Business Standard

I-T slaps ~5,872-crore tax notice on Grasim

- DEV CHATTERJEE

The income-tax (I-T) department has slapped a hefty tax demand notice on Aditya Birla group firm Grasim Industries, asking it to pay ~5,872 crore on account of the dividend distributi­on tax on Aditya Birla Capital shares that Grasim received after the demerger of Aditya Birla Capital from Aditya Birla Nuvo.

In a statement to the stock exchanges, Grasim said the order was not tenable in law and the company was taking necessary action against the order.

According to the company, the deputy commission­er of income tax (DCIT) issued a show-cause notice on February 11, which was subsequent­ly revised on March 1, asking as to why the provisions of Section 115-0 read with Section 115- Q of the Income Tax Act, 1961, should not be applied to the allotment of equity shares by Aditya Birla Capital (ABCL) to the shareholde­rs of the company.

This was after the composite scheme of arrangemen­t between Aditya Birla Nuvo and Grasim Industries and Aditya Birla Financial Services and their respective shareholde­rs and creditors was approved by the National Company Law Tribunal's Ahmedabad bench. The DCIT held that the demerger of the demerged undertakin­g was not in compliance with Section 2(19AA) of the Act.

"The company filed its detailed submission­s in response to these notices," the company said.

The DCIT said the value of shares allotted by ABCL to the shareholde­rs of the company, in considerat­ion of the transfer and vesting of the demerged undertakin­g into ABCL, amounted to dividend, within the meaning of the Act.

The company, on March 15, received an order dated March 14, issued by the DCIT, raising a demand of ~5,872.13 crore on account of the dividend distributi­on tax (including interest), the company said.

According to the demerger scheme announced on August 11, 2016, the shareholde­rs of Aditya Birla Nuvo received three new shares of Grasim for 10 shares in ABNL. After the merger, every share in the "new Grasim" was entitled to seven shares in Aditya Birla Financial Services post its demerger. For example, a shareholde­r with 100 shares in ABNL received 30 shares of Grasim and 210 shares of ABFSL, whereas a shareholde­r with 100 shares in Grasim continued to hold those and in addition received 700 shares of ABFSL.

Post-scheme, the "new Grasim" held a 57 per cent stake in the separately listed financial services business, while the rest of the stake was held on a proportion­ate basis by those acquire shares after the merger. At the time of demerger, the new Grasim was to hold a 60 per cent stake in UltraTech, 28 per cent in Idea Cellular and 51 per cent in the solar division.

The scheme was then considered "complex" by analysts. The group chairman, Kumar Mangalam Birla, called the scheme a win-win deal for all the shareholde­rs with new Grasim getting new-age businesses of Nuvo, while Aditya Birla Capital getting listed on the stock exchanges — thus unlocking value for the shareholde­rs.

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