It is expected to be a combination of offer-for-sale and issuance of fresh equity
At the upper end, Vodafone would make it India's biggest stock market listing since state-owned Coal India Ltd raised $3.5 bn in 2010
The listing of Vodafone's Indian unit is expected to raise between $2 bn and $2.5 bn
Many brands are tapping into visuals, sounds and mascots of the past to ensure stickiness in a competitive landscape. But is it working?
Special leave petitions will be filed before Supreme Court against the order of Bombay HC
The company seeks appointment of a judge to preside over Rs 14,200-crore tax case
The court adjourned the matter to Wednesday but made it clear it would not grant the company any time on the next date to file its response to the notice of the I-T dept
The government has extended an olive branch by waiving penalty and interest to multinationals like Vodafone and Cairn for one-time settlement of tax disputes arising out of retrospective law, but one isn't sure if the companies will accept it.Revenue secretary Hasmukh Adhia's assertion that the government can't do away with the retrospective law, which was brought in by the United Progressive Alliance government, speaks of its political implications. Undoing the law, though legally permissible, would mean foregoing demands running into thousands of crores of rupees in tax component alone. It would be a political hot potato uniting the Opposition to sharpen knives against the ruling dispensation for what would be perhaps rightly seen as the government's willingness to be arm-twisted by the handful of powerful multinationals on the pretext of creating an environment for facilitating foreign investments. Also, what is equally intriguing is the absence of any legal challenge to the law by
As long as retrospective amendment remains valid, demand of tax against the companies remains valid, said CBDT Chairman
Notices can be issued by tax authorities for various reasons. One such reason can be to effect recovery. This is what Vodafone is facing lately, even when the matter is before arbitration. The moot question, hence, would be - can the department issue a recovery notice, when the dispute is pending before an arbitration panel? The legal answer to this would be a certain 'yes'.Once a tax has been determined by revenue authorities as 'payable', it can be recovered, even coercively. The pendency of the case, even before the high court or Supreme Court, does not prevent the recovery of tax. The only remedy is to get the recovery 'stayed' by a court.It is noteworthy that the Income-tax Act does not provide for any arbitration on tax matters. International arbitrations are generally invoked to protect investments running in astronomical figures - as is the case with Vodafone, which has resorted to the India-Netherlands Bilateral Investment Treaty. This arbitration certainly does not put a lega
Says investments will help increase the number of people employed by the company to 15,000 over the next few years
The company also said that it enjoys a constructive relationship with India