• Notification Date: 31-01-2023
  • Notification No: N/A

Companies have to Reverse Credit claimed on IPO Expenses

Tax authorities have started issuing notices to various companies, asking them to reverse credit claimed on expenses for listing of the shares. More than 150 companies that have raised funds through initial public offering (IPO) since July 2017, are now looking at the additional goods and services tax (GST) liability. 
 

The authorities are of the opinion that listing of shares is equivalent to trading of securities. It is an exempted service as per the GST provisions, hence tax credit claimed by the companies should be reversed. Tax experts said that the treatment of IPO as security trading may not be the correct interpretation as the proceeds are also used for "furtherance of business", and it is not exempted under GST provisions. 
 
As per Section 17(2) and 17(3) of the Central GST Act, 2017, the quantum of input tax credit allowed for taxable supply cannot be claimed on exempted supply of goods or services. Such credits, if claimed, need to be reversed.  
"...companies need to reverse the credit that they claimed," a senior tax official said. "We have already sent notices to a few companies and more will be sent soon." 

Another official stated that around 24 notices seeking reversal of credit have been sent out to companies since November. Tax authorities also share similar opinion under the erstwhile service tax regime. They believe that the public offer was also a transaction in securities and thus companies needed to reverse the credit claimed in lieu of that. 
 
Tax experts said that considering the total fund raising through this route, reversing tax credit would amount to significant tax liability. 
As per Prime Database, about 168 companies raised over ₹3.10 lakh crore through IPOs between July 1, 2017 - the day GST regime came into effect - and December 2022. 

Experts said there is ambiguity in the CGST Act provision and the tax department's interpretation of IPO as security trading could lead to litigations. "An IPO, a process of offering shares to the public, allows a company to raise equity capital and is different from sale of securities," said Abhishek A Rastogi, founder of law firm Rastogi Chambers. "Accordingly, there should not be any reversal of credit in case of an IPO as securities are not even generated till the process is complete." 

MS Mani, partner at consultancy major Deloitte India, said, "The term 'furtherance of business' used in Section 16 of the CGST Act is wide enough to include certain expenses, which may not have a straight-line relationship with the taxpayer's business. It is essential to explain the same to the GST authorities and convince them on the linkages of such expenses with the business in order to avoid litigation." 
Tax authorities had taken a similar view under the erstwhile service tax regime, and asked many companies to reverse the credit claimed in lieu of that. 

Experts said this interpretation could lead to tax claims not only from the companies that listed their shares but also those entities that initially invested in unlisted companies. "In some cases, this value of 'exempted supply' is becoming even more than value of 'taxable supply', leading to reversal of a significant amount of common input tax credit for the industry," Saurabh Agarwal, tax partner at EY, said. 
"The appropriate procedures being set by the industry in this regard can help in reducing the cost arising on this account," he added.