Moneycontrol

OPINION Why Jane Street’s ‘Basic Arbitrage’ Defence Doesn't Wash

The heart of the argument between SEBI and Jane Street is whether this activity constitutes “basic arbitrage” or “market manipulation”. In this debate, at the moment SEBI’s arguments are clearly way more convincing.

July 24, 2025 / 14:06 IST
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These conditions will remain in effect until the market watchdog completes its ongoing investigation

India's capital markets regulator, SEBI, grabbed global financial media headlines with its stunning order last week against trading firm Jane Street. The order accuses the New York-headquartered high-frequency trading firm of a "sinister scheme" to manipulate Indian stocks and derivatives markets to make a ton of profits. It bans the Jane Street group from any activity in the stock market and has asked it to pay back Rs 4,843 crore of "illegal gains". What has stunned the global markets is the mountain of granular detail that SEBI has presented to prove the alleged “manipulation”.

At the moment of this writing, Jane Street has yet to contest the order at India's Securities Appellate Tribunal. But it has denied the charges and has sent an internal memo to employees; some contours of its defence can be gleaned from that leaked memo.

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Here's one relevant para from the memo:

"The Order says 'it is particularly instructive' to consider the first eight minutes of trading on January 17, 2024 in order to understand the 'intent and design' of our options strategy, which it calls 'Intra-day Index Manipulation.' Those eight minutes illustrate basic index arbitrage trading, which many of you will know as a core and commonplace mechanism of financial markets that keeps the prices of related instruments in line. One can easily observe that there was a large divergence between the price of the BANKNIFTY index (NSEBANK Index on Bloomberg) reflected in options markets and the price implied by the stock levels. Jane Street (presumably alongside other market participants) traded in a direction consistent with closing that gap and bringing the two markets more in line with one another."