SEBI has introduced new rules for the futures and options (F&O) market, bringing significant changes to how stock and index derivatives function. These updates aim to improve market stability and reduce excessive speculation.
Changes in Stock Derivatives Position Limits
One of the key changes is how position limits in stock derivatives are determined. Earlier, traders could take large positions in stock futures and options without a direct link to how actively the stock was traded in the cash market. This created an imbalance where the derivatives market sometimes saw excessive trading even when the underlying stock had low liquidity.
To understand this better, let’s break it down:
– The cash market (also called the spot market) is where actual shares of a company are bought and sold.
– The derivatives market includes futures and options contracts that allow traders to bet on a stock’s price movement without actually buying or selling the shares.
Previously, a trader could take a massive position in a stock’s futures or options contract, even if the stock itself was not heavily traded in the cash market. This meant that derivative prices could move significantly without real buying or selling of the actual stock. This speculative activity sometimes led to sharp price swings and increased volatility, making the market riskier for regular investors.
Now, SEBI has changed this rule by linking position limits in derivatives to the liquidity of the stock in the cash market. If a stock has high trading volumes in the cash market, traders will be allowed to take larger positions in its derivatives. If a stock is less liquid, the position limits in its derivatives will also be lower. This ensures that speculation in derivatives is better aligned with real market activity, reducing the chances of artificial price movements.
New Rules for Index Derivatives
For index derivatives, SEBI has introduced a rule that only indices with at least 14 stocks will qualify for derivatives trading. Previously, indices with fewer stocks were allowed, which sometimes led to high concentration risk.
For example, if an index had only 10 stocks and a few of them had a very high weightage, any sharp movement in just one or two stocks could impact the entire index disproportionately. By requiring indices to have at least 14 stocks, SEBI aims to ensure that indices represent a broader market segment, making them less vulnerable to manipulation.
Open Interest Calculation Method Change
Another major change is how open interest (OI) is calculated. OI refers to the total number of outstanding futures and options contracts for a stock or index. Previously, OI was measured in absolute contract numbers, meaning that it didn’t account for differences in contract sizes.
For instance, if Stock A had a contract size of 1,000 shares per contract and Stock B had a contract size of 2,000 shares per contract, both would contribute equally to the OI calculation, even though Stock B involved double the number of shares.
Now, SEBI has introduced the “future equivalent” metric, which standardizes OI calculation by adjusting for contract size. This makes it easier to compare risk exposure across different stocks and indices and gives a more accurate picture of market activity.
Changes in Market-Wide Position Limits (MWPL)
Market-Wide Position Limits (MWPL) determine how much of a stock’s total market capitalization can be traded in derivatives. Previously, MWPL was based on the stock’s free float market capitalization – which refers to the total value of shares available for public trading.
However, this method sometimes allowed excessive speculation because stocks with a small free float but high speculative interest could see heavy derivative trading. The revised MWPL calculation is more refined, ensuring that position limits better reflect the stock’s real liquidity and reducing undue volatility.
Higher Margins to Reduce Excessive Leverage
SEBI has also increased intraday margins for index futures trading. Previously, traders needed to deposit ₹500 per crore of trade value as margin. Now, this has been increased to ₹1,500 per crore.
Margins act as a safety buffer, ensuring that traders have enough funds to cover potential losses. The lower margin requirement earlier meant traders could take large positions with minimal capital, leading to excessive leverage. The increase in margin reduces the chances of extreme price fluctuations caused by speculative trading.
Stricter Rules for Institutional Investors
Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), mutual funds (MFs), and alternative investment funds (AIFs) will now face stricter position limits. Earlier, these large institutional investors could take significant positions in derivatives, which sometimes led to market distortions. The new rules aim to prevent any single entity from having too much influence over market movements.
Index Weight Restrictions for Balanced Exposure
Finally, SEBI has imposed new restrictions on how much weight a single stock can have in an index. Earlier, a single stock could have a high weightage, making the index overly dependent on its movement. Now, no single stock can hold more than 20% weight in an index, and the top three stocks combined cannot exceed 45%.
For example, in Bank Nifty, if one or two major banks had very high weightage, their stock movements could drive the entire index, making it less representative of the overall banking sector. These new limits ensure that indices remain well-diversified and reflect a broader market trend.
Why SEBI Made These Changes
All these rule changes have one common goal: to reduce excessive speculation and make the derivatives market more stable and aligned with actual market activity. SEBI wants to ensure that:
- Stock derivatives trading is more balanced – linking position limits to cash market liquidity prevents excessive speculation.
- Index derivatives are well-diversified – requiring more stocks in indices ensures broader market representation.
- Risk exposure is more accurately measured – the new OI formula and MWPL changes provide better risk assessment.
- Excessive leverage is reduced – higher margin requirements prevent traders from taking oversized positions with minimal funds.
- Institutional influence is controlled – stricter limits on large investors prevent undue market impact.
- Index movements are fairer – weight restrictions prevent individual stocks from dominating indices.
These changes are expected to improve market integrity, protect retail investors, and ensure that F&O trading serves its true purpose—hedging and risk management—rather than being a tool for excessive speculation.