A Blueprint for Your Wealth & India’s Growth
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Union Budget 2026-27, presented by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, is defined by fiscal discipline and structural continuity. Rather than headline-driven populism, the government has chosen to build a stable, predictable environment for long-term wealth creation. For our clients – across equity, debt, and alternative allocations – this budget reinforces the conviction that India’s risk-reward profile continues to improve.
As your financial partners, we have distilled the key policy shifts below to help you understand how each affects your portfolio, your tax planning, and your broader financial strategy.
- Macro-Fiscal Insights: The Foundation of Your Portfolio
The government’s overarching priority this year is productivity-led growth while maintaining fiscal consolidation. A declining fiscal deficit directly supports lower inflation expectations, moderates the upward pressure on interest rates, and stabilises the currency all of which are structurally positive for your long-term debt and equity holdings.
Key Fiscal Indicator | FY26 (Revised) | FY27 (Target) | Why It Matters |
Fiscal Deficit (% of GDP) | 4.4% | 4.3% | Controls inflation & rates |
Capital Expenditure (Capex) | ₹10.95 Lakh Cr | ₹12.22 Lakh Cr | Boosts infra & market sectors |
Debt-to-GDP Ratio | 56.1% | 55.6% | Signals healthier economy |
Nominal GDP Growth | 8.0% | 10.0% | Tailwind for corporate earnings |
Source: Union Budget Documents, Ministry of Finance, Government of India
- The Income Tax Revolution: A New Era of Simplification
Starting 1 April 2026, the six-decade-old Income Tax Act of 1961 will be formally replaced by the Income Tax Act, 2025. The philosophical shift is unmistakable—from a compliance-heavy, paper-first regime to a “Digital-First” framework designed for transparency and ease of administration.
For the upcoming assessment year, the tax rates under the Default New Regime remain stable. However, the Section 87A rebate of ₹60,000 continues to ensure that individuals with income up to ₹12 lakh effectively pay zero tax.
Taxable Income Slab (₹) | New Regime Rate |
Up to ₹4,00,000 | Nil |
₹4,00,001 – ₹8,00,000 | 5% |
₹8,00,001 – ₹12,00,000 | 10% |
₹12,00,001 – ₹16,00,000 | 15% |
₹16,00,001 – ₹20,00,000 | 20% |
₹20,00,001 – ₹24,00,000 | 25% |
Above ₹24,00,000 | 30% |
- Key Changes for the Savvy Investor
While headline tax slabs remain unchanged, several technical recalibrations will directly affect how you manage your assets and trading activities. These are the adjustments that merit your immediate attention.
Cost of Investing: STT & Buyback Taxation
To moderate high-frequency speculative activity, the government has increased Securities Transaction Tax (STT) on derivative contracts. Simultaneously, the taxation of share buybacks has been rationalised—shifting from dividend-rate taxation to a more favourable capital gains treatment.
Investment Trigger | Previous Rule | New Rule (from 1 Apr 2026) |
Share Buybacks | Taxed as Dividends (Slab Rate) | Taxed as Capital Gains (12.5% LTCG) |
STT: Equity Futures | 0.02% | 0.05% |
STT: Options Premium | 0.10% | 0.15% |
Mutual Fund Dividends | 20% interest deduction allowed | Deductions removed; fully taxable |
The SGB Surprise: Sovereign Gold Bonds
A significant change for gold bond investors: the tax-free redemption benefit for SGBs is now restricted only to original subscribers. If you have acquired SGBs from the secondary market, you will no longer enjoy the capital gains tax exemption at maturity. We recommend reviewing your SGB holdings with your relationship manager to assess the net impact on your portfolio.
Lifestyle & Personal Planning: TCS Relief
The budget provides meaningful cash-flow relief for families with international connections—particularly those funding overseas education, medical treatment, or travel. The reduction in Tax Collected at Source (TCS) rates will ease the upfront cost burden significantly.
Remittance Category (LRS) | Previous TCS Rate | Revised TCS Rate |
Overseas Education (> ₹10 Lakh) | 5% | 2% |
Overseas Medical Treatment | 5% | 2% |
Overseas Tour Packages | 5% / 20% | 2% (No threshold) |
- Sectoral “Big Bets”: Themes for Your Portfolio
The government is deploying record capital into specific sectors that are designed to underpin the next decade of structural growth. These are not fleeting policy signals—they represent multi-year allocation commitments that create investable tailwinds for patient capital.
- Infrastructure & Railways: ₹12.2 lakh crore allocated, including 7 new high-speed rail corridors. This is a clear signal of sustained order-book visibility for EPC, cement, and steel players.
- Green Energy: ₹22,000 crore for rooftop solar under PM Surya Ghar and ₹20,000 crore for Carbon Capture, Utilisation & Storage (CCUS). Positions India favourably on ESG metrics for global institutional flows.
- Semiconductors & AI: ISM 2.0 launched with a ₹40,000 crore outlay and a 20-year tax holiday for qualifying data centres. This is a generational play on India’s position in the global tech supply chain.
- The “Orange Economy”: Animation, Gaming, VFX, and content creation—backed by creator labs in 15,000 schools. A long-horizon play, but one that signals India’s intent to capture value in the global creative economy.
- The 2047 Cloud Tax Holiday: A Structural Shift
Perhaps the most forward-looking provision of this budget is the proposed 20-year tax holiday (extending to 2047) for foreign companies that procure services from specified Indian data centres to deliver cloud services globally. This measure directly addresses the “permanent establishment risk” that has historically discouraged global hyperscalers from locating substantial physical infrastructure in India.
Our analysis of this provision: India is making a sophisticated trade-off—foregoing contested tax claims on global revenues in exchange for billions of dollars in irreversible hard investment on Indian soil. The multiplier effects on employment, land values, and adjacent technology ecosystems are significant.
Built-In Domestic Safeguards
- Reseller Mandate: Services to Indian customers must be routed through Indian reseller entities, ensuring that domestic IT majors (TCS, Infosys, Wipro) remain embedded in the value chain.
- Asset Ownership: Data centres must be owned and operated by Indian companies, conferring significant pricing power and volume to domestic infrastructure players such as Reliance and Adani.
- AI for Real-World Problem Solving
The budget integrates artificial intelligence into India’s capacity-building agenda through “Bharat-VISTAAR,” a multilingual AI tool designed to enhance farm productivity by integrating the AgriStack portal with ICAR’s agricultural research database. This is complemented by the creation of AVGC Content Creator Labs in 15,000 schools and 500 colleges, aimed at preparing 2 million skilled professionals for the creative and digital content industries by 2030.
From an investment lens, these measures signal that AI adoption in India will be government-catalysed and sector-specific—creating demand for both domestic platform companies and the global technology firms supplying foundational infrastructure.
OUR VIEW: NAVIGATING THE PATH TO VIKSIT BHARAT
The Union Budget 2026-27 is a document of strategic confidence. By prioritising infrastructure-led growth, simplifying the legal framework for taxation, and placing substantial capital behind frontier manufacturing—semiconductors, biopharma, and green energy – the government is constructing the scaffolding for long-term economic resilience.
However, our analysis also underscores that the ultimate credibility of this roadmap hinges on two factors: the quality of execution and the revival of broad-based consumption. Capital expenditure, however large, cannot substitute for household spending in sustaining GDP momentum.
As India navigates a fractured global order, the 2026-27 budget serves as a foundational blueprint to translate potential into performance ensuring that the dividends of growth are shared equitably across the nation’s vast demographic landscape.
“Wealth is built through patience and a steady plan. Budget 2026 gives us the stability to do just that.” |
