Budget 2024 – impact on your taxes, investments and markets

Union Budget 2024-25, the first Budget after Elections, has taken a slightly different tack after a long time. The focus on personal taxes is back – whether it is to give or take. While we admit there is probably a little more taking than giving, the simplification of tax, accompanied by more money in the hands of people through the New Tax Regime, together with sustained capex will still likely keep the economic growth engine chugging, along with the comfort of a fiscal deficit that is largely in control.

Budget 2024 – impact on your taxes, investments and markets

Budget 2024 Impact on Personal taxes

Continuing with the objective of incentivizing more people to join the simplified new tax regime, there were announcements to sweeten the new tax regime in this budget as well. While the overall number of slabs remains the same, there are some changes in the first three slabs, allowing less tax outgo. See the slabs in the new tax regime.

Additionally, the standard deduction under the new tax regime has been increased to Rs. 75,000 from Rs. 50,000 earlier, making another Rs. 25,000 tax-free.

We have created a new spreadsheet to help you assess whether you’re better off with the new or old tax regime after these recent changes. Please find it below.

Under Section 80CCD, for non-government employees, contributions to a pension plan like NPS from their employer were tax-deductible up to 10% of salary. This limit has now been increased to 14% under the new tax regime. Do note that the maximum employer contribution allowed under PF and NPS combined is Rs.7.5 lakh per year and there is no mention of revising this in the budget memorandum. This change is with effect from the assessment year 2025-2026 (FY 24-25).

Employers offering NPS as part of the salary package might tweak the salary structure to benefit from this change. Although section 80CCD is available under both the old and new tax regimes, the increase in exemption to pension contributions has been given only to the new tax regime. This is yet another evidence of making the new tax regime more attractive.

Chapter XVII of the Income Tax act deals with the collection and recovery of tax.  Under this chapter, portion B deals with tax deduction at source (TDS) and BB deals with tax collection at source (on sale of certain items for instance where the seller will collect tax from the buyer at specified rates and remit the same to the Government).

Section 192 that falls under Chapter XVII B covers TDS on salaries whereby an employer is liable to deduct tax on salary before paying the same out. This section also lays out how the amount of tax to be deducted is to be computed – taking into account all the income of the employee and not just the salary income, TDS and loss on income from house property. TCS was not taken into consideration.

If it turns out that too much tax was deducted on the salary, after taking into consideration all of the income, TDS and TCS of the assessee, he / she had to go through the hassle of claiming a refund. To make life simpler, this section, specifically sub-section 2B of this section, will be modified with effect from October 1, 2024 to state that in arriving at the tax to be deducted on salaries, the employer must take into account the following (subject of course to the employee submitting proof of the same):

1.       any income chargeable under any other head of income

2.       loss under ‘income from house property’

3.       any tax deducted or collected at source

In other words, TCS is now allowed to be set off against TDS liability on their salaried income.

If you are a young student and looking forward to your first job, Budget 2024 will give you some extra motivation. One of the focus areas of the Budget 2024 is ‘Employment and Skilling’ and three schemes have been announced under this. The ‘First Timers’ scheme or Scheme A, will certainly interest you! This promises one month’s wage to all new entrants in all formal sectors (based on EPFO registration). This will be paid in 3 instalments and will be capped at Rs. 15,000. The eligibility criteria for this benefit is a salary of up to Rs. 1 lakh per month.

Scheme B that is intended to incentivize job creation in the manufacturing sector too will interest you as it will provide a direct benefit to both the employer and you the new first-time employee on EPFO contributions for the first four years for specified scales.

Budget 2024 – Impact on investments

  • There were two big ticket announcements through the Union Budget that could impact you positively and negatively – depending on which asset class you are interested in. They are:  rationalization of capital gains tax and
  • increase in securities transaction tax on futures and options segment.

The former (capital gains) is a HUGE change. Let us deal with it first.

In a move to simplify capital gains across asset classes there have been four broad changes:

  • One, having only two holding period cut offs - 12 months or 24 months – to qualify for long term. All listed securities (read as listed equities and bonds) will be classified as long term if held for more than 1 year and all other asset classes will be classified as long term if held for more than 2 years.
  • Two, short term capital gains on stocks, equity funds and units of business trust (InvIT and REIT) is proposed to be taxed at 20% as against 15% earlier. For other instruments, STCG is the same as it is now.
  • Three, LTCG will be uniformly taxed at 12.5% for all classes of assets. How you define ‘Long Term’ will be based on point number 1 above.
  • Four, there will be no indexation benefit for any asset class

However, as a consolation, the total long term capital gains exemption for shares and equity-oriented funds has been increased from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 1.25 lakh per year. Now let us look into what this means for different asset classes.

Listed stocks, equity mutual funds and listed bonds

In the table below, the changes are

  • the STCG for shares and equity funds (from the present 15%),
  • LTCG for all the 3 instruments (from 10% to 12.5%) and
  • the holding period for REITs and InvITs that has changed from 36 months to 12 months.

What it means for you: Your LTCG incidence will go up from 10% to 12.5%. So, on a say Rs 10,000 gain, if you paid Rs 1,000 as LTCG it would now be Rs 1,250 or a 25% increased tax outflow. In STCG, this is even worse as it moves from 15% to 20%. The impact here is a 33% increase in tax outflow. But you need to keep in mind that the exemption on capital gains has increased from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 1.25 lakh for LTCG. The other positive is recognition of REITs and InvITs as LTCG if held for 12 months. Overall negative, especially for STCG.

Unlisted bonds, debentures and shares

In the table below, the holding period has reduced from 36 to 24 months for all the instruments mentioned. STCG has remained the same and LTCG is proposed at 12.5% from the present 20% with indexation.

What it means for you: Holding period reduction from 36 months to 24 months is a positive. The 12.5% taxation can largely be positive for unlisted shares and can go either way for unlisted bonds and debentures. Overall marginally positive.

Certain categories of mutual funds

As shown in the table below,

  • For equity Funds: Tax on STCG and LTCG have increased (from 15% and 10% respectively).
  • For debt-oriented and conservative hybrid funds: Nothing changes.
  • For gold, international and fund of funds (with less than 65% in debt): The definition of specified mutual funds has changed. Therefore, these will no longer be taxed like debt.

One class of product that we have not mentioned above is gold and silver ETFs and International ETFs. While the intent of the law appears to be to take them out of debt definition, it is unclear whether they will be considered as listed security for classifying as >12 month LTCG. One interpretation is that they will not fall under the debt category and are listed and should automatically be classified like equity for LTCG and STCG.

We think this may not be the case. In other words, for gold and International funds, holding period is likely >24 months for LTCG. STCG appears to be slab rate (as was the case before) and LTCG at a much better rate of 12.5% (slab rate at present). We will update this if the interpretation is otherwise.

The other contentious issue at present is whether debt funds will be taxed under 12.5% for their long term capital gains, considering that all assets other than the listed securities fall under 12.5%. Our understanding is that, this is not the case. A separate section 50AA was created last year only for the purpose of taxing debt funds separately. This section remains, albeit with a modified interpretation of what constitutes specified mutual funds.

What it means for you: For gold funds, international funds and FoF that are not into debt, the taxation makes these asset classes better than debt and hence a big positive.

Physical assets

The biggest change for the asset classes below is the removal of indexation benefit and change in taxation from 20% (with indexation) to 12.5% (without indexation). Please note that this move is does not impact the end-users who sell their existing house and reinvest in a new house. Those benefits remain.

While holding period hasn’t changed for property, it has changed from 36 months to 24 months for gold.

What it means for you: The removal of indexation benefit may be felt steeply in real estate depending on whether you made a lot of returns or otherwise. For those with poor returns, indexation would have helped even avoid tax. For those with very high returns (or very long holding period), this might turn out to be better tax treatment than the one with 20% indexation. For gold, the reduction of holding period from 36 to 24 is a plus. Mixed impact based on your gain!

The budget proposed doubling the STT on both futures and options contracts.

Futures contract rates have increased from 0.0125% to 0.02% of the traded value. Options contracts rates have been Increased from 0.0625% to 0.1% of the option premium. This amounts to a 60% increase for both. But it is noteworthy that exchanges like the NSE had announced a reduction in exchange transaction charges effective April 2024, across cash and derivatives. So some parts of the market opine that the F&O STT hike is largely neutral. We do not yet have a view on this. However, what is clear is that the government (and also SEBI) is making moves to ensure that derivative trading is restricted to those with deep pockets.

Effective October 1, 2024, interest on your RBI Floating Rate Savings Bonds will be taxed if interest exceeds Rs 10,000 a year. Also, any G-Secs and State Development Loans (SDLs) notified in the Gazette will also be subject to such TDS. Interest on these instruments so far did not suffer TDS although they were taxed like any other interest income.

At present, TDS is deductible at 1% for sale of property exceeding Rs 50 lakh. The budget has provided clarification on TDS related to immovable property in situations with multiple buyers or sellers.

Previous interpretation:  There was confusion about whether TDS applied when the total sale consideration (price) exceeded ₹50 lakh but each individual buyer or seller's share was less than ₹50 lakh.

Budget 2024 clarification and amendment: The budget clarifies that TDS at 1% applies if the aggregate consideration (total sale price for all buyers and sellers combined) exceeds ₹50 lakh. This applies regardless of the amount paid by each individual buyer or received by each individual seller.

Simply put, if you're selling a property with multiple sellers or buyers, you need to consider the total sale price, not just each person's individual share, to determine if TDS applies.

Any amount received by you from a buyback of listed shares initiated by a company will be treated like dividends (other income) and taxed at your slab rate. However, the cost of such shares that you received as buyback can be set off against any other gain on the same shares in future. Example is given below:

What it means to you: After plugging the dividend distribution model used by promoters to take cash out, buybacks were a popular method to take out cash and distribute. With this proposal, such paybacks have been plugged. This means you might have fewer buybacks and you will need to assess whether it is attractive enough considering your tax outgo.

While this may not have a direct impact for you, the abolition of Angel tax can help entrepreneurs and the start-up ecosystem. Angel tax was the tax on investments received by startups from external investors. They were classified as income from other sources and taxed a rate of 30%, putting more burden on any young start-up. This change will be effective from April 1, 2025.

The finance minister also unveiled a new scheme called NPS Vatsalya under the National Pension Scheme (NPS) for minors, which offers parents and guardians the opportunity to start pension planning for their children by making contributions that will be transferred to the standard NPS when they turn 18. It may be too early to comment on this move but this is likely to be a better scheme (in terms of higher risk-return pay offs) than options like PPF, considering that the former is market linked. The lock-in, withdrawal, rebalance features etc. will determine whether it is worthwhile.

Budget 2024 – Impact on sectors and markets

The lower-than-expected fiscal deficit target of 4.9% for FY25 and unchanged capital expenditure may not be something for markets to rejoice as it broods higher capital gains and STT on futures and options. Nevertheless, the allocations indicate fiscal prudence and would likely be appreciated by the bond market.

We discussed about capital gains and their impact on your investments. Coming to the implication of the same on the market, this change is happening at a time when returns from equities as an asset class has been moderating over the past few years (even while there are bumper years). So, will equities remain attractive on a post-tax basis, especially for institutional investors who drive the market?

For foreign investors, currency depreciation can make this equation even worse (which has been the case between 2009 and 2020). The new capital gain rates are also coming at a time when markets are priced to perfection. So, any negative impact of this tax increase can also come to haunt the markets when expectation of growth cools-off at some point.

Meanwhile, the budget has also passed on taxation of buybacks in the hands of recipient (as dividend), which will put companies on a back foot. They cannot no longer easily reward investors when markets behave poorly.

On the positive side, the cheer for the market comes from fiscal consolidation, as rating agencies, bond markets and corporates will take the right cues from the same. While the fiscal deficit for FY24 itself came 0.2% lower than expected at 5.6%, the number for FY25 is pegged at 4.9% Vs market expectation of 5.1%.

The government has used better than expected tax collections and RBI dividend bounty to accelerate fiscal consolidation than tinkering too much with allocation. Besides, that we will have the next budget in a space of 6 months may have also kept the government from tinkering much with allocations. The few areas that saw allocation (money and space) was clean energy transition, innovation and R&D. Rest went to social development projects.

Another positive highlight in the budget was the government’s focus on employment creation with measures for employment and skilling the youth that would span over several years with a mammoth allocation of Rs 2 lakh crore. This includes incentive for employees and employers to absorb, skill and retain youth. This is something to be viewed as an initiative that would carry on in the coming years until it brings desired results. This also vindicates market’s assumption post the general election outcome that the government’s thrust could be changing towards employment creation, rural growth, etc.

Meanwhile, the FM has also tried to lure taxpayers to switch to “new tax scheme” by doling out higher standard deduction and lowering tax slab rates. What these would also result in is more money in the hands of people which can be positive for discretionary consumption. That is a sort of “trend” that developed post general election and would see it accelerating now.

  • It is the railway and defence pack from the PSU space that reacted most negatively to the budget. While the government’s capex commitment didn’t change vs. the interim budget at Rs.11.11 lakh crore, FM has specifically mentioned that the future allocation will be considering other priorities and fiscal consolidation as well. The fact that the Budget speech states the need for private sector to take over the mantle of capex forward is clearly communicative of this.
  • Markets should take comfort that the capex is still maintained high at 3.4% of GDP, but it may be the higher expectations that was causing negative reaction, combined with irrational valuations in these segments.
  • The stock of electronics manufacturing pioneer Dixon Tech fell after the Budget lowered duties on imported mobile phones and chargers from 20% to 15%. The government is perhaps of the view that the sector is approaching the desired scale and that it makes sense to lower the duty to where it was before the PLI incentives, where duty protection was given to help them scale.
  • On the positive side, Gold retailers got a shot in the arm with 9% reduction in customs duty on gold from 15% to 6% and this could not have come at a better time, just ahead of the festival season.  While this happened, Gold financiers witnessed a negative reaction as gold prices plunged, adversely affecting their loan to value (LTV) ratio.
  • ITC led the gains from heavyweights as the Budget spared smokers this time. The broader consumer sector and the IT sector gained in a weak market.
  • While these are but pockets of momentary market reaction, for us the accelerating trend in the consumption space, post elections, could have got a shot in the arm from the social measures in this Budget. Beyond that, there isn’t much to take home.

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65 thoughts on “Budget 2024 – impact on your taxes, investments and markets”

  1. Vidya…Is the clause under Debt funds “The changes are effective ONLY FROM APRIL 1, 2025” double confirmed? I did not see that in other web site notes and confusion prevails everywhere to the extent that even sites like cafemutual got the debt funds taxation wrong (initially) as 12.5% and then, later corrected it.

    1. Hello Sir, yes, the definition/classification of specified mutual funds (which should be at slab rate and which ones are excluded) effective only April 1, 2025. Only the rates of 12.5 and 20 are applicable right away.thanks, Vidya

  2. Hi , Very well explained , thanks
    Is there any change in tax on ESPP purchase and could you pls explain below scenarios ?
    1. ESPP stocks purchased in a USA based company ?
    a. Any change in Foreign Remittance Tax ?
    2. ESPP stocks purchased in a Indian based company ?

  3. Sridhar Ramadoss

    For old property held before 2001, would indexation benefit apply while computing LTCG? If indexation benefit is allowed in such cases, would the resultant Gain be taxed at 12.5% or 20%?

    It shall be helpful if PI can clarify this aspect once a clear viewpoint emerges in the coming days.

    1. We are awaiting for clarification for FinMin for us to clarify 🙂 While ther eis no written document, the FInance Secretary in a passing comment to media has mentioned there properties boght before April 1, 2001 will be grandfathered. What such grandfathering involves (indexation or such the value as of April 2001) is not clear. Comments in media talks about indexation availability for such properties. We will clarify here once there is written document. Thanks, Vidya

  4. Thanks for this. not sure if this is clarified above, what is the tax rate now for funds which hold equity between 35%-65%, likes of PPFAS dynamic asset allocation fund, which was launched last year mainly to get taxation benefit like debt funds? are they taxed at slab now like debt funds (for both STCG & LTCH) or are they taxed at 12.5% for LTCG

  5. Thanks for the excellent article. I have the following doubts:

    1. Hybrid funds (like HDFC Balanced advantage) can keep net equity at a lower level (40% for ex) and with arbitrage they will be 65%. I hope this still remains as Equity taxation?
    2. There are some funds like Parag DAA and SBI Multi asset fund that have 35% equity and have indexation today. Now with indexation completely gone where will they fit into? Treated as a debt fund or like Real estate with a flat 12.5% after 2 years?
    3. What is the deal with Arbitrage funds? I saw in some new channel that tax efficiency for Arbitrage fund is removed. Do we have the fine print yet?
    4. Also where will the Equity Savings fund belong? I suppose they are like hybrid funds anyway but always have lower Equity (max 30%) unlike hybrids which can go from low to high

    My worry is even if Arbitrage, Equity savings is left out they will be targeted eventually if the govt wants to keep FD investors back there in the bank and not allow them to use products like Equity Savings and Arbitrage funds etc.

    1. 1. BA/DAA, equity savings and arbitrage remain with equity status.
      2. If their debt holding is more than 65% they will be treat like debt. If equity less than 65% but debt is also less than 65% then they will likely come under 12.5% – 2 years LTCG category. 3. No, it remains the same..except higher tax for LTCG and STCG like other equity products. 4. Answered in 1 above.
      Your worry is legitimate..if derivatives are stopped being treated as equity for tax purpose. For now, they remain equity. We have to cross the bridge when it comes 🙂 Vidya

      1. Thanks for your clarification.

        Just wanted to inform – I got an update from PPFAS that DAA will be LTCG 12.5% tax and slab rate for STCG.

        Also arbitage funds tax efficiency is considered in the context that its usually for parking short term cash for a few months so an STCG of 20% makes is less attractive but we can’t over analyse these things anyway.

  6. Sivaram P. Rao

    Hi,
    Is there clarity on tax treatment of debt funds purchased before 1 Apr 2023 which were grandfathered? Do they also move to slab rate or are they going to be taxed at 12.5% if sold after 2 years?

    1. There is no clarification given on this. As of now, our understanding is that the LTCG for units bought before March 31, 2023 will be taxed at 12.5% if held for more than 2 years. This – unless the indexation is grandfathered for purchases made before March 31, 2023. thanks, Vidya

      1. I hope and pray that the GoI does not resile on “indexation” benefit protected on debt funds purchased before 1st April 2023; as the rules specifically grandfathered indexation on such purchases.
        Any retrospective change to the detriment of investors will cut at the root of confidence on the sovereign.

    1. there is no clarification given on this. As of now, our understanding is that the LTCG for units bought before March 31, 2023 will be taxed at 12.5% if held for more than 2 years. This – unless the indexation is grandfathered for purchases made before March 31, 2023.
      Vidya

  7. Gopalakrishnan CS

    Hi
    Very informative purely from the investors point of view. One clarification are the debt funds which we were holding for more than 10 years will have no indexation benefits ?

    1. there is no clarification given on this. As of now, our understanding is that the LTCG for units bought before March 31, 2023 will be taxed at 12.5% if held for more than 2 years. This – unless the indexation is grandfathered for purchases made before March 31, 2023.

  8. Ravishankar Seshadri

    Is the LTCG indexation benefit protected for redemption made after today in respect of investments done in debt funds before 31 March 2023? If it is also taken away, that is big disappointment.

    1. there is no clarification given on this. As of now, our understanding is that the LTCG for units bought before March 31, 2023 will be taxed at 12.5% if held for more than 2 years. This – unless the indexation is grandfathered for purchases made before March 31, 2023.
      Vidya

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