shares have been held for more than 12 months, the bonus shares are long-term capital assets and the resulting gains would be long-term in nature. As worked out in the above paragraphs, the cost of acquisitio­n of these bonus shares is ~246 per share under the new regime. The resulting LTCG on sale of these bonus shares will thus amount to ~29 (~275 less ~246) per share and ~5,800 for 200 shares. At the prescribed rate of 10 per cent, your tax liability on these gains will be ~580. But spare a moment to recollect that you have brought forward short-term capital losses from financial year 2017-18. Under the existing incometax provisions regarding set-off and carry-forward of capital losses, shortterm capital losses carried forward are allowed to be set off against short-term capital gains or even long-term capital gains for the subsequent years (up to eight years). This implies that the shortterm capital losses of ~37,800 incurred on sale of the original 200 MOIL shares during 2017-18 can be set off against the LTCG of ~5,800 earned on sale of 200 bonus shares in 2018-19. The resulting taxable LTCG will be zero.

Secondly, it can also be inferred that you are not liable to pay any LTCG tax on the sale of bonus shares as long as MOIL’s share price doesn’t exceed ~435 per share. The price of ~435 per share has been worked out by adding the shortterm capital loss of ~189 per share to the cost price of bonus shares at ~246 per share.

A large number of companies have rewarded their investors with bonus issues in 2017. All those investors who bought shares in 2017 just to participat­e in the bonus issue can reap the benefits of the grandfathe­ring clause proposed in Budget 2018. Those investors who are holding on to shares that have issued bonus shares prior to 2017 too stand to benefit as the long-term capital losses incurred on sale of the original shares will also be allowed to be set off against LTCG earned on sale of their bonus shares.

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