Friday, January 23, 2026
Economy & Markets
7 min read

Market Participants Demand Equity Tax Relief for Budget 2026-27

Mint
January 18, 20264 days ago
Market participants seek equity tax relief ahead of Budget

AI-Generated Summary
Auto-generated

Market participants are requesting capital market tax relief before the Union Budget. Key proposals include increasing the exemption limit for long-term capital gains on equities and standardizing the definition of "long term." Stakeholders also urged against further increases in transaction taxes and suggested aligning dividend tax rates.

New Delhi, Market participants have urged the government to ease capital market taxation, including a higher exemption limit on long-term capital gains, ahead of the Union Budget for 2026-27. They also suggested that the government avoid further increases in transaction taxes. The Union Budget will be presented by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on February 1. Market stakeholders also demanded enhancement of the tax-free exemption limit on long-term capital gains from equity investments to provide greater relief to retail and long-term investors. In its budget wishlist, JM Financial Services recommended that the government should raise the tax-free exemption limit for equity LTCG from ₹1.25 lakh to ₹2 lakh. The firm also sought to standardise the definition of "long term" to 12 months across all asset classes, including equity, debt, gold and real estate, to reduce complexity and improve tax clarity. Additionally, it called for allowing capital losses to be set off against income under other heads. Market participants have also cautioned against any further increase in transaction-related taxes. Dhiraj Relli, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of HDFC Securities, said stakeholders have proposed keeping the Securities Transaction Tax on cash equity trades lower than that on derivatives to encourage long-term investing over speculative trading. He also suggested taxing only the profit component of share buybacks and aligning dividend tax rates for domestic investors with those applicable to non-resident Indians . Tejas Khoday, Chief Executive Officer of FYERS, said the government should refrain from raising STT any further. He added that reducing both long-term and short-term capital gains tax to 10 per cent would significantly boost retail investor participation. Khoday also expressed hope that import duties on gold and silver are not increased further, as these assets remain important hedging instruments against equity market volatility and rupee depreciation. Meanwhile, the NSE and BSE will conduct live trading on Sunday, , when the Union Budget is presented. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Rate this article

Login to rate this article

Comments

Please login to comment

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
    Equity Tax Relief: Budget 2026-27 Demands