STT Hike Targets F&O Speculation, 90% Lose Money: Sitharaman

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman stated the hike in Securities Transaction Tax on futures and options is specifically intended to discourage speculative trading. She cited a SEBI report indicating that approximately 90% of individual traders in the F&O segment incur significant losses. The government rationale notes the total volume of options and futures transactions exceeds 500 times India's GDP. The STT increase applies only to these derivatives, not other asset classes, as part of measures to strengthen the derivatives framework and protect retail investors.

Key Points: STT Hike on F&O to Curb Speculative Trading, Says FM

  • STT hike targets speculative F&O trading
  • SEBI report shows 90% of F&O traders lose money
  • Government cites transaction volume 500x GDP
  • Increase applies only to futures and options
3 min read

Hike in STT on F&O is to discourage speculative trading: Nirmala Sitharman

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman explains the STT hike on Futures & Options aims to discourage speculative trading after SEBI data shows 90% of investors lose money.

"F&O is a highly speculative market. - Nirmala Sitharaman"

New Delhi, February 2

A day after Budget announcement, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Monday the hike in Securities Transaction Tax on futures and options was to discourage investors from getting into speculative trading.

She said many parents had called up and apprised that their children were investing and losing money in F&O trading. "F&O is a highly speculative market," she asserted.

The finance minister told reporters that the increase in STT on F&O was categorically to discourage speculation in derivatives trade.

Citing a SEBI report, she said that 90 per cent of people who invest in F&O lose their money. "People are losing money due to high speculation in F&O trading," she added.

A study conducted by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) earlier revealed that approximately 93 per cent of individual traders in the equity futures and options (F&O) segment continue to incur significant losses. Despite consecutive years of losses, more than 75 per cent of loss-making traders continued trading in F&O.

F&O, which stands for Futures and Options, refers to financial derivatives that allow traders to speculate on asset price movements without owning the asset itself. The underlying asset can be stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, indices, exchange rates, or interest rates.

Securities Transaction Tax is a small levy charged by the government on every buy or sell transaction in the stock market, including shares, futures, and options. While it may appear modest, STT directly increases trading costs, particularly for frequent traders, hedgers, and arbitrageurs.

The government proposed raising the STT on Futures to 0.05 per cent from the current 0.02 per cent. STT on options premium and exercise of options are both proposed to be raised to 0.15 per cent from the present rate of 0.1 per cent and 0.125 per cent, respectively.

Notably, STT has been raised only on options and futures, and not on other asset classes. Other STT rates remain the same.

The Government gave the rationale that the total volume of options and futures transactions is more than 500 times the Indian GDP. Therefore, the government believed there was justification for raising rates to curb purely speculative activity in options and futures.

As retail investors are increasingly incurring losses in equity index derivatives (F&O) trade, SEBI and the government have been, from time to time, putting in place measures to strengthen the derivatives framework, including raising minimum contract size, to disincentivise such trades.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While I understand the intent to protect retail investors, this feels like a blanket punishment. It also impacts serious traders and hedgers who use F&O for legitimate risk management. Couldn't they have introduced better financial literacy programs instead of just raising costs?
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Priya S
As a parent, I completely agree with the Finance Minister. My nephew lost a significant amount of his savings last year trading options after watching some "guru" on YouTube. The government is right to step in. This is about protecting our youth from get-rich-quick schemes disguised as investing.
R
Rohit P
The volume being 500 times GDP is mind-boggling! It shows most of it is just speculative churn with no real value creation. This tax is a small price to pay if it makes people think twice before placing a reckless trade. Hope it works.
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Karthik V
Respectfully, this seems like a revenue-raising measure wrapped in a protective narrative. If the goal was truly to discourage speculation, why not ban leveraged trading for small accounts or mandate stricter KYC for F&O? The STT hike feels like an easy way out that hurts all traders.
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Meera T
People need to understand the difference between investing and gambling. Buying shares of a good company for the long term is one thing, betting on Nifty's movement next Thursday is entirely different. This policy nudge is in the right direction. 🙏

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