Traders are monitoring India's derivatives market for signs of unusual trading following a ban on Jane Street Group. The benchmark NSE Nifty 50 Index opened flat, but volatility and options volume are on focus. Investors are cautious given SEBI's "strong vigilance," and any surprise change in index levels Thursday would be a key flag. The impact of the Jane Street ban may become clearer after the National Stock Exchange releases its daily report on derivatives volume and options prices.
Title: Market Watch: Unusual Trading in India's Derivatives Market Following Jane Street Ban
Traders are closely monitoring India's derivatives market for signs of unusual trading activity following a ban on Jane Street Group. The benchmark NSE Nifty 50 Index opened little changed, with its major components, including HDFC Bank Ltd., Reliance Industries Ltd., and ICICI Bank Ltd., showing minimal movement. The day started calmly, but volatility and options volume remain on traders' radars as the expiration day unfolds.
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) issued the ban on Jane Street last Friday, accusing the firm of market manipulation through algorithmic trading strategies. Traders are waiting to see if SEBI's order will have any impact on Thursday's market, a day when about half of the nation's equity-derivatives expire—traditionally a lucrative strategy for Jane Street. The US giant has denied the allegations, stating it was deploying common arbitrage trades.
The India NSE Volatility Index (Nifty 50 Index) hovered around its lowest level in almost a year, and trading of Nifty 50 options surpassed Wednesday's volume. Investors are being cautious due to SEBI's "strong vigilance," according to Tejas Shah, head of equity derivatives at Equirus Securities in Mumbai. "No players would want to enter their bad books," he said.
Abhishek Shah, a Mumbai-based proprietary trader, believes any surprise change in index levels on Thursday would be a key flag to watch. More clarity on the impact of the Jane Street ban may emerge after the National Stock Exchange of India Ltd. releases its daily report on derivatives volume and options prices following the end of trading.
Nimish Maheshwari, an analyst with Beat The Street who publishes on the Smartkarma platform, expects a 20% to 30% drop in options volume on weekly contracts relative to previous expirations. Large trading firms are likely to hold off deploying strategies similar to Jane Street's.
On Tuesday, when less liquid options on the BSE Sensex Index expired, volume remained in line with previous expirations. However, the cost of the contracts traded on the BSE Ltd. exchange was 4% below the previous expiration and 28% lower than the eight-week average excluding month-end Tuesdays [2].
The ban on Jane Street has had immediate fallout: shares of Indian brokerage firms like Angel One, BSE, and Nuvama Wealth fell by up to 11%, reflecting investor fears over systemic risks in derivatives markets. Derivatives turnover dropped by 13–17%, underscoring the outsized role Jane Street played—accounting for 25% of trades on some days [2].
SEBI's reforms, including real-time trade surveillance, algorithmic audits, and position limits, aim to curb such practices. These measures address a critical vulnerability: India's derivatives market, which handles 60% of global equity derivatives volume, had become a playground for high-frequency trading (HFT) firms exploiting retail traders' reliance on index movements [2].
Investors should avoid entities with opaque trading practices and favor firms benefiting from regulatory clarity. Brokers with robust compliance frameworks and RegTech innovators are poised to gain market share as investors prioritize trust [2].
The Jane Street ban is a landmark moment for India's financial markets. While it introduces volatility for firms exploiting regulatory gaps, it lays the groundwork for a sustainable, investor-friendly ecosystem. Investors must treat this as a wake-up call: in a world of stricter oversight, transparency and ethics are the new benchmarks for success [2].
References
[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-07-10/traders-watch-indian-expiry-day-for-fallout-from-jane-street-ban
[2] https://www.ainvest.com/news/sebi-ban-jane-street-watershed-moment-regulatory-oversight-india-derivatives-market-2507/
[3] https://www.businessworld.in/article/sebi-bars-jane-street-impounds-rs-4843-crore-over-derivatives-probe-562292
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