This day trader lost Rs 24 lakh in 5 minutes
Unless
you know the rules of trading in futures and options completely, you could end
up running huge losses, as Chirag Gupta, a 27-year-old day trader recently did.
Tinesh Bhasin reports. Rediffmail.com
Tinesh Bhasin reports. Rediffmail.com
Imagine
investing about Rs 11,250 in the stock market and getting a return of Rs 6.08
lakh in a span of five minutes.
But when
the broker sends you the contract note, the securities transaction tax (STT)
for the trade is over Rs 24 lakh -- almost four times the profit -- and it's
not a printing mistake.
It
happened with 27-year-old management student Chirag Gupta.
When
about five minutes were left for the markets to close, Gupta saw that he could
buy Nifty call options at 5 paise per unit and make a profit of around Rs 2.75
a unit.
He bought
options that Nifty will close above 8,600 and it closed at 8,602.75.
Gupta
bought all the Nifty lots (3,000) he could in the short span of time.
One Nifty
lot has 75 units.
Later, he
realised that his broker had deducted over Rs 24 lakh from his trading account
for STT.
Gupta's
mistake: He let the option expire.
The
calculation of STT is different if a trader squares off the position before
expiry and if he lets the contract expire.
"If
a person squares off his long position before the market closes, STT of 0.05
per cent is levied on the premium paid when contract is sold. However, if the
contract expires, the STT rate is 0.125 per cent, and is charged on the entire
settlement value of the contract, including the value (or price) of the
asset," says Venu Madhav, chief operating officer, Zerodha.
Brokers
suggest that irrespective of whether a trader has a put option or a call option
or whether s/he is in profit or loss, s/he should ensure that all the trades
are settled before the expiry of contract.
Brokers
do have a mechanism to prevent such issues.
"Most
brokers track such trades. On the last day of expiry of contracts, we send
messages and emails to customers to square off their positions. If clients
still fail to do so, brokers square off the trades to prevent losses to the
client," says Vikas Singhania, executive director, Trade Smart Online.
But if
the trades happen in the last few minutes, as in Gupta's case, the broker
cannot do much.
Brokers
are not clear why the taxation differs.
Some say
it's a penalty by the exchanges. They point that that the way STT is calculated
on expiry of contract can impact the entire financial system -- not just the
trader.
Umesh
Mehta, head of research, Samco Securities, explains: STT is deducted by the
broker after the trade and passed on to the stock exchanges. If their customer
does not have enough money to pay the STT, it's the brokers' responsibility to
pay.
If a
broker does not have the required net worth, he can go bankrupt.
"I
could get only 3,000 lots. I would have easily bought 20 times the contracts,
if available, as I thought it was an arbitrage," says Gupta.
In such a
case his tax liability would be around Rs 4.8 crore.
Gupta is
running a petition (https://www.change.org/p/security-transaction-tax-stt-a-trap-for-traders-and-a-systemic-risk-for-capital-markets)
requesting policymakers and regulator to change the calculation of STT on
contracts that expire.
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