HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceBudget 2019 has led to a huge tax arbitrage between debt AIFs and debt MFs

Budget 2019 has led to a huge tax arbitrage between debt AIFs and debt MFs

Tax arbitrage siphons away 1.6-2.4 per cent of the returns in debt AIF compared to mutual funds

July 30, 2019 / 10:59 IST
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Mint

Robert King Merton, an American sociologist, coined the word “unintended consequences" to describe outcomes that were either not foreseen or intended of a purposeful action. Post the recent budget, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) and alternative investment funds (AIFs) in India are learning about this phenomenon the hard way. The increase in marginal tax rate for the super-rich will negatively impact them though these vehicles were not the target of the tax increase.

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Most FPIs invest in India through the trust or a limited liability partnership structures and are not recognized as corporate entities under the Income-tax Act. Hence, their income is taxed as per individual tax brackets. With the increase in surcharge now applicable for non-corporate entities, FPIs will see tax increase from 35.8 per cent to 39 per cent (for FPIs earning less than Rs 5 crore) and from 35.8 per cent to 42.7 per cent (for FPIs earning more than Rs 5 crore). Also, like FPIs, most AIFs (over 95 per cent) in India are structured as trusts and, thus, will attract the provisions of the higher marginal tax rate. Equity AIFs will not be impacted by the increase in marginal tax rates as they pay capital gains tax—for listed equities, long-term capital gains tax is 10 per cent and for unlisted equity, it is 20 per cent with indexation. For debt AIFs, however, the impact could be significantly negative as interest income is clubbed with other income and taxed at maximum marginal rates.

The main problem for debt AIFs, though, is not that they will attract a higher tax rate. Given that the minimum investment amount for an AIF is Rs 1 crore, most individual investors in an AIF are anyway in the top tax bracket. The problem is that they will be at a large tax disadvantage compared to mutual funds (MFs). This budget has unwittingly created a large tax arbitrage between debt AIFs and debt MFs. Consider a debt AIF which earns interest income. Earlier, that would have been taxed at 35.8 per cent, now it will be taxed at 42.7 per cent. On the other hand, a dividend plan of a debt MF will be taxed at dividend distribution tax (DDT) of only 29.12 per cent. Thus, the tax arbitrage has increased from around 7 percentage points to around 14 percentage points now.