Moneycontrol » News » Budget Columns

Union Budget, what's that?

Published on Wed, Feb 28, 2007 at 19:24 |  Source : Moneycontrol.com

Updated at Wed, Feb 28, 2007 at 19:57  

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3
0
0
Share on Tumblr
Udayan Mukherjee, Stocks Editor, TV18

For any beast of the stock market, there is one simple takeaway from this year's Budget: From next time, learn to ignore it, its just not worth the hype. Truly, P Chidambaram is no longer the reformer we once knew. In any case, his guns are now trained on other segments of the economy, maybe justifiably so.

He probably thinks the corporate sector and the markets don't really need much from him. Which is true. So its in the fitness of things that he dwells on making us a more inclusive economy, harps on education, infrastructure and agriculture. All laudable things. Just that, if you are market player, don't lose sleep over it. When you don't have expectations, you are not disappointed easily.

Having said this, a few budget moves rankle. The two tier excise on cement is downright foolish and regressive. Surely he doesn't expect cement companies to start selling at less than 190 a bag to pay less excise? And of course cement companies will pass this down, so cement will sell at a higher price which defeats the very purpose of such a move anyway. Hare brained. There's no argument against taxing IT companies, in principle, just extending MAT is a bit confusing. One it goes against the promise of the 10A/10B tenure and two, people may infer that 10A/10B may actually be extended, now that MAT is in! For people who were betting on a corporate tax surcharge cut, the budget is a shocker. The surcharge stays and companies will now have to effectively pay more tax. There's a new cess. The fine print will throw up how badly FBT on ESOPs will hurt companies who have active stock option plans. Seems like a harsh step. And then there is the baffling hike in dividend distribution tax. What sense does that make? Evidently, the corporate sector isn't his favourite son, this time.

There were glimpses of the reformer. Alas, just glimpses. Using our large forex reserves to fund infrastructure seems like an innovative step. Short selling and a lending and borrowing system are steps forward. But for someone spoilt on the diet of the 1997 budget, its too little. For a lesser finance minister, you may have called it an average budget, for Chidambaram it is disappointingly pedestrian. Anyway its over and done with now.

Next week, everyone would have forgotten about it too. Life will carry on. For the market, which has corrected quite sharply this month, there are bigger issues. The global situation has turned murky. That may hold the key to where we are headed in the near term. In the absolute near term , the market seems a bit oversold. There may be a bounce but after that it will probably have to spend some time in consolidation. Just don't forget the lesson next time: the Budget doesn't matter to your life in the markets. Leave the jumping around to the media, we have to do it for a living.

- Udayan Mukherjee, Stocks Editor, TV18

  

More on Moneycontrol

Trending News

Business News

Logitech ZAAG iPad2 Keyboard Case
Competition ahoy: Monkey 1, Sensex in neck-and-neck race "Competition ahoy: Monkey 1, Sensex in neck-and-neck race"

Sources Say BCCI Sahara Meet BCCI Agrees To All Other Demands Put In By Sahara

The latest earning numbers FIRST on CNBC-TV18
Videos

Feb 12 2012, 11:20

See more rally even if Greek crisis drags on: RBS

- in FII View

Feb 10 2012, 21:39

Truck demand sluggish; margins down 80bps: Shriram Trans

- in Results Boardroom

Interviews

Feb 12 2012, 15:00 | Source: CNBC-TV18

Bosch sees 3-5% growth in 2012, bets big on India  

Feb 11 2012, 11:52 | Source: CNBC-TV18

TCS to expand centers in N.America; CY12 focus on Japan  

Subscribe to

Moneycontrol Newsletters

Moneycontrol.com offers you a choice of various sectoral and other newsletters for FREE!

Follow moneycontrol.com