EVM & Capital Gains Tax
Understanding Recommendation Schedule, Holding Periods, and Tax Implications
Disclaimer
The information provided above is intended to explain the practical tax implications that may arise because of the annual recommendation cycle followed by the EVM (Expectations Value Model) framework.
As a SEBI-registered Research Analyst, our role is limited to providing research recommendations and related disclosures in accordance with applicable SEBI regulations.
Tax planning, tax advisory, investor-specific execution guidance, and personalized guidance or support (hand-holding) are outside the scope of services permitted to a SEBI-registered Research Analyst.
Accordingly, the discussion above should not be construed as tax advice, investment execution advice, or personalized financial guidance.
Investors are advised to consult their tax advisors, chartered accountants, or financial consultants before taking investment or tax-related decisions based on their individual financial situation.
Tax laws and regulations are subject to change. The information above reflects the position as of the date of publication and may not account for subsequent amendments or updates.
Every year, we release our BUY recommendations on 31st May (or the next working day if 31st May falls on a weekend or market holiday). At the same time, we also release SELL recommendations for the previous year’s portfolio.
Why Recommendations Are Released Only Once a Year
The primary reason is the way our proprietary quantitative model — EVM (Expectations Value Model) — works. EVM requires the latest annual financial data of all listed companies to generate rankings and identify the best opportunities. Listed companies generally have time until 31st May to publish their annual results. Therefore:- The full data becomes available only around 31st May
- EVM can run meaningfully only after that
- This naturally results in a once-a-year recommendation cycle
The Current Year’s Situation
| Year | Recommendation Date | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Previous Year BUY Recommendations | 2 June | 31st May was Saturday |
| Current Year BUY Recommendations | 1 June | 31st May is Sunday |
- The previous portfolio was purchased on 2 June last year. The 12-month holding period therefore completes only on 2 June this year.
- But the new recommendations are released on 1 June this year.
Tax Difference
| Type | Holding Period | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| STCG | Less than 12 months | 20% |
| LTCG | 12 months or more | 12.5% (on gains above ₹1,25,000 per year) |
| Scenario | Tax Rate | Tax on ₹3,00,000 Gain |
|---|---|---|
| Sell on 1 June (STCG) | 20% | ₹60,000 |
| Sell on 2 June (LTCG) | 12.5% on ₹1,75,000 taxable gain* | ₹21,875 |
The Important Point Investors Should Understand
This is primarily a calendar alignment issue. Over long periods, occasional mismatches between recommendation dates and the 1-year holding period are unavoidable because of weekends and market holidays. In practical terms, investors following the EVM annual cycle may have to bear STCG taxation roughly once every 5–6 years. As a result, although the LTCG rate is currently 12.5%, the effective long-term tax burden under the EVM framework may work out to approximately:13.5% – 14% Effective Average Tax Rate
This is because one occasional STCG year gets averaged across several LTCG years. For illustration: assuming STCG applies once every 6 years, the blended rate works out to (5 × 12.5% + 1 × 20%) ÷ 6 ≈ 13.75%. The actual figure will vary based on individual circumstances and any future changes to tax rates.What Makes More Sense This Year?
Selling on 1 June this year does not permanently solve the calendar mismatch issue. Even if STCG is accepted this year, similar mismatches can still happen in future years because weekends and holidays keep changing. For most investors, the more sensible approach this year may therefore be:- Continue holding the previous portfolio till 2 June
- Benefit from the lower LTCG tax rate
- Enter the new recommendations one day later
Alternative Approaches
| Approach | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Sell on 2 June ✅ Recommended | LTCG benefit, better post-tax return | Enter new portfolio one day later |
| Use temporary additional capital | Immediate participation + LTCG benefit | Requires additional liquidity |
| Sell on 1 June | Simplest execution | Higher STCG tax, no exemption benefit |