The Rs 40-trillion mutual fund (MF) industry is expected to benefit from stripping tax advantages off high-ticket insurance products and market-linked debentures (MLDs) in the latest Budget.
“With the attractiveness of MLDs and big-ticket insurance investments diminished, HNIs may allocate more towards debt mutual funds,” said N S Venkatesh, CEO of the Association of Mutual Funds in India (Amfi).
“Mutual funds would benefit from the change in the taxation of insurance products and MLDs. Limits on capital gains on real estate investment also augurs well for debt funds,” said A Balasubramanian, managing director and chief executive officer, Aditya Birla Sun Life AMC.
In the latest Budget, the government has proposed higher taxes on MLDs by imposing a short-term capital gains tax, irrespective of the investment time frame. As of now, investments in MLDs for more than a year qualify for long-term capital gains tax at 10 per cent. With the change in taxation, investors will have to pay tax at their slab rate, which can be as high as 30 per cent.
However, this may not be the end of the road for MLDs, feel analysts. “MLDs may have lost the tax advantage but they remain a unique offering.
These are still one-of-a-kind quasi-equity products that come with downside protection,” said Dhaval Kapadia, director, portfolio specialist, Morningstar Investment Adviser India.
In the case of insurance, the government has removed tax exemptions for insurance policies with premia of over Rs 5 lakh.
MLD is a structured product that provides returns based on the performance of an underlying index or security. Since most MLDs offer principal protection, they are deemed to be a fixed-income investment option. As MLDs require a minimum investment of Rs 10 lakh, their investors are mostly HNIs.