Wait...
Search Global Export Import Trade Data
Recent Searches: No Recent Searches

Demat trade stamp duty waiver on anvil.


Date: 21-08-2009
Subject: Demat trade stamp duty waiver on anvil
NEW DELHI: The Centre and stock market regulator SEBI have asked states to either waive off or rationalise the stamp duty on financial transactions executed electronically, a move that could bring down the transaction costs on the various electronic exchanges in India.

This will figure at the meeting of the standing committee of state finance secretaries on Friday, a finance ministry official told ET.

Stamp duty is a form of tax that is usually levied on documents and some transactions such as buying and selling of land. “A low and uniform stamp duty is crucial for the development of a seamless financial market in the country,” the official said. Besides bringing about rationalisation and uniformity in stamp duty rates, the Centre also wants states to streamline the mechanism of collecting the levy, he added.

At present, when an investor buys or sells shares, he has to pay a stamp duty. The duty is collected by his broker, who executes the transaction on his behalf on the stock exchange and also deposits the same with the state government concerned.

The duty—levied on the total value of the transaction—varies from state to state. At present, while Maharashtra levies stamp duty at the rate of Rs 200 per Rs 1 crore, Delhi levies it at Rs 1,000 per Rs 1 crore and Kerala at Rs 5,000 per Rs 1 crore. These high duties, together with the securities transaction tax, exchange charges and brokerages, inflate the transaction cost on Indian stock exchanges to one of the highest in the world.

The variable duty structure not only comes in the way of the development of a pan-India financial market, but also encourages brokers to seek out less-costly states, leading to complications and ambiguity.

States that impose a higher duty tend to lose revenues as brokers route transactions through offices in states that have lower duty.

Moreover, there is no clear rule for the imposition of the levy. For example, if a shareholder in Assam sells a security through a broker in Delhi who is a member of a stock exchange in Mumbai, there is no clarity on when the duty should be levied and who would collect it. Currently, the most common practice is that a broker collects the duty from his client and deposits it with the state where the brokerage firm is registered. However, at times this leads to dual taxation. “We are ready to pay, but the duty should be uniform and the collection mechanism should be streamlined,” said BK Sabharwal, chairman (northern region), Association of National Stock Exchange Members of India.

Source : The Economic Times

Get Sample Now

Which service(s) are you interested in?
 Export Data
 Import Data
 Both
 Buyers
 Suppliers
 Both
OR
 Exim Help
+


What is New?

Date: 31-07-2025
Notification No. 49/2025-CUSTOMS (N.T.)
Fixation of Tariff Value of Edible Oils,Brass Scrap, Areca Nut, Gold and Silver

Date: 19-07-2025
Notification No. 34/2025-Customs
Seeks to amend notification No. 146/94-Customs, dated the 13th July, 1994 to omit serial number 10A.

Date: 18-07-2025
Notification No. 33/2025-Customs
Seeks to amend notification No. 146/94-Customs, dated the 13th July, 1994 to provide exemption on import of Horses for Polo (HS 0101 29 10) under specified condition.

Date: 16-07-2025
Notification No. 47/2025-Customs (N.T.)
Appointment of Common Adjudicating Authority for the purpose of finalization of Provisional Assessment in SVB case w.r.t. M/s. Ammega Belting India Pvt. Ltd. -reg

Date: 15-07-2025
Notification No. 46/2025-CUSTOMS (N.T.)
Fixation of Tariff Value of Edible Oils, Brass Scrap, Areca Nut, Gold and Silver

Date: 30-06-2025
Notification No. 44/2025-CUSTOMS (N.T.)
Fixation of Tariff Value of Edible Oils, Brass Scrap, Areca Nut, Gold and Silver

Date: 30-06-2025
Notification No. 32/2025-Customs
Seeks to amend Notification No.130/2010- Customs dated 23.12.2010 to extend the exemption benefits to Air Canada.

Date: 13-06-2025
Notification No. 43/2025-CUSTOMS (N.T.)
Fixation of Tariff Value of Edible Oils, Brass Scrap, Areca Nut, Gold and Silver

Date: 11-06-2025
Notification No. 42/2025-CUSTOMS (N.T.)
Fixation of Tariff Value of Edible Oils, Brass Scrap, Areca Nut, Gold and Silver

Date: 06-06-2025
Notification No. 13/2025-Customs (ADD)
Seeks to impose Anti Dumping Duty on imports of ‘Insoluble Sulphur’ originating in or exported from China PR and Japan.



Exim Guru Copyright © 1999-2025 Exim Guru. All Rights Reserved.
The information presented on the site is believed to be accurate. However, InfodriveIndia takes no legal responsibilities for the validity of the information.
Please read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy before you use this Export Import Data Directory.

EximGuru.com

C/o InfodriveIndia Pvt Ltd
F-19, Pocket F, Okhla Phase-I
Okhla Industrial Area
New Delhi - 110020, India
Phone : 011 - 40703001