All you wanted to know about reporting capital gains in ITR forms

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Reporting capital gains in income tax returns (ITR) is undoubtedly becoming tedious for taxpayers. With the taxman aiming to leave no stone unturned, the disclosures in the ITR forms have only increased in the last few years.

Here, we simplify the reporting requirements of short term capital gains (STCG) and long-term capital gains (LTCG) under Capital Gains Schedule in the ITR forms.

Property, equity disclosures

After many tweaks over the last few years, there is thankfully no significant change to the current ITR forms (applicable for FY21). The only change is in the case of immovable property.

Here the difference between the transaction value and the circle rate is now altered to 10 per cent, from the previous level of 5 per cent, to be in line with the amendments in the tax law proposed in the Budget of 2020.

In case of STCG/LTCG on the sale of immovable property, it is mandatory to disclose the details such as consideration, stamp value, cost of acquisition of the property and name and PAN/Aadhaar number of the buyer etc.

These details should be furnished separately for each immovable property transferred during the year. If you have sold land and building, quoting the PAN of buyer is mandatory only if tax is deducted under section 194-IA or is mentioned in the documents.

For sale of listed equity shares or equity-oriented mutual fund units, while STCG on sale can be reported on a consolidated basis, scrip-wise details for long-term capital gains (for which LTCG tax at 10 per cent was introduced in Budget 2018 for sale exceeding ₹1 lakh) for certain transactions have to be reported under Schedule 112A.

However, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), vide a press release dated 26.09.2020, clarified that scrip-wise reporting in the ITR was required only for those shares/units eligible for the benefit of grandfathering.

The grandfathering clause exempts tax on LTCG on listed equity shares up to January 31, 2018 for those securities bought before that date.

The ITR form has introduced a drop-down feature in Schedule 112A wherein the taxpayer can select if the share/ unit was acquired “on or before” or “after 31.01.2018”.

For the listed shares/units acquired after 31.01.2018, the consolidated amount of sale consideration and cost of acquisition alone should be reported. For others, the fields requiring details of “ISIN code” and “name of share/ unit” scrip-wise has to be reported.

Amounts reinvested in certain specified forms such as residential house property, agricultural land or tax free bonds – which comes under Section 54 – can be claimed as deduction from capital gains. The details of such claims have to be furnished as per part D of the Schedule CG. Information such as cost of new residential house/agricultural land and amount invested in specified/notified bonds and date of these transactions are to be reported.

Further, part E of the Schedule CG provides for set-off of current year capital losses with current year capital gains. The schedule is mostly auto-filled but note that the long-term capital loss can only be adjusted with any long-term capital gains only. While short-term capital losses are allowed to be set-off against both long-term and short-term gains.

Also, part F of the Schedule requires reporting of quarter-wise details of incomes under the head ‘capital gains’, details of which is taken for calculation of advance tax liability and interest under 234C. Thus, capital gains accrual or receipt have to be reported on a quarterly basis.

Other schedules

While most of the Schedule CG requires entering the details, other schedules relevant to reporting of capital gains mostly require just confirmation as most of the details would have been auto-populated.

The capital gains in a financial year, remaining after intra head set off (as discussed above), will be reflected in Schedule CYLA, where set-off against current year losses under various heads of income takes place.

Here, losses under any other head can be set off with income under the capital gain head.

Subsequently, the income remaining after set off of current year losses, as per Schedule CYLA will be shown in Schedule BFLA, where set off of brought forward losses of earlier years takes place.

The brought forward losses under this schedule will be picked from Schedule CFL of the ITR form, in which brought forward losses details are to be manually entered. Note that brought forward short-term capital loss can be set off against any STCG or LTCG. However, brought forward long-term capital loss can only be set off against an LTCG.

In case of capital loss instead of capital gain, the remaining capital loss after above adjustments will be taken to Schedule CFL for losses to be carried forward to future years – that is, next eight assessment years from the assessment year in which the loss was incurred.

Mode of filing

Individuals having capital gains shall report the income in ITR 2/ITTR 3 form for FY21. ITR 3 is required when an individual has income from business or profession in addition to capital gains income.

The CBDT has launched a new offline utility called JASON for the assessment year 2021-22. The existing excel and java utility have been discontinued. The new JSON utility has currently been enabled for ITR 1 to 4.

The utility will import and pre-fill the data from e-filing portal to an extent possible, while the key transactional data has to be keyed in. Once the JSON file is created, it that has to be uploaded to the new income tax e-filing portal, which is yet to be fully functional.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Why Bajaj Finance FDs are a safe option

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


If you are a fixed income investor in search of higher rates, and are comfortable going beyond bank fixed deposits, then NBFC deposits are an option you can consider.

Many NBFCs (non-banking financial companies) are offering higher rates than most private and public sector banks on fixed deposits of comparable tenures, of course, for the higher risk they entail.

However, unlike bank deposits that are insured for an amount up to ₹5 lakh by the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation, NBFC deposits enjoy no such protection.

It therefore, makes sense to restrict yourself only to the deposits of NBFCs with strong financials.

Today, interest rates are at near bottom and are expected to go up, though not anytime soon.

The RBI left the repo rate unchanged yet again in the latest monetary policy review on August 6, 2021.

Two-year fixed deposits, that offer better rates than lower tenure deposits without locking-in your money for too long, can therefore, be a good choice.

What’s on offer

Bajaj Finance offers 6.10 per cent per annum on its two-year cumulative FD and non-cumulative FD (with an annual interest pay-out option). This is better than the 5.1 – 5.2 per cent and 5.0 – 5.5 per cent respectively offered by several public and private sector banks.

The Bajaj Finance FD rates are a tad lower than those offered by other NBFCs such as Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services (6.2 per cent) and Shriram Transport Finance (6.54 per cent) on their similar deposits.

But Bajaj Finance’s strong financials, among the best in the sector, offer ample comfort to investors.

The deposits enjoy the highest ratings — CRISIL’s FAAA/Stable and ICRA’s MAAA (stable).

Senior citizens, that is, those aged 60 or above get an additional 0.25 per cent on the Bajaj Finance FD. Those booking an online FD get an additional 0.10 per cent. This does not apply to senior citizens. You must invest a minimum of ₹25,000 in the FD.

Strong financials

Bajaj Finance has a well-diversified loan book spread across consumer, rural, SME and commercial loans.

As of June-end 2021, consumer loans accounted for 44 per cent of the lender’s loan book of ₹1.6 lakh crore. With a presence in over 3,100 locations, the non-bank lender is geographically well-diversified too. The loan book registered a year-on-year growth of 15 per cent growth in the June 2021 quarter.

Adequate buffer

As of June-end 2021, Bajaj Finance’s net NPAs (non-performing assets) were only 1.46 per cent.

While this is higher than the 0.5 per cent in the June 2020 quarter, the previous year’s numbers are not comparable due to the then ongoing moratorium.

Also, Bajaj Finance’s capital to risk weighted assets ratio (CRAR) of 28.57 per cent is well above the mandated 15 per cent, providing adequate buffer against any future bad loans.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

What role do anchor investors play in an IPO

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Two colleagues sharing a cab ride to office have money conversations.

Aruna: Markets are doing well. I wish I could make some extra money from it.

Sarika: Yes, same here. IPOs are quite the money-spinners today I hear.

Aruna: Yeah, more than half a dozen IPOs in August alone. My broker says to look at anchor investor book before applying.

Sarika: Who are anchor investors? Promoters?

Aruna: No. Anchor investors are institutional investors who are offered shares a day before the IPO opens.

Sarika: If some are buying shares ahead of IPO, are they not cutting our chances?

Aruna: Haha. Actually, anchor investments are a useful guide to other investors. They indicate whether there is demand for IPO offered.

Sarika: Do anchor investors get any discount?

Aruna: No. They are supposed to ‘anchor’ the issue by agreeing to subscribe to shares at a fixed price. Anchor investors can bid for shares at any price within the IPO price band.

Sarika: Then, how is this important? To me it seems just another share-sale!

Aruna: In a bull market, everything seems simple. But actually anchor investors are quite important for small investors. Unlike brokerages who simply put out IPO reports, anchor investors have skin in the game. Typically, they are mutual funds, insurance companies and foreign funds. They would have done better research.

Sarika: So, if the public issue has any problem, will the anchor investors give it a tepid response?

Aruna: Yes, Sari. There have been instances of some IPOs failing to mop up money from anchor investors, or anchor investors bidding at the lower end of the IPO price band.

Sarika: Oh, there is some method to the madness then! I was thinking they are like IPO brand ambassadors.

Aruna: Obviously there is a lot of at stake. Its real money that anchor investors put in and they can’t sell their shares for at least 30 days after the allotment. So, they have to be doubly sure.

Sarika: Where do I get anchor investor information?

Aruna: Anchor investor details are published in BSE Notices and NSE Circulars a day before the IPO opens for the public. The communique will mention shares allotted to each anchor investor, percentage of anchor investor portion allotted, value of shares allotted and so on.

Sarika: Interesting. In comparison to all the grey market premium (GMP) talk on upcoming IPOs, I suppose the anchor investor activity is a far better signal.

Aruna: Definitely. And we have reached office. Time to drop anchor here!

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

How a small change in date can impact interest income

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


If you are grappling with low interest rates on fixed income products, you may want to do every little bit to enhance your interest income. For that, it is important to understand how interest income is calculated.

The date on which deposits and withdrawals are made in a month can have an impact on the interest income you earn. Here we talk about the interest calculation for a few fixed income instruments – Public Provident Fund (PPF), Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY), Post Office Savings Account (POSA) and Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF).

Post Office Schemes

PPF and SSY are two long-term saving products from the Post Office offering attractive interest rates today.

Both the accounts require minimum amount to be deposited every financial year (₹500 for PPF and ₹250 for SSY) to keep them active.

Under these accounts, the interest amount gets credited at the end of the financial year and compounding of interest happens annually. However, the interest is calculated for each calendar month on the lowest balance in an account between the close of the fifth day and the end of the month.

Say, the balance in your PPF/SSY account as on July 2021 end is ₹2 lakh and you plan to deposit ₹10,000 in August. If the deposit is made on August 6, the interest for the month of August will be calculated on ₹2 lakh only. The deposit amount of ₹10,000 will be considered for interest calculation only from the month of September 2021. If you slightly tweak the deposit date to some time before August 5, you can earn a slightly higher interest income on PPF/SSY. This may translate to a reasonably good amount over time due to the compounding effect.

The Post Office Savings Account (POSA) too comes with similar conditions. The interest, here too, is credited at the end of each financial year, but the lowest balance between the tenth and the last day of the month is considered.

Rules for POSA also state that on withdrawal of the entire balance interest on the corpus will be calculated up to the last day of the month preceding the month in which the account is closed. Thus, one can plan the withdrawals from POSA at the beginning of a month as you would have maximised the interest earnings at the end of the previous month.

Employees’ Provident Fund

If you are a salaried , both the employee and the employer together contribute 24 per cent of the basic salary plus dearness allowance on a monthly basis towards EPF.

On all the contributions made, interest is calculated from the first day of the month (succeeding the month of credit) to the end of that fiscal year.

For example, if, say, the EPF contribution for April 2021 is made by your employer to the EPFO towards the end of the April itself, then this contribution will earn interest for eleven months in the fiscal FY22 (May 2021 to March 2022). But say, the employer deposits the amount in the beginning of May 2021, then interest will be calculated only for ten months, that is, from June 2021 to March 2022.

Though credits to the PF account are not in your control, understand that your employer transferring the monthly PF contribution at the end of that relevant month is beneficial over transfer at the beginning of the next month.

On the other hand, in case of withdrawals, interest is calculated on the withdrawn amount up to the last day of the month preceding the month of withdrawal.

On maturity

You can consider continuing your investments in fixed-income products such as PPF/SSY and EPF account even after the contributions come to an end. This is because the interest rates offered by EPF (8.5 per cent for FY20), PPF (7.1 per cent now) and SSY (7.6 per cent now) have so far been attractive compared to other products considering the risk-return metrics.

When the subscriber retires after 55, interest will continue to be credited to the PF account until three years from the time fresh contribution to the account are stopped. Even when the EPF account becomes dormant (with no fresh contributions) before retirement age of 55, the account continues to be operative and interest will be paid until the subscriber turns 58, in most cases. In case of PPF/SSY, the account holder may retain his account after the minimum contributory period of 15 years, without making any further deposits upto 21 years from account opening in case of SSY or any period in blocks of five year in case of PPF and the balance in the account will continue to earn interest at the rate applicable to the scheme.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Sitharaman lays foundation stone for Khadi workers’ shed in Andhra village, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Ponduru, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Saturday laid the foundation stone for a mass shed for Khadi workers at Ponduru village in Andhra Pradesh’s Srikakulam district.

She also handed over a cheque for Rs 18 lakh to the Andhra Fine Khadi Karimikabhivrudhi (AFKK) Sangham, Ponduru, said a statement issued by her office.

Sitharaman handed over the contract document for the new building to the khadi workers association coinciding with the National Handloom Day.

The Finance Minister is on a two-day visit to the southern state and attended a programme organized by AFKK.

During her visit, Sitharaman garlanded a statue of Mahatma Gandhi.

Ponduru’s location has an interesting connection with Gandhi, considering his halt at Dusi railway station which is just 10 km away from the village during his Dandi March as part of India’s freedom struggle.

“On his Dandi March, Gandhiji had stopped at Dusi railway station, just 10 km away from Ponduru, to inspect the khadi work done there, which is renowned across the country,” said the statement.

Mahatma Gandhi also sent his son Devdas to the village to study khadi work.

“After staying for a week, he conveyed to Gandhiji how the women in the region spun on the single spindle chakra, a tradition that is still being followed in the area, one of the few areas to do so,” said the statement.

Meanwhile, multiple delegations, including Crafts Council of Andhra Pradesh, Laghu Udyog Bharti, Federation of Andhra Pradesh State Weavers Association and General Insurance Pensioners Association called on Sitharaman.

Bharatiya Janata Party Rajya Sabha MP G.V.L. Narasimha Rao and state Finance Minister Buggana Rajendranath Reddy were also present with her.

Federal Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman was speaking to reporters after the meeting with the Goods and Services Tax Council, which she chairs and includes all state finance ministers of the country.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Risks & Regulatory Imperatives, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


In today’s age of the Internet, fiat and account-based electronic money are in a state of flux. A decade after Bitcoin was introduced to the world by Satoshi Nakamoto, token-based digital currencies have proliferated to include a wide variety of private cryptocurrencies, central bank digital currencies and stablecoins. Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are a direct liability of the central banks. Stablecoins, on the other hand, are fiat collateralised (linked to fiat currencies such as the US dollar or euro.) or collateralised as per the value of the underlying asset or reserve.

Regulators across the globe are concerned about the unprecedented growth of tokenized money, stablecoins in particular, and its potential to disintermediate incumbent financial institutions , create volatility and financial stability risks.

Let’s Decrypt Stablecoins
Are the concerns over stablecoins legitimate? Let’s understand this token and its various types in detail to make an informed opinion.

So, what are stablecoins? Unlike Bitcoin and other popular cryptocurrencies, known for wild volatility, stablecoins are blockchain-based cryptocurrencies backed by safe reserves.

But, are stablecoins really stable?

Let’s have a look at different types of stablecoins classified solely on the basis of the value that underpins them.

Types of Stablecoins
● Fiat-collateralized stablecoins: These stablecoins are collateralized by fiat money, such as US dollar, euro or the pound, on a 1:1 ratio. Common examples are Tether (2014), Gemini Dollar(2018) and TrueSD.

● Stablecoins backed by other asset classes: There are a few stablecoins, which are backed by a basket of multiple assets (commercial papers, bonds, real estate, precious metals, etc). The value of these stablecoins can fluctuate over time subject to movement in commodity and precious metal prices. Digix Gold, backed by

physical gold, was introduced in 2018. SwissRealCoin, launched in 2018, had a Swiss real estate portfolio.

● Crypto-collateralized stablecoins: Crypto-collateralized stablecoins are more decentralised than their peers and are backed by cryptocurrencies. The flipside is price volatility. To address the risk of price volatility, these stablecoins are over-collateralised. Dai (launched in 2017) is the most popular crypto-collateralized stablecoin.

● Non-collateralized stablecoins: These stablecoins do not have any backing and are decentralized in the true sense. The supply of non-collateralized stablecoins is governed by algorithms. Basis, introduced in 2018, is the most common stablecoin in this category.

Risks from Stablecoins
Tether, arguably the largest stablecoin issuer, disclosed in March that it held over 75% of its reserves in cash and cash equivalents, most of which are in the form of commercial paper. The remaining assets include loans to unaffiliated entities (12.55%), corporate bonds, funds & precious metals (9.96%), and additional investments which include Bitcoin and other digital tokens (1.64%).

The commercial paper holdings of Tether outnumbered leading money market funds (MMF) in the US and Europe.

In the event of a mass selloff of Tether coins along with other stablecoins, short-term credit markets will have to bear the brunt. In June this year, the crash of Iron, an algorithmic stablecoin, gave us a glimpse of the risk they run. That made Mark Cuban, an America’s billionaire entrepreneur and a victim of Iron collapse, to raise his voice for regulating stablecoins.

Fitch Ratings has rightly cautioned that potential asset contagion risks linked to the liquidation of stablecoin reserve holdings could increase pressure for tighter regulation of the nascent sector.

Clarion Call for Regulation
US Secretary of the Treasury Janet L Yellen has underscored the need to act quickly to ensure there is an appropriate US regulatory framework in place.

“You wouldn’t need stablecoins; you wouldn’t need cryptocurrencies, if you had a digital US currency,” US Fed Chairman Jerome Powell told a Congressional hearing this July.

He made it clear that the Fed is done letting stablecoins run amok. “We have a tradition in this country where the public’s money is held in what is supposed to be a very safe asset,” Powell said. “That doesn’t exist for stablecoins, and if they’re going to be a significant part of the payments universe… then we need an appropriate framework, which frankly we don’t have.”

Last year, European Commission came out with a regulatory framework proposal for crypto assets and stablecoins. The Financial Stability Board (FSB), an international body that monitors and makes recommendations about the global financial system, has highlighted the potential of global stablecoins (GSCs). FSB says, “A widely-adopted stablecoin with a potential reach and use across multiple jurisdictions (so-called ‘global stablecoins’ or GSCs) could become systemically important in and across one or many jurisdictions, including as a means of making payments.

But those who back stablecoins say with the established use cases in cross-border payments, settlements and financial inclusion, a global regulatory framework is all that is needed to harness the full potential of stablecoins.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Sundaram Finance to revise interest rates on deposits, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Chennai, Aug 6

K Surendran BJP state president (File photo)

Non-banking finance company Sundaram Finance Ltd has announced a revision in interest rates on its deposits with effect from August 8, the company said on Friday. According to a company press release, the interest rate on fresh deposits and renewals stand revised to 5.50 per cent per annum as against 5.75 per cent earlier, for deposits with a tenure of 12 months

Interest rates have been revised to 5.65 per cent per annum as compared to the earlier 6 per cent, for deposits with a tenure upto 24 months.

For deposits upto 36 months, the interest rates have been revised to 5.80 per cent as against 6.25 per cent earlier, a company statement said.

For senior citizens, the interest rate on deposits have been revised to 6 per cent per annum as compared to 6.25 per cent for deposits of upto 12 months, 6.15 per cent per annum for deposits upto 24 months as compared to the earlier 6.50 per cent.

For deposits upto 36 months, the interest rates have been revised to 6.30 per cent as compared to 6.75 per cent earlier.

As on March 31, 2021, Sundaram Finance said its deposit base stood at Rs 4,021 crore.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Tata Motors partners with Sundaram Finance, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Auto major TATA Motors has partnered with city-headquartered non-banking finance company Sundaram Finance to offer exclusive offers to customers opting to purchase its range of passenger cars. Under the partnership with TATA Motors, Sundaram Finance would offer six-year loans on the new ‘Forever’ range of cars and with 100 per cent financing that would require minimal down payment, a company statement said here.

The partnership would also offer special financing ‘Kisan Car Scheme’ with extended and convenient repayment options to the farmers.

“The farmers can repay the loan in installments once every six months coinciding with their harvest”, it said.

Commenting on the partnership, TATA Motors, Vice- President, sales, marketing and customer care, Rajan Amba said, “…we are delighted to be partnering with Sundaram Finance to roll out special finance schemes. This is in alignment with our constant effort to fast track the availability of safe personal mobility solutions to individuals and families.”

“We hope that these offers will boost customer morale and make the process of purchasing a car more convenient,” he added.

On the partnership with TATA Motors, Sundaram Finance, deputy managing director, A N Raju said, “following the lockdown in several states since April, we are now seeing a recovery in the passenger vehicles segment as endorsed by the sales numbers in July.”

“Also with social distancing, we are observing a rise in the demand for ‘personal transport’ over the last 12 months. Through a lower down payment model and a lower EMI, we are proactively reaching out to the small business owners and making car ownership more affordable…”, he added.

Tata Motors in July recorded a strong jump on its total sales made in last month.

The company recorded a 92 per cent rise in its total domestic sales to 51,981 units in July 2021 as compared to the same month last year. It had sold 27,024 units in July 2020.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Rajasthan CM seeks Centre’s cooperation for economic, social development of states, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Jaipur, Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Friday insisted upon increasing economic and policy cooperation from the Centre in order to strengthen the spirit of cooperative federalism. In a meeting with NITI Aayog member Ramesh Chand, senior adviser Yogesh Suri and adviser Rajnath Ram, the chief minister said in the last few years, the financial condition of all the states of the country has been adversely affected due to the coronavirus pandemic and the economic slowdown.

At the same time, he said the need to increase the scope of social security is being felt more.

“In such a situation, the central government should provide more cooperation to the states for the smooth conduct of activities related to economic and social development,” Gehlot said.

He said it is not easy for any state to bring the economy back on track without the cooperation of the central government.

“In view of the peculiar geographical conditions of the state, the Centre should provide assistance to the state in the ratio of 90:10 instead of 50:50 like the northeastern and hilly states, and Union Territories,” a statement quoting the chief minister said.

He reiterated his demand to give national status to the Eastern Canal Project of Rajasthan, which is aimed at providing drinking and irrigation water in 13 districts in eastern Rajasthan.

Gehlot also raised several demands pertaining to the state.

In the meeting, the Niti Ayog praised the performance of Rajasthan in the areas of ease of doing business, export sector, school education, MGNREGA, agriculture and animal husbandry, health, renewable energy, women empowerment, MSME sector, etc.

Energy Minister BD Kalla, Education Minister Govind Singh Dotasra, Industries Minister Parsadi Lal Meena, Chief Secretary Nirajan Arya, CM‘s economic advisor Arvind Mayaram, advisor Govind Sharma and other senior officers attended the meeting.

Selja is supposed to enjoy the confidence of Congress president Sonia Gandhi and is also considered close to Ashok Gehlot (in pic)



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Gold Prices Set To Fall By Rs 1,000 As International Prices Plunge

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Investment

oi-Sunil Fernandes

|

Gold rates in Indian cities are set to fall by Rs 1,000 per 10 grams at the very least on Saturday, as international prices fell by 2.5% in trade. The MCX which trades until 11 pm, saw gold prices fall by Rs 952. Jewellery associations in the country, which take cues from the MCX prices would quote these same rates.

Gold in Indian cities was trading around that Rs 44,600 to Rs 46,600 per 10 grams for 22 karats on Friday and hence it should open lower on Saturday from these levels.

In the global markets gold fell to its lowest in over a month after a strong U.S. jobs report boosted expectations the Federal Reserve could begin tapering its economic support sooner than previously anticipated.

Spot gold fell 2.3% to $1,763 per ounce after touching its lowest since June 30 at $1,757.

Strong US Jobs data, pushes gold prices lower

Hiring in the United States rose for the month of July at its fastest pace in nearly a year despite fears over Covid-19′s delta variant and as companies struggled with a tight labor supply, the Labor Department reported.

Nonfarm payrolls increased by 943,000 for the month while the unemployment rate dropped to 5.4%, according to the department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. The payroll increase was the best since August 2020.

This strong jobs data may now push the US Fed to begin partial withdrawal of its easing programme much earlier than anticipated.

Many analysts believe that gold could now be headed lower in the direction of $1700 an ounce. However, support could arise near these levels as the globe is still awash with liquidity and this could lead to buying at lower levels.

“The Fed has underscored that their decisions in terms of when they will begin to taper, as well as normalizing interest rates, are tied directly to the state of the economy. More so, they have adjusted their dual mandate which was to facilitate full employment and maintain a target inflationary rate of 2% to focus upon full employment while letting inflationary rates run hot. Their rationale is that much of the current upticks in inflationary pressures are transitory and will be alleviated as the country continues to rebound returning to a much more robust economy,” says Amit khare, AVP- Research Commodities, Ganganagar Commodities, Limited.

Meanwhile, the Sovereign Gold Bonds have now opened for subscription.

Gold Prices Set To Fall By Rs 1,000 As International Prices Plunge

According to Nish Bhatt, Founder & CEO, Millwood Kane International – an Investment consulting firm, the price for the Fifth tranche of SGB is fixed at Rs 4790/gm.
“Investment in non-physical gold, via digital or paper gold, is highly recommended as it provides high liquidity, no storage cost, and is easier to sell vs physical gold. Investment in SGBs comes with an interest coupon payable semi-annually. Investment in SGB is a superior alternative to physical gold. The investments in non-physical gold will help the government to keep a check on the currency and larger fiscal deficit.

Gold prices have softened in the past few weeks to touch a 1-month low. In the past one week alone, it has dropped nearly Rs 1,000/10gm in value. The rising US Dollar and Treasury yields on the back of a sooner than expected policy tightening by the Fed have largely led to softening of gold prices. Gold prices domestically and internationally have traded in a narrow range in the past few months. The latest variant of the virus, the pace of vaccination, unlocking, and signs of policy tightening by the Fed will guide gold prices going forward,” he says.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 174 175 176 177 178 387