Shweta Rajani, Head-Mutual Fund, Anand Rathi Wealth, says “any capital asset that you have held and sold like real estate, depending on the holding period will be categorised under short-term or long-term capital gain. You could have had unlisted equity or listed equity that made any gains on that. You could have debt mutual funds, you could have some bonds that you have sold. So, again, listed bonds or unlisted bonds – either way – will again come under the head of capital gains. So, a simple definition is any capital assets sold will have an implication of capital gains.”
Let us start by talking about the role that taxation plays in one's investment decision-making process and to what extent investors must be wary of tax when they are deciding where they want to invest and where they want to park their money.
Shweta Rajani: Since we are talking about tax and investments, both are actually interrelated. When you are taking your investment decisions, one of the factors that one must look at would be taxation. So, generally when we are looking at our investment opportunities, we would look at what can be the return expectation, what is the time horizon, what is the risk factor. Like that, I think liquidity and tax implications should be one key factor for determining whether you should invest in that instrument or not. So, it should be, a key selection criteria, while it should not be the only selection criteria.
One more thing is that when you are looking at investments and taxation, it starts from the day you
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