When Ravi Sharma sold property that he had purchased a decade ago, he made a handsome profit on it. But along with this, came the capital gains tax liability. He now had two options.
He could invest the capital gains in Section 54EC bonds that are currently being issued by Rural Electrification Corporation and National Highways Authority of India and thereby save the entire amount. Or he could actually pay the tax and invest the balance in quality equity funds.
Sharma was inclined towards the second option. The bonds offer a low annual interest rate, currently six per cent and are taxable. Plus, the money remains locked for three years. We decided to run some numbers.
The analysis saw Sharma clutching the application form for the bonds. Section 54EC bonds may also be used to save tax on long-term capital gains from sale of non-equity mutual funds, bonds, debentures, gold, jewellery or even gold exchange traded funds.
GAME PLAN
In spite of the fact that the returns are low, the interest taxable and a three-year lock-in. To know why, examine the table.
The key thing is that on account of being a tax saving bond, they effectively offer investors an up-front 20 per cent discount. It is like investing Rs 80 but earning a return on Rs 100. Also, the 20 per cent gets spread over just the three-year lock-in period of the bonds.
So, say the investor earned a capital gain of Rs 100. Effectively, he will end up investing Rs 80 in the bonds, as he saves a tax of Rs 20.
At six per cent, he earns Rs 6