Law/Court
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31st October 2025, 8:29 AM

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The Approving Panel has ruled the merger between Hinduja Global Solutions Ltd. (HGSL) and NxtDigital Ltd. as an 'impermissible avoidance arrangement' under India's General Anti-Avoidance Rules (GAAR), delivering a major setback for the Hinduja Group arm. HGSL has been disallowed from claiming Rs 1,203 crore in tax set-offs and must now recover the full tax amount with interest and penalties. The panel determined that the merger's principal objective was to achieve tax advantages, not genuine commercial or operational growth. The ruling notes that HGSL had sold its healthcare division for Rs 8,000 crore, generating capital gains of Rs 3,059 crore, and subsequently merged with loss-making NxtDigital, which had accumulated losses of Rs 1,500 crore. This allowed HGSL to offset these losses against its profits, reducing its tax liability by approximately Rs 281 crore.
Panel Findings: Internal communications revealed 'tax savings' as the main motive behind the merger. The panel found the transaction lacked commercial substance and business synergy. It also ruled that provisions of the Income Tax Act intended for genuine business reorganisations were misused. Approval from the National Company Law Tribunal does not preclude GAAR invocation if tax avoidance is evident.
Legal Context: Citing the Supreme Court's McDowell & Co. judgment, the panel reaffirmed that artificial tax arrangements cannot qualify as legitimate tax planning. This order reinforces the government's strict stance on tax avoidance through corporate restructuring.
Impact: This ruling may discourage similar corporate restructuring maneuvers solely aimed at tax benefits, potentially increasing scrutiny on large corporate groups. It reinforces the authority of GAAR provisions and could lead to more tax litigation if companies attempt aggressive tax planning. Rating: 8/10
Difficult Terms: * **Impermissible avoidance arrangement**: A transaction structured primarily to avoid tax obligations, rather than for genuine business purposes. * **General Anti-Avoidance Rules (GAAR)**: Provisions in tax laws designed to prevent taxpayers from entering into arrangements that, while potentially legal in form, are intended to circumvent tax rules and reduce tax liability. * **Tax set-offs**: The ability to use losses or credits from one period or transaction to reduce taxable income or tax liability in another period or transaction. * **Capital gains**: Profit made from the sale of an asset that was held for investment purposes. * **Accumulated losses**: Losses incurred by a company over multiple periods that have not yet been offset against profits. * **Commercial substance**: A requirement that a transaction must have a genuine business purpose and economic effect beyond simply reducing tax liability to be considered valid. * **Business synergy**: The concept that the combined value and performance of two companies after a merger will be greater than the sum of their separate parts. * **Income Tax Act**: The primary legislation governing income tax in India. * **National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT)**: An Indian quasi-judicial body that adjudicates issues relating to companies. * **McDowell & Co. judgement**: A landmark Supreme Court of India ruling that established the principle that tax planning should not involve artificial or colourable devices and that schemes designed solely to avoid tax are not permissible.