In a recent event at BSE, the Finance Minister addressed the urgent issue of the “unchecked explosion” in retail trading of futures and options (F&O). She warned that this trend could severely challenge the market and investor sentiment, emphasizing the need to protect household finances from being “shattered.”
Government officials typically overlook the derivatives market, which has minimal connection to the real economy. However, developments in India’s equity derivatives market since COVID-19 suggest imminent trouble. As election jitters caused India’s leading indices to dip by 4% this month, it wasn’t institutional investors worrying about losses. Instead, retail investors flooded social media with complaints about devastating losses in options trading. One trader shared a loss of 780 lakh while at the gym, caused by a sharp index put option premium spike from €50 to €1,000. Others reported “injection” moves in Sensex and Midcap Nifty options that wiped out their accounts.
Bloomberg reported a courtroom drama in the US, where quantitative trading firm Jane Street sued Millennium Management, accusing them of luring away two employees who ran a profitable options trading strategy, exploiting inefficiencies in the Indian options market. This led to concerns about foreign hedge funds and high-frequency traders exploiting Indian retail investors, with calls for regulatory action.
Despite efforts by SEBI, including tighter margin norms, hard limits on leverage, and mandatory risk disclosures, retail investors continue to flock to the F&O market. SEBI’s January 2023 study showed that 9 out of 10 retail F&O traders incurred losses. Despite this, the number of F&O traders grew from 12 lakh in FY19 to 96 lakh in FY24, outpacing the growth of cash market investors.
Seasoned traders note that new investors are crowding into the riskiest F&O segments, like weekly index options, leading to volatile and often disastrous trades. Exchanges have facilitated this by rolling out options contracts on volatile benchmarks with staggered expiries, giving retail traders daily opportunities for risky trades.
To protect retail investors from themselves, SEBI may need to restrict the availability of instruments that encourage reckless trading. Involving domestic institutional investors (DIIs) like mutual funds, insurers, and pension funds in the F&O market could lead to more rational trading practices. Additionally, SEBI should ensure F&O contracts are available on indices backed by significant investments and streamline contract expiries to reduce the focus on short-term trading.
These measures will likely reduce trading volumes on Indian exchanges and impact the commercial interests of exchanges, brokers, and the stock market ecosystem. However, they are essential to curb the retail F&O trading frenzy and protect household savings from further harm.