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2017 (8) TMI 339 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Write back of Provision for Management Charges.
2. Adjustment to the Arm’s Length Price (ALP).
3. Related Party Transaction (RPT) Filter.
4. Exclusion of Companies with High Profit Margins.
5. Functional Comparability of Specific Companies.
6. Computation of Deduction u/s 10A.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Write back of Provision for Management Charges:
- The assessee reversed a provision for management charges payable to its parent company amounting to ?801,775 and claimed a 10A deduction on this amount, treating it as business income.
- The AO disallowed the claim, stating that the reversal of management charge provision is not derived from the export of computer software and hence, 10A deduction cannot be claimed.
- The CIT(A) dismissed the appeal, stating that the reversal is merely an accounting entry and does not result in business income.
- The Tribunal set aside this issue to the AO for verification of whether the provision was allowed as a business expenditure in the earlier year and to decide the claim as per law.

2. Adjustment to the Arm’s Length Price (ALP):
- The TPO rejected the assessee’s TP analysis and selected a set of 17 comparable companies, proposing an adjustment u/s 92CA of ?1,52,11,661.
- The CIT(A) applied filters to exclude companies with 0% related party transactions and high-profit margins of more than 50%, reducing the set to 4 comparables.
- Both the assessee and the revenue filed cross appeals against the CIT(A)’s order.

3. Related Party Transaction (RPT) Filter:
- The TPO applied a 25% RPT filter, while the CIT(A) applied a 0% RPT filter.
- The Tribunal held that a 0% RPT filter is impractical and established a 15% tolerance range for RPT, modifying the orders of the CIT(A) and TPO.

4. Exclusion of Companies with High Profit Margins:
- The CIT(A) excluded companies with high-profit margins, such as Exensys Solutions Ltd. and Thirdware Solutions Ltd.
- The Tribunal ruled that high profit or loss alone cannot be criteria for exclusion unless due to extraordinary circumstances. The Tribunal directed the AO/TPO to reconsider these companies based on functional comparability.

5. Functional Comparability of Specific Companies:
- The Tribunal examined the functional comparability of 10 companies that the assessee sought to exclude, referencing previous Tribunal decisions.
- Companies such as Infosys Technologies Ltd., Exensys Software Solutions Ltd., and Flextronics Software Systems Ltd. were excluded due to functional dissimilarities or extraordinary events.
- The Tribunal directed the AO/TPO to exclude certain companies and reconsider others based on functional comparability and related party transactions.

6. Computation of Deduction u/s 10A:
- The assessee reversed a provision for management charges and claimed a 10A deduction, which the AO disallowed.
- The CIT(A) did not address this issue initially but later rejected the claim in a rectification order.
- The Tribunal set aside this issue to the AO for verification of whether the provision was allowed as a business expenditure in the earlier year and to decide the claim as per law.

Conclusion:
The Tribunal partly allowed the cross appeals, setting aside certain issues for further verification and directing the AO/TPO to recompute the arms-length price and 10A deduction based on the Tribunal’s findings. The Tribunal emphasized the importance of functional comparability and appropriate filters for related party transactions in transfer pricing analysis.

 

 

 

 

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