Business Standard

ADDING FUEL TO EQUITY RALLY

- BS REPORTERS Mumbai, 18 May

Indian equities are likely to continue their upward trajectory with the GST Council making significan­t headway in making the Goods and Services Tax (GST) a reality in the country.

The Council met on Thursday and finalised tax rates for 1,211 items with a majority of items being kept at under 18 per cent. Market experts believe this is broadly in line with expectatio­ns and may further fuel the market rally in the coming days.

Goods and services tax (GST) is a system of taxation that seeks to merge many individual­ly applied taxes into a single tax and is a significan­t step in the reform of indirect taxation in India.

“I don’t think there are no negative surprises in the final GST rate list from a markets perspectiv­e as everything was in line with the expectatio­ns. In fact, this could be a positive trigger for markets; the tax slabs of some of the essential goods has gone down by as much as 40 per cent. The investor sentiment would also go up as India embraces a single tax code,” said Deven Choksey, managing director, KR Choksey Securities.

Indian equities continue to scale new peaks, defying warnings by many market pundits of a possible consolidat­ion. The 50-share Nifty scaled the 9,500 peak for the first time in history this week but fell one per cent on Thursday to 9,429 following global cues.

“Categorisa­tion of several consumer products like soaps, toothpaste and hair oil under 18 per cent is good news and should see prices drop for consumers. Similarly, several food items such as edible oil, tea, coffee and sugar have been kept at five per cent, with exemption for milk and foodgrain, which would also bring cheers for industry,” said Pratik Jain, partner and leader–indirect tax, PwC. However, he said that 19 per cent items (over 200) would be kept under 28 per cent, which was initially meant for only few commoditie­s such as luxury cars, aerated beverages etc.

“Most of the items are falling under the 18 per cent rate and the move is not expected to be very inflationa­ry. It’s broadly in line with expectatio­ns and evenly balanced. The markets are likely to react positively,” said Rikesh Parikh, vice-president–institutio­n corporate broking, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

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