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2022 (5) TMI 1099 - AT - Income TaxDisallowance u/s 14A - Expenditure incurred on exempt income earned - HELD THAT - In the light of the decision rendered by Hon ble Jurisdictional High Court in the case of Nirved Traders (P.) Ltd. 2019 (4) TMI 1738 - BOMBAY HIGH COURT disallowance under section 14A of the IT Act cannot be more than the exempt income earned by the Assessee during the assessment year in question. In this case there is no dispute that the dividend i.e. the exempt income earned by the Assessee during the relevant Assessment Year was only Rs. 1, 58, 998/-. Accordingly the disallowance in this case could not have exceeded Rs. 1 58, 998/-. It is only because the Assessee voluntarily offered a disallowance to the extent of Rs. 2 52, 536/- we confirm disallowance to the extent of Rs. 2 52, 536/-. Decided in favour of the Assessee. Loss on account of intra-day trading in the shares - Disallowance of loss treating the same as speculation loss - HELD THAT - We are in agreement with the findings of AO and Ld. CIT (A) that the loss suffered by the appellant on account of intraday trading in the shares of Indusind Bank (Without Delivery) was speculative in nature because the transactions were settled without actual delivery of the shares. As explained by the appellant BEFORE US In this connection the assessee specifically relies on the exception created under the proviso to section 43(5) wherein it is provided under clause (b) that a contract in respect of stock and shares entered into by a dealer or investor therein to guard against loss in his holdings of stocks and shares through price fluctuations is not to be deemed as speculative. Discussion of section 73 is not relevant here as first of all the nature of transaction has to be ascertained by virtue of section 43(5) and then only question of set-off/ carry forward as defined in section 73 will arise. The provisions of Section 43(5) were amended by the Finance Act 2005. Prior to the amendment Section 43(5) defined a speculative transaction to mean a transaction in which a contract for the purchase or the sale of any commodity including stocks and shares is settled otherwise than by the actual delivery or transfer of the commodity or scrip. The impact of the amendment by the Finance Act 2005 was that an eligible transaction on a recognised stock exchange in respect of trading in derivatives was deemed not to be a speculative transaction. With effect from 1 April 2006 trading in derivatives was by a deeming fiction not regarded as a speculative transaction when it was carried out on a recognized stock exchange. It clearly indicates that the transaction mentioned in section 43(5) (supra) and delivery based trading alone can t be treated as speculative transaction. Where as in the case of assessee neither he entered into the transaction in the nature of F O nor delivery based trading rather he settled his transaction without delivery by placing the order of purchase and sales. The consequence is that in A.Y. 2010-2011 the loss which occurred to the assessee as a result of its activity of intraday trading in shares without delivery (a loss arising from the business of speculation) was not eligible of being set off against the profits which it had earned against the business of futures and options/trading in shares with delivery since the latter did not constitute profits and gains of a speculative business. Re Snowtex Investment Ltd. vs. PCIT 2019 (5) TMI 1165 - SUPREME COURT . - Decided against assessee.
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