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Legacy FPIs in Bajaj Finance staring at possible tax shock over bonus shares

The tax impact of FPIs arises from the capital gains tax rules and grandfathering provision, introduced in 2018, that brought back long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax on listed equities.

May 06, 2025 / 12:28 IST
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Bajaj Finance last week declared a 1:2 stock split and a 4:1 bonus share issue.

Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) who have held Bajaj Finance shares since before 2018 may be staring at a significant tax outgo, following the recently announced stock split and bonus share issue.

The NBFC last week declared a 1:2 stock split and a 4:1 bonus share issue - its first bonus issuance in nine years – that may lead to an unpleasant surprise for legacy foreign investors.

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The tax impact of FPIs arises from the capital gains tax rules and grandfathering provision, introduced in 2018, that brought back long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax on listed equities. The law allowed shareholders of listed equities prior to January 31, 2018, to compute LTCG using the fair market value (FMV) of the stock as on that date instead of the original purchase price. This step-up in cost base significantly reduced the capital gains tax burden for such investors. However, the relief does not extend to bonus shares, which are treated as fresh allotments and assigned a zero acquisition cost.

Tax experts point out that this gap could materially impact the effective tax outgo of FPIs who receive four bonus shares for every one share held. “Unlike stock splits, bonus shares do not get the FMV step-up benefit under the grandfathering clause. So, for FPIs, the cost of acquisition for these bonus shares is treated as zero. The entire sale proceeds, if and when sold, are liable to tax,” said one tax expert on condition of anonymity.