Home > Business > Business Headline > Report

Investors rush to book loss entries

Nimesh Shah in Mumbai | March 22, 2004 08:32 IST

As the end of the financial year approaches, the demand from retail investors and high net worth individuals for book entries showing a loss in capital market transactions has resurfaced.

Market sources said investors who have made profits in the course of the year are now rushing to buy "loss entries" to offset their profits for the year.

Such has been the rush with brokers that the latter have started charging a premium of 3-4 per cent on the value of the entry, a source said.

How it is done

An investor, X, makes a profit of Rs 1 crore in capital market transactions

His short-term capital gains tax liability works out to Rs 30 lakh

Instead of paying the entire tax, the investor books a loss by getting a dummy entry

The same dummy entry is then reversed on a later date

Brokers said the rush this year exceeds all previous year's records since most investors have made huge profits in the current bull run.

The benchmark Bombay Stock Exchange Sensex appreciated nearly 100 per cent from its low of 2,924 in April 2003 to an all-time high of 6250 in January 2004.

A leading broker on condition of anonymity said, "There has been huge demand for loss entries from our clients which has become a difficult task for us to fulfill."

An NSE broker also confirmed there was a mad rush for loss entries. To meet this demand, brokers are now turning to the derivatives segment, unlike in previous years where they could manage to get entries in the cash segment alone.

The modus operandi is simple. Say an investor, X, has made a profit of Rs 1 crore (Rs 10 million) in the current bull rally. So his short-term capital gain tax liability works out to Rs 30 lakh (Rs 3 million).

Instead of paying the entire tax, the investor books a loss by getting a dummy entry. The same dummy entry is then reversed on a later date by the broker in the stock exchange.

The broker who manages a dummy entry buys a call for an investor who wants to book a loss. And when the prices fall the premium on the call reduces, and the investor's entry is reversed at a lower price, thus showing losses on his account. Also the premium keeps on falling closer to the expiry date.

These transactions require an entry on the other side of the transaction -- of a person selling the call at a high price and buying it back at a lower price. The broker usually arranges for a dummy investor folio where the corresponding sale entries are parked, and for this, demands a premium.

Article Tools
Email this article
Print this article
Write us a letter
Discuss this article



Related Stories


Invest your capital gains



People Who Read This Also Read


The youngest top selling agent

Reforms swell MNC profit

Govt fights to limit IDFC blaze








Powered by










Copyright © 2004 rediff.com India Limited. All Rights Reserved.