HomeNewsBusinessMarketsSEBI's F&O crackdown may curb accessibility for low-ticket retail players: Kotak report

SEBI's F&O crackdown may curb accessibility for low-ticket retail players: Kotak report

Historical parallels of regulatory interventions in derivatives trading from Korea and China underscore the crushing impact of such measures on trading volumes, say analysts at Kotak Institutional Equities

July 11, 2024 / 14:38 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Moneycontrol was the first to report about SEBI's working committee on F&O proposing measures to curb rapid growth in derivatives volume.
Moneycontrol was the first to report about SEBI's working committee on F&O proposing measures to curb rapid growth in derivatives volume.

Reports that Securities and Exchange Board of India's (SEBI) expert working committee on futures and options (F&O) suggesting measures to the market regulator for reining in the frenzy in the derivatives market have been making the rounds. Analysts at Kotak Institutional Equities, while awaiting further clarity on the topic, believe that these steps will potentially curb accessibility for low-ticket retail (largely option buyers).

Moneycontrol was the first to report that SEBI's working committee on F&O has proposed several measures to curb the rapid growth in derivatives volume. These include increasing the minimum lot size of derivative contracts to Rs 20 lakh-Rs 30 lakh from the current Rs 5 lakh, restricting weekly options to one expiry per stock exchange per week, and limiting the number of strike prices for options contracts.

Story continues below Advertisement

KIE highlighted that options trading has a high skew, given that 20 percent of retail option traders likely drive 90 percent of premiums. "Hence, an increase in the lot size when combined with fewer weekly expiries could be a feasible solution," the brokerage believes.

On the other hand, measures such as higher margins and monitoring of position limits, according to KIE, are probably aimed at restraining non-retail volumes. "We need to see the effectiveness of all of these measures put together, along with the potential second-order effects of flushing out retail activity from the market," it added.