Research By: Saizal Agarwal
The practice of purchasing a security in one market and simultaneously selling it in another at a higher price is known as arbitrage. This allows investors to take advantage of the short-term difference in cost per share. An arbitrage trade is considered to be a relatively low-risk exercise.

Example: Stock Arbitrage between BSE and NSE
Imagine that a company, ABC Corporation, has its shares listed on both the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) and the National Stock Exchange (NSE). Let's assume the following conditions exist: The stock is trading at ₹100 per share on the BSE. Simultaneously, due to a temporary exchange rate or market inefficiency, the same stock is trading at the equivalent of ₹102 per share on the NSE.
- Buying on the BSE: The arbitrageur purchases 1,000 shares of ABC Corporation on the BSE at ₹100 per share. The total cost of this transaction is ₹100,000.
- Selling on the NSE: At the same time, the arbitrageur sells 1,000 shares of ABC Corporation on the NSE at the equivalent of ₹102 per share. The total revenue from this transaction is ₹102,000.
- Profit Calculation: The profit from this arbitrage transaction is the difference between the selling price on the NSE and the buying price on the BSE:
Profit = Revenue from NSE− Cost from BSE = ₹102,000−₹100,000= ₹2,000
This ₹2,000 profit is made without any exposure to market risk because the trades were executed simultaneously. The arbitrageur has successfully exploited the price discrepancy between the two markets.
It is a key mechanism that ensures the consistency of prices across different markets, and it offers traders a method to achieve risk-free profits. However, it is a strategy that requires precision, speed, and often sophisticated technology. In modern financial markets, where price discrepancies are quickly corrected, the role of arbitrageurs is crucial in maintaining market efficiency.
Types of Arbitrage:
| Type of Arbitrage | Definition | How It Works | Example | Risk Level |
| Pure Arbitrage | Buying and selling the same asset in different markets to profit from price differences. | Simultaneously buy in one market at a lower price and sell in another market at a higher price. | Buy a stock at ₹50 on the BSE and sell it for ₹51 on the NSE, making ₹1 per share in profit. | Very Low |
| Merger Arbitrage | Exploiting price discrepancies in a target company’s stock before a merger or acquisition. | Buy the target company’s stock at a lower price before the merger and sell it after the merger at a higher price. | Buy shares of Company B at ₹95 before a merger announcement, and sell at ₹100 after the merger is confirmed. | Moderate (depends on merger outcome) |
| Convertible Arbitrage | Profiting from the mispricing between a company’s convertible bonds and its underlying stock. | Buy the convertible bond and short the underlying stock, or vice versa, to lock in a profit. | Buy ABC Corporation’s convertible bond at ₹1,000, short 50 shares of its stock at ₹19 per share, and profit from price changes in either the bond or stock. | Low to Moderate |
| Retail Arbitrage | Buying products at a lower price in physical stores and selling them online for a profit. | Purchase discounted items in-store and sell them on an online marketplace at a higher price. | Buy blenders on sale for ₹50 at Walmart and sell them on Amazon for ₹90, earning a profit after fees and shipping. | Low |
| Dividend Arbitrage | Taking advantage of dividend payments by buying stocks just before the ex-dividend date. | Buy stocks before the ex-dividend date, collect the dividend, and hedge with futures contracts. | Buy 1,000 shares of Infosys before the ex-dividend date to collect a ₹20,000 dividend while shorting futures to hedge against price drops. | Low to Moderate |
| Futures Arbitrage | Exploiting the price difference between the spot price and the futures price of an asset. | Buy the asset in the spot market and sell the futures contract, or vice versa, to lock in a profit. | Buy 100 shares of XYZ Ltd. at ₹1,000 in the spot market, sell the futures contract at ₹1,050, and profit from the difference after accounting for carry costs. | Low to Moderate |
- Pure Arbitrage:
Pure arbitrage involves simultaneously buying and selling the same asset in different markets to profit from price differences. It is the most straightforward and traditional form of arbitrage.
Example: Suppose a stock, XYZ Corporation, is trading at Rs50 on the BSE and at ₹51 on the BSE due to temporary exchange rate inefficiency. An arbitrageur can:
- Buy 1,000 shares of XYZ Corporation on the BSE for ₹50, costing ₹50,000.
- Sell 1,000 shares of XYZ Corporation on the NSE for ₹51, generating ₹51,000.
The arbitrageur makes a risk-free profit of ₹1,000 by taking advantage of the price discrepancy.
- Merger Arbitrage:
This is a tactical endeavour. When arbitrageurs suspect an acquisition or merger, they purchase the target company's stock. They sell the shares when the prices rise after the merger.
Example: Company A announces it will acquire Company B at ₹100 per share, but Company B's stock is currently trading at ₹95, reflecting the market's uncertainty about the deal going through.
- Buy 1,000 shares of Company B at ₹95, costing ₹95,000.
- If the deal is successful, sell the shares at ₹100, earning ₹100,000.
- The arbitrageur makes a risk-free profit of ₹1,000 by taking advantage of the price discrepancy.
Real life example of merger arbitrage is the HDFC-HDFC Bank merger. Traders who understood the swap ratio and market dynamics could potentially profit by exploiting the price discrepancies between the two companies' shares during the period leading up to the merger's completion.
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