City
Epaper

SEBI introduces new rules for equity F&O segment to boost transparency, stability

By IANS | Updated: May 29, 2025 20:48 IST

Mumbai, May 29 The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Thursday announced a new set of ...

Open in App

Mumbai, May 29 The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) on Thursday announced a new set of rules for the equity Futures and Options (F&O) segment.

These changes aim to improve transparency, control excessive speculation, and bring more stability to the market.

One of the major changes introduced by the SEBI is a new method for measuring open interest (OI) in the equity F&O segment.

Open interest refers to the total number of outstanding contracts in futures or options.

The SEBI said it will now closely monitor the open interest levels during the day, especially for single stock futures and options, instead of waiting until the end of the day.

The capital market regulator has also decided to link the market-wide position limit (MWPL) to the cash market volume and the free float of the stock.

MWPL is the maximum number of contracts that can be open in F&O trading for a particular stock.

This move is aimed at preventing excessive speculation in stocks with limited liquidity.

In another key measure, the SEBI has increased the position limits for trading in Index Futures and Index Options, saying that it wants to strike a balance between allowing market participants to take meaningful positions in large indices and avoiding manipulation risks.

For Index Options, the net end-of-day position limit for futures-equivalent open interest (FutEq OI) will be Rs 1,500 crore.

In terms of gross positions, neither the long nor the short side should exceed Rs 10,000 crore.

When it comes to Index Futures, position limits will vary by category of participants.

For example, for Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) in Category I, mutual funds, and brokers (including proprietary and client trades), the limit will be the higher of either 15 per cent of the total futures open interest or Rs 500 crore.

For FPIs in Category II -- excluding individuals, family offices, and corporates -- the limit will be the higher of 10 per cent of the open interest or Rs 500 crore.

Brokers, including their proprietary and client accounts combined, will have an overall cap of 15 per cent of open interest or Rs 7,500 crore, whichever is lower.

The SEBI clarified that these limits are in addition to any holdings the participants have in the cash market or actual stock holdings.

The new rules are expected to make the F&O segment more transparent and efficient, while also keeping excessive risk in check.

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

Other Sports'The youth factor just isn’t there right now': Uthappa questions SRH's bowling squad

NationalMeditation vital for inner peace, social harmony, says VP Radhakrishnan

Cricket"Doubt I'll be playing Melbourne, will have a chat about Sydney": Cummins speaks after Ashes series win, provides Lyon fitness update

Entertainment"Deeply saddened": Priyanka Gandhi Vadra pays tribute to Malayalam actor Sreenivasan

Other SportsCameron Green important for us, needed someone to take the franchise forward: Nayar

Business Realted Stories

BusinessTop 6 firms add Rs 75,257 crore in market value

BusinessMPC likely to remain on extended pause; further rate cuts hinge on inflation trend: Report

BusinessUltraTech Cement faces Rs 390 crore GST demand

BusinessGeM records over 11.25 lakh MSE sellers securing Rs 7.44 lakh crore in Govt orders

BusinessIndia’s biogas sector likely to attract Rs 5,000 crore investment in 2026-27