Written By: Nishant Parsad
It started like any other volatile trading day. Except this time, the volatility wasn’t just the result of economic data or a global macro trigger. It felt... manufactured.
By mid-2024, India’s options traders, particularly those who specialize in expiry-day selling strategies, began noticing a disturbing pattern: sharp, coordinated price spikes that seemed to arrive out of nowhere, disrupting positions and triggering stop-losses. These weren’t natural market jitters. They were surgical, sudden, and savage. For many traders, it didn’t feel like they were up against other human participants. It felt like they were up against machines.
That suspicion now has a name: Jane Street.
Who is Jane Street and Why Are They a Big Deal?
Jane Street Group LLC isn’t your average trading desk. It's one of the most powerful proprietary trading firms in the world — operating across more than 45 countries, with 2,600+ employees and cutting-edge algorithmic infrastructure. They're known for speed, precision, and scale.
But it was their entry into India’s F&O market that raised eyebrows — not because they were new, but because of the disruption that seemed to follow them.

The Manipulation Accusation
Since April 18, 2024, expiry-day traders in India — a growing, highly active community — found their systems being consistently blindsided. Natural theta decay (the phenomenon that benefits option sellers as time passes) was being reversed by unnatural price spikes.
- Losses mounted
- Brokerages were flooded with complaints
- Entire trading firms shut down
Initially, the NSE launched a probe, but it limited its investigation to one Singapore-based Jane Street entity and gave it a clean chit. For a community that saw its livelihood wiped out, this half-step felt insulting.
SEBI’s Decisive Response
Fast forward to SEBI’s interim order — and it was as sweeping as it was strong:
- All Jane Street entities barred from participating in Indian markets (directly or indirectly)
- Ordered to deposit ₹4,843 crore — alleged profits from unfair trades — into escrow accounts
- Banks instructed to block any debit instructions from Jane Street
- All positions to be closed within three months, or before expiry
It was the kind of crackdown traders had been begging for. Finally, someone had acknowledged that this wasn’t just volatility — it was potentially systemic manipulation.
And more importantly, SEBI had acknowledged it publicly and aggressively.

The Human Cost Behind the Charts
What made this crackdown so important wasn't just regulatory discipline. It was the message it sent to a bleeding trader community.
- Expiry-day options trading has become the bread and butter for thousands of full-time and part-time traders across India
- It relies on a predictable decay of option prices as contracts near expiry
- But when a player with high-speed systems and unmatched execution capability enters the field, that predictability disappears
This wasn’t a level playing field. It was asymmetry in its rawest form.

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