Markets Eye STT Cut, LTCG Relief in Upcoming Budget: NSE Official

Ahead of the Union Budget 2026-27, NSE's Sriram Krishnan stated market participants are seeking a reduction in Securities Transaction Tax (STT) to lower trading costs. He added that foreign investors want the Long-Term Capital Gains tax removed for more efficient repatriation and global parity. Krishnan also announced NSE's plans to launch new commodity contracts, including Brent crude and gold, while highlighting a massive surge in retail investors from 2.9 to 12.5 crore post-Covid. Furthermore, he revealed the exchange is actively deploying artificial intelligence across various functions like surveillance and document analysis.

Key Points: Budget 2026-27: Markets Seek STT Cut, LTCG Tax Relief

  • STT reduction expected
  • LTCG tax relief for foreign investors
  • New commodity contracts launching
  • Retail investors surge to 12.5 crore
  • NSE deploying AI in operations
4 min read

Markets seek STT cut, LTCG relief in Budget: NSE's Chief Business Development Officer Sriram Krishnan

NSE's Sriram Krishnan reveals market expectations for tax relief in the Budget, including STT reduction and LTCG removal for foreign investors.

"Market participants have expressed a view that they'd like to see some reduction in STT - Sriram Krishnan"

Coimbatore, January 27

Ahead of the Union Budget for 2026-27, Sriram Krishnan, National Stock Exchange's Chief Business Development Officer, said market participants are expecting tax relief, particularly a reduction in Securities Transaction Tax, while foreign investors are seeking doing away with Long-Term Capital Gains tax.

Speaking to ANI, Krishnan said, "Market participants have expressed a view that they'd like to see some reduction in STT, which is seen as the major contributor to the cost of trading."

He added, "Foreign investors have (also) spoken about long-term capital gains tax if it can be done away with. That can help them because, repatriation can be more efficient and we will then be on par with some of the other countries that they invest into."

Krishnan noted that several industries are also expecting some relief in the Budget amid global uncertainty.

"Overall, I think many industries are expecting some relief because they have all been going through a tough time thanks to the geopolitical situation and the fact that tariffs are affecting some of them. So I think the budget can be expected to be producing some of these outcomes."

On NSE's product expansion, Krishnan said the exchange is preparing to roll out several new offerings in the commodities segment.

"NSE is lining up to improve the available products in the commodity segment. For example, we have approvals to launch a Brent crude oil contract, a 10-gram gold contract, and also a natural gas contract based on Indian prices." He added, "These are three products which will get launched very soon."

He also highlighted growing participation in existing contracts and future plans.

"We are also seeing increasing participation in our WTI crude oil contract. And we are also trying to see if there are any amendments required in the current product proposition within commodities."

Krishnan said approvals are awaited for debt market derivatives as well. "Apart from that, we are waiting for approval for launching government bond index derivatives and corporate bond index derivatives."

Commenting on the broader market scenario, Krishnan said retail participation has risen sharply over the last few years, particularly after Covid.

"As a stock exchange we are seeing a huge amount of retail participation in the last few years particularly after Covid."

He said the number of investors has surged.

"The number of retail investors, the unique investors, has gone up from about 2.9 crores to 12.5 crores today. So that's a massive growth that we have seen in number of investors."

On new listings on NSE, he said, "In 2024, if you see, 268 companies got listed on NSE. In 2025, 220 companies got listed on NSE. So on average, we seem to have 200-plus companies coming to NSE every single year."

Addressing market volatility, Krishnan said it is driven by external factors.

"Market volatility is not something that NSE will do anything about. It is what it is based on what we are seeing." He added, "In a geopolitically uncertain environment, there is bound to be some amount of stress and volatility and that is part of the natural twists and turns that we will see."

On technology and risk management, he said, "The NSE's technology has been very, very acclaimed for close to three decades now in the whole world." Highlighting scale, he added, "We have seen 2,000 crore order messages hitting NSE within one day, which is just six hours and 15 minutes."

Krishnan said NSE is already deploying artificial intelligence across operations. "NSE is already using AI in many of the activities. For example, in surveillance, in deciphering offer documents, in reading or summarising lengthy code judgments in training and development of the software codes and so on and so forth."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

A
Arjun K
While tax relief is welcome, we must also consider the government's revenue needs. LTCG tax removal for foreign investors might attract capital, but what about ensuring a level playing field for domestic investors? The focus should be balanced.
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Rohit P
The growth from 2.9 to 12.5 crore investors is phenomenal! It shows the rising financial awareness in India. More products like the new gold and crude contracts will only deepen the market. Bullish on Indian markets! 📈
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Sarah B
Interesting read. As someone new to investing in India, the technology and scale mentioned (2000 crore orders in a day!) is impressive. The use of AI in surveillance is reassuring for risk management.
V
Vikram M
Good to see NSE expanding in commodities. A natural gas contract based on Indian prices is much needed. However, I hope the budget also provides some relief to the manufacturing sector which is facing global headwinds.
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Karthik V
The request to do away with LTCG for foreign investors feels a bit one-sided. What about simplifying the tax structure for resident investors as well? The budget should focus on boosting domestic confidence alongside attracting foreign flows.

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