Image used for representational purpose only.

Image used for representational purpose only.
| Photo Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto

Government raised transaction taxes on equity ​derivatives in Union Budget presentation on Sunday ‌(February 1, 2026) in a bid to cool down ​derivatives markets, sending stock indexes down on concerns over trading higher costs.

The Budget also proposed changes in taxation of buybacks, which involves companies repurchasing their own shares from existing shareholders usually from the open market or through a tender offer.

Also read | Union Budget 2026 LIVE

The Nifty ​50 index was down 0.84%, while ⁠the BSE Sensex index was down 0.74%

The government proposed increasing the securities transaction tax on futures to 0.05% from 0.02% and ​on options to 0.15% ⁠from 0.1%. It also said share buybacks would be taxed as capital gains at slab rates, with large shareholders facing additional levies.


Also read | Industry reactions LIVE

“Higher transaction ‌costs are likely to reduce trading volumes, dampen ‌short-term momentum, and lower profitability for active market participants. FII participation in derivatives ‍may also moderate as post-tax trading efficiency declines, impacting overall liquidity,” Raj Gaikar, a research analyst with Mumbai-based ‍SAMCO Securities, said.

“This can create a cascading effect on revenue streams of broking companies, exchanges, AMCs, and depositories, which are closely linked to market turnover,” he added.

Other analysts said that the increase will further cool derivatives trading in India and lead to reduction in volumes.

“The intent appears to ⁠be volume moderation rather than revenue maximisation, as any potential revenue gain could be offset ​by lower derivative volumes,” Shripal Shah, MD & CEO Kotak ⁠Securities said.

The government has been trying to reduce the derivatives trading activity through tighter regulations and increased taxes in the last two years as retail investors continue to make ⁠losses.


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