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India Supreme Court tax ruling on Mauritius investments unsettles global investors and reshapes foreign investment outlook.

New Delhi – India’s landmark Supreme Court tax ruling on investments routed through Mauritius has sent shockwaves across global financial markets and raised fresh concerns about policy certainty.

The decision is being seen as a turning point in India’s approach to treaty abuse, tax avoidance, and scrutiny of foreign investment structures.

For decades, foreign investors channelled nearly 180 billion dollars into India through Mauritius due to favourable tax provisions under a bilateral treaty signed in 1982.

This structure allowed capital gains from share sales in Indian companies to be taxed only in Mauritius, where the tax rate was effectively zero.

On January 16, the Supreme Court ruled against U.S.-based investor Tiger Global in a high-profile case involving its 2018 sale of a 1.6 billion dollar stake in Flipkart to Walmart.

The court held that Tiger Global used Mauritius-based entities as conduit companies to claim impermissible tax benefits and avoid Indian capital gains tax.

The judges concluded that India had successfully demonstrated the lack of genuine commercial substance behind the Mauritius entities used in the transaction.

They ruled that merely holding a tax residency certificate was not sufficient proof of legitimate business activity in Mauritius.

This verdict significantly strengthens the powers of Indian tax authorities to lift the corporate veil and examine the real intent behind cross-border investment structures.

Legal experts say it allows domestic anti-avoidance laws to override treaty benefits when transactions are found to be artificial or designed mainly to evade tax.

Investors and advisors fear the ruling could trigger closer scrutiny of past deals, especially those completed before 2017 under the treaty’s grandfathering clause.

Although the revised treaty ended tax-free capital gains after 2017, earlier investments were expected to remain protected until now.

The Supreme Court clarified that India’s General Anti-Avoidance Rules, or GAAR, can still be applied even to grandfathered transactions.

This has created anxiety among investors who were relying on treaty protections for future exits from Indian investments.

Government officials have played down the concerns, arguing that tax is only one of many factors influencing foreign investment decisions.

They maintain that genuine investors with real economic substance have nothing to fear from the ruling.

Despite reassurances, lawyers report receiving nervous calls from investors in Europe and the United States seeking clarity on potential exposure.

Many fear prolonged litigation, retrospective tax demands, and uncertainty around deal structuring.

Mauritius has historically been India’s largest source of foreign direct investment, accounting for nearly a quarter of total inflows over two decades.

The ruling therefore has wide implications for India’s mergers and acquisitions landscape and future foreign capital flows.

India remains one of the world’s fastest-growing major economies and a key destination for global investors.

However, recurring tax disputes and regulatory ambiguity continue to raise questions about the ease of doing business.

Recent cases, including a massive tax demand against a global automobile company, have reinforced worries over prolonged scrutiny and enforcement actions.

Analysts warn that policy consistency and clear tax administration will be critical to sustaining investor confidence going forward.

This ruling marks a decisive shift in India’s tax jurisprudence and sends a strong message against aggressive tax planning structures.
How authorities apply this precedent in future cases will determine its long-term impact on global investor sentiment.