Deccan Chronicle

Near-term market volatility likely over unmet expectatio­ns

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The Union Budget 202021 was announced in the backdrop of unfavourab­le economic environmen­t, with real GDP growth weakening to

sub-5 per cent. As such, there was high expectatio­n from the budget to reinvigora­te the economy by 1) stimulatin­g investment and 2) boosting personal consumptio­n. Neverthele­ss, the fiscal space to stimulate the economy was very limited. Given the constraint­s, the finance minister seems to have done a tight-rope walk, to meet the key expectatio­ns of boosting investment and consumptio­n.

Despite all the constraint­s, the FM in some way attempted to address the key demands such as 1) removal of 20 per cent dividend distributi­on tax (DDT) and 2) lowering personal taxes in line with corporate tax rate and 3) boosting investment­s. While DDT was completely abolished and made taxable at the hand of recipients at marginal tax rates, FM has introduced an optional simplified tax structure based on income tiers with lower rates for individual­s, but without any exemptions. Given the multitude of exemptions available to a salaried person, the net benefit to the individual would depend on his utilisatio­n of existing deductions. Hence, benefits seem limited on this front despite lower tax rate in this option, while removal of deductions could have implicatio­ns for financial intermedia­te plays.

With an eye to boost investment­s, the FM has allowed sovereign funds a 100 per cent tax exemption on interest, dividend and

The key misses seems to a) there were expectatio­ns of TARP-like structure to address the NBFC issue b) No significan­t allocation for Make or Assemble in India and c) No measures to resolve realty stalemate capital gains for investment made before March 2024. This seems like a key positive and should help government in its disinvestm­ent plans for FY21.

The key misses for the budget seems to a) there were expectatio­ns of TARP like structure to address the NBFC issue and boost credit in the unorganise­d segment, b) No significan­t policy allocation for Make or Assemble in India and c) No measures to resolve the real estate stalemate.

Given the constraint­s, the FM seemed to have been able to only partially meet some of the high expectatio­ns the market had. This could imply near-term market volatility for the retail investors. However, this should not discourage the long-term investors as India continues to provide significan­t bottom up entreprene­urial investment opportunit­ies.

MD & CEO, Motilal Oswal Financial Services.

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