PE, VC funds could be treated as separate class of investors

The government is considering recognising private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) funds as a separate class of investors so that multiple issues faced by these increasingly significant investors and their concerns can be resolved in a comprehensive manner.

Several PE and VC funds have pointed out issues relating to taxation, regulation and processes leading to litigations at various tribunals.

“We are setting up an expert committee in a month or two to look at terms of regulation and processes, and related issues. The idea behind it is that those funds in (unlisted space) and are setting up offices in India require a paradigm shift (in taxation and other regulations), looking at the significant amount they are investing here,” Ajay Seth, secretary at the Department of Economic Affairs, told ET in an interview.

The government is considering recognising private equity (PE) and venture capital (VC) funds as a separate class of investors so that multiple issues faced by these increasingly significant investors and their concerns can be resolved in a comprehensive manner.

Several PE and VC funds have pointed out issues relating to taxation, regulation and processes leading to litigations at various tribunals.

“We are setting up an expert committee in a month or two to look at terms of regulation and processes, and related issues. The idea behind it is that those funds in (unlisted space) and are setting up offices in India require a paradigm shift (in taxation and other regulations), looking at the significant amount they are investing here,” Ajay Seth, secretary at the Department of Economic Affairs, told ET in an interview.

“Scaling up this investment requires a holistic examination of regulatory and other frictions. An expert committee will be set up to examine and suggest appropriate measures,” she said.

People in the know said the committee is expected to deliberate over all the issues and see if PE and VC funds could be classified as a separate class of investors like foreign portfolio investors (FPIs). FPIs are regulated by the Securities and Exchange Board of India and invest in the listed space.

The expert panel is likely to comprise representatives from regulators, tax department and industry stakeholders. It would examine how employee stock options by startups and carry fees be treated, an official privy to the plan said. Carry fees is the share of profit or investment that a fund manager gets.

“Of late, there have been multiple challenges both on income tax as well as GST fronts for PE-VC funds and the fund managers, with open litigations on many fronts. Easing out these challenges will allow for faster growth of this sector,” said Bhavin Shah, partner, PwC.

The Customs, Excise & Service Tax Appellate Tribunal, Bengaluru, in a July 2021 order held that service taxes were applicable on expenses incurred by PE-VC funds even under the trust structure. That implies carry fees, legal fees and salaries incurred by a fund that is held in a trust structure would appropriate service tax.

Many VC funds, PEs, and other alternative investment funds (AIFs) including mutual funds based in India use trust structures for investment. The tribunal also held that salaries paid to fund managers should face indirect taxes. Currently, they pay 18% GST on carry fees.

“Some of the aspects which the government could look at include creating a framework to encourage domestic listings of target companies and discouraging inversion of Indian companies to foreign jurisdictions, tax parity to PE/VCs in line with treatment of FPIs, regulatory and tax simplification for startups, tax simplification for performance fees, extending tax exemption for infrastructure investments, simplification of AIFs regulations and registration procedures,” said Rajesh Gandhi, partner, Deloitte India.

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