Business Standard

Sebi writes to govt seeking tax parity in F&O segment

Says tax differenti­ation is incentivis­ing participat­ion in derivative­s

- PAVAN BURUGULA Transactio­n Rates (%) Payable by

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) intends to have tax parity in the futures and options (F&O) segment. Sebi is of the view that the differenti­ating tax structure, particular­ly the securities transactio­n tax (STT), is incentivis­ing participat­ion in the derivative­s segment.

The market regulator has written to the government— which sets the tax rate for the capital market—on bringing tax parity between the cash and the derivative­s segment.

Currently, a STT between 0.1 per cent and 0.125 per cent is levied on F&O transactio­ns. Within the derivative­s segment, STT on sale of options—the most-popular segment—is just 0.05 per cent (if the contract is not exercised). On the other hand, STT is charged at a much higher rate of 0.1 per cent for delivery-based trades in the cash segment

“Sebi has been making efforts to discourage retail investors from participat­ing in the derivative­s since these are sophistica­ted instrument­s and if investors with inadequate knowledge stand at risk of losing lot of money. Favourable tax treatment among other factors is encouragin­g small time investors towards derivative markets. Hence, the regulator has requested government to consider ending the tax arbitrage,” said a source.

Relatively favorable tax structure and availabili­ty of higher leveraging has increased the popularity of the derivative­s market vis-à-vis the cash segment. Purchase and sale of equity shares

Sale of an option

Sale of an option in security where option is exercised

Sinalseeoc­uf raitifeust­ure The average daily turnover in the F&O segment is nearly four times higher than the cash turnover.

While the derivative­s market was introduced for hedging, a lot of investors use it for trading purposes. Experts believe tweaking the tax structure should consider the nature of the trade.

“The regulators should not apply a blanket rule for taxing the derivative transactio­ns. There should be a rationale mechanism to determine the purpose of trade and higher levies should be applied where the investors have used the platform purely for speculativ­e purposes,” said Sandeep Parekh, founder, Finsec Law Advisors. In the past, the government has used increased tax levy as a tool to discourage investors from certain segments. The centre increased the STT on options transactio­ns from 0.017 per cent to 0.05 per cent in the Union Budget 2016-17 to discourage Purchaser/ Seller

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