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Modi govt’s tax on stock buybacks puts brakes on a great year of share repurchases

The proposed tax may affect share purchases worth Rs 10,000 crore that are in progress.

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Mumbai: The decision by India’s government to impose a tax on stock buybacks puts the brakes on what could have been another great year for share repurchases.

More than 70 companies, including software exporter Wipro Ltd., announced or completed Rs 354.6 billion ($5.2 billion) of share buybacks in the first half of 2019, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s about two thirds of the Rs 546 billion of such transactions for all of 2018, which was the most in at least six years, the data show.

“In the last three years, buybacks had supported the rally in stocks and helped improve the earnings per share for companies,” said Umesh Mehta, head of research at Samco Securities Ltd. in Mumbai. “That opportunity is now closed. Companies would now have to move back to distributing dividends, where the tax liability is lower.”

The proposed tax may affect share purchases worth Rs 100 billion that are in progress. Infosys Ltd., India’s second-largest provider of IT services, has until Sept. 19 to complete buying back Rs 82.6 billion of its own stock, while Adani SEZ & Ports Ltd. is looking to repurchase shares worth Rs 19.6 billion, according to exchange filings.

Companies have been using buybacks as a more tax-efficient way to return excess cash to shareholders in addition to dividends, which attract a levy of 15%. India’s top five software exporters have returned a combined Rs 867 billion over the past three years via this route, according to Jefferies.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman closed the window Friday by announcing a 20% tax on stock repurchases. The trigger for the tax to kick in depends on when the company actually pays the money for the shares tendered, said Mehul Bheda, a partner and tax consultant at Dhruva Advisors in Mumbai.

“The tax saving on the buyback has been substantially reduced,” he said. –Bloomberg


Also read: Nirmala Sitharaman’s budget puts the ball back in RBI’s court to spur growth


 

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