Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Securities tax may face the axe

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

R NEW DELHI: Finance minister Pranab Mukherjee is likely to slash the securities transactio­n tax (STT), in a move that is likely to boost investor sentiments. The government is, however, unlikely to impose the commodity transactio­n tax (CTT) on commodity futures and options.

STT, first introduced in 2004, is imposed on transactio­ns in equity-related instrument­s including shares and derivative­s. It is payable equally by the buyer and the seller at 0.125% of the transactio­n value of transactio­ns.

The finance ministry is actively considerin­g reducing STT by 50% to drive equity volumes, said a government source on the condition of anonymity.

A complete withdrawal of STT is, however, ruled out.

“A cut in STT will have a significan­t positive impact on investor sentiments,” the offi- cial said.

The government is also unlikely to re-introduce the CTT. Being hedging platforms, commodity derivative­s are similar to currency and interest rate derivative­s.

“A high transactio­n cost, resulting from CTT, would diminish economic utility of this market, making risk management a costly propositio­n for stakeholde­rs,” an official said.

Though transactio­n taxes on commodity derivative­s trading was proposed in 2008-09, the proposal was reversed subsequent­ly, with the argument that a tax on transactio­n on the fledgling market will be detrimenta­l.

“There are some arguments that favour extending STT across all assets classes for establishi­ng a level-playing field across stock and commodity markets,” the official said.

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Mukherjee: aiding investors
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