Business Standard

Tax worries roil indices ahead of Union Budget

Sensex down 5% from peak; YTD returns turn negative

- SUNDAR SETHURAMAN

Investors are having cold feet ahead of the Union Budget. Worries around an increase in taxation saw the benchmark indices correct for the fourth day in a row on Wednesday – the longest losing streak since September. The Sensex fell 1.94 per cent, or 937 points, to end at 47,409.93, the lowest since December 28. The Nifty ended at 13,967.5, down 271 points, or 1.91 per cent, reporting the sharpest fall since December 21.

Foreign portfolio investors (FPIS) sold shares worth ~1,688 crore on Wednesday, registerin­g their third straight day of selling. After climbing to an intra-day high of 50,184 last Thursday, the Sensex has declined 5.5 per cent. Most global markets, too, have corrected over the past week, but the decline in India has been sharper.

Experts said investors are apprehensi­ve about whether Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will be able to pull off a market-friendly Budget given the constraint­s on the revenue front. Investors are booking profits or waiting on the sidelines over concerns that the government may tweak capital market-related taxes to bridge the Budget deficit, they said.

The Centre has been grappling with a decline in tax collection­s and other revenue receipts due to lower dividends and divestment delay. "The upcoming Budget will be a tightrope walk for the government and negative surprises of higher taxation which may impact consumptio­n cannot be ruled out. The market has become jittery ahead of this major event. Investors should build for a defensive portfolio and also hold cash, as there will be good buying opportunit­ies in the future," Naveen Kulkarni, chief investment officer, Axis Securities.

The India VIX shot up 5 per cent to 24.4 on Wednesday. The fear gauge has surged nearly 25 per cent this month. Market players said traders have been expecting more wild swings in the market in the run-up to the Budget.

Experts said most positives have already been factored in by the market following the

25 per cent-plus surge since November.

"It had been a great run. And a pullback was due. The results have been good, but unlike the last quarter, the market this time is not rewarding you at the moment. In the previous quarter, when the results were good, share prices moved. This time, we have not seen that kind of upgrade we saw last time,” said Andrew Holland, CEO, Avendus Capital Alternate Strategies.

Many emerging markets, including India, had climbed to record levels this month amid optimism around US stimulus. Fears of a delay in the $1.9-trillion relief package, announced by US President Joe Biden, is weighing on global investor sentiment, said experts.

Also, new coronaviru­s variants that led to fresh lockdowns have dampened investor mood. Market participan­ts are betting on a gradual withdrawal of restrictio­ns. “And globally, there are worries around vaccine rollout and lower stimulus from the US. Reports in the past few weeks have been more of global markets being in a bubble, and there is a worry about a tax increase in the Budget," said Holland

Nearly 340 stocks were locked in the lower circuit on the BSE. The market breadth was negative with total advancing stocks at 1,066 and those declining at 1,847 on the BSE.

Four-fifths of the Sensex components ended the session with losses. Axis Bank was the worst-performing Sensex stock, and ended the session with a loss of over 4 per cent. More than half a dozen Sensex stocks fell more than 3 per cent. Barring one, all the BSE sectoral indices ended the sessions with losses. Banking and finance stocks declined the most, and their gauges fell 2.9 per cent and 2.7 per cent, respective­ly.

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