Business Standard

Budget proposals Hits & misses

Five key capital market announceme­nts from the previous Budget

- COMPILED BY SAMIE MODAK

>Proposal: Foreign investor investment ceiling on bourses raised from 5% to 15% >Impact: None of the exchanges have seen any of their foreign investors take advantage of the higher ceiling. Most have restricted their investment­s to 5%. However, the measure is expected to help the BSE, which will list on Friday, and bigger rival National Stock Exchange (NSE), which, too, is expected to go public soon >Proposal: Tax sops for Real Estate Investment Trusts (Reits), Infrastruc­ture Investment Trusts (InViTs) and Internatio­nal Financial Services Centre (IFSC) >Impact: The finance minister gave some tax incentives to jump-start these. Although all three hold promise, they have been slow starters. A few infra companies have filed documents with the Securities and Exchange Board of India to launch InViTs. BSE’s bourse in IFSC at GIFT City, Ahmedabad, has been launched but volumes are thin.

>Proposal: Increase in Securities Transactio­n Tax (STT) on options to 0.05%, from 0.017%

>Impact: Options trading contribute­s to the bulk of stock exchange volumes. The increase, although nearly threefold (but on a very low base), hasn’t had a negative impact on trading volumes. On the contrary, the share of options in the overall futures and options (F&O) pie has increased to 85%, from 82%.

>Proposal: To provide for more members and benches of the Securities Appellate Tribunal

>Impact: The promise has remained unfulfille­d. The quasi-judicial body, which hears appeals against those aggrieved with orders passed by markets regulator Sebi and insurance regulator Irdai, is currently operating with three members. No additional benches have been formed. >Proposal: Additional 10% dividend distributi­on tax (DDT) on those earning annual dividend in excess of ~10 lakh >Impact: The move was criticised by market players, as it amounted to double taxation — income earned by companies is also subject to tax. Some companies opted for share buybacks, instead of dolling out dividends, to explore tax arbitrage.

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