City
Epaper

NSE changes lot size for Nifty Bank and Nifty Mid Select derivatives contracts

By IANS | Updated: March 30, 2025 15:21 IST

Mumbai, March 30 The National Stock Exchange (NSE) has made changes to the lot size of derivatives contracts ...

Open in App

Mumbai, March 30 The National Stock Exchange (NSE) has made changes to the lot size of derivatives contracts for Nifty Bank and Nifty Mid Select.

According to a circular issued by the NSE’s Futures and Options (F&O) department, the decision aligns with the guidelines set by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).

"Under the revised structure, the lot size for Nifty Bank has been increased from 30 to 35. Similarly, the lot size for Nifty Mid Select F&O contracts has been raised from 120 to 140," the exchange said in its circular.

However, there have been no changes to the lot size of derivatives contracts for other indices. The lot size for Nifty 50 remains at 75, while Nifty Financial Services is unchanged at 65, and Nifty Next 50 continues at 25.

The changes to Nifty Bank and Nifty Mid Select derivatives contracts will not apply to the existing monthly expiry contracts scheduled for April 24, May 29, and June 26. Instead, these changes will come into effect from the monthly expiry of July 31.

Earlier, the NSE had announced a shift in the expiry dates for derivatives contracts of Nifty, Bank Nifty, and other indices to the "last Monday of the month".

However, the SEBI has put a temporary hold on this decision. The market regulator has directed that all derivatives contracts should expire on either Tuesday or Thursday.

Meanwhile, last week, the NSE started settling trades of its unlisted shares electronically, marking a major shift from the previous manual process.

Transactions will now be processed through Central Depository Services India Ltd (CDSL), enabling a faster and more efficient transfer process. The stock exchange announced this change earlier this month.

Despite this shift, the NSE confirmed that its shares will remain unlisted and will not be publicly traded on any stock exchange.

However, this move ensures that off-market transfers adhere to the SEBI’s regulations under the Securities Contracts (Regulation) (Stock Exchanges and Clearing Corporations) Regulations, 2018.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentDacoit Day 1 Box Office Collection: Here’s How Much Mrunal Thakur–Adivi Sesh Film Earned on Opening Day

TechnologyBuyers criticise ‘poor quality’ China’s clean energy for creating costly ‘dependencies’

CricketIPL 2026: Punjab Kings wins toss, opts to bowl first against Sunrisers Hyderabad

CricketIPL 2026, PBKS vs SRH: Toss Result, Playing 11s, Impact Players and Pitch Report for Today’s Match

Other SportsIPL 2026: Unchanged Punjab Kings opt to bowl against Sunrisers Hyderabad

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndia’s developer community surges to 27 million on GitHub

BusinessDelhi EV Policy 2.0 offers new roadmap for 2-wheeler owners, cab aggregators, car buyers

BusinessDIIs offset FII selling as Indian markets rebound over 5 pc on ceasefire hope

BusinessIndia’s Popular Vastu Expert Acharaya Pankit Goyal Reveals Why Most Businesses Fail, And How Vastu Can Help Fix It

BusinessSAMARYA CREATION LAUNCHES AUMORA MUSIC India's First Creator Economy Company Enters Music with Legendary Lyricist SAMEER ANJAAN