Finance Bill 2023 Amendment: Debt Funds Proposed to be Taxed at Par with
FDs
·
Capital gains arising from debt mutual funds
as only short-term capital gains. It means gains arising from debt mutual funds
will be added to your taxable income and taxed at your income tax slab rate.
· If a
debt fund is held for more than 3 years, the investor pays long-term capital gains
tax at 20 per cent with indexation benefit
Currently, one of the biggest
reasons for investing in debt funds is the tax advantage they offer over fixed deposits.
In an unexpected move, the Finance
Bill 2023 has introduced an amendment that will classify capital gains arising from
debt mutual funds as only short-term capital gains. It means gains arising from
debt mutual funds will be added to your taxable income and taxed at your income
tax slab rate.
Currently, one of the biggest
reasons for investing in debt funds is the tax advantage they offer over fixed deposits.
If a debt fund is held for more than 3 years, the investor pays long-term capital
gains tax at 20 per cent with indexation benefit while interest from the fixed deposit
is taxed as per one's tax slab. Hence, the post-tax returns for debt mutual funds
are higher than the post-tax returns of bank FDs. The short-term capital gain from
debt funds, however, is currently taxed as per individual tax slab if redeemed before
3 years.
“I hope the proposed change in
the Finance Bill to remove LTCG with indexation status on debt funds is reviewed. Financialization is just happening in India and
a vibrant corporate bond market needs a strong debt MF ecosystem,” tweeted Radhika
Gupta - Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Edelweiss Asset Management
Limited
The amendment in the Financial
Bill 2023 reads “Specified mutual fund means a mutual fund by whatever name called
where not more than 35 per cent of its total proceeds is invested in equity shares
of the domestic companies.”
Another major announcement in
Budget 2023 was related to market-linked debentures (MLD), which are also proposed
to be taxed as only short-term capital gain.
Market Linked Debentures are
non-convertible debentures where the return is not fixed but depends upon the performance
of the underlying index.
“While the market size of outstanding
MLDs is not large in the context of debt capital markets, select NBFC issuers specially
in the AA and below rating category have issued these bonds regularly in the last
few years. The tax arbitrage offered by these bonds, if sold prior to final fixing/maturity
is what has driven the demand for these debentures. As a corollary post the budget
announcements, we expect demand to reduce meaningfully and consecutively those issuers
who were issuing these MLD bonds will shift to plain vanilla debt issuances for
raising resources,” said Amit Tripathi, CIO – Fixed Income Investments, Nippon India
Mutual Fund told Business Today.