Why in the news?
- SEBI issued new rules for monitoring intraday positions in equity derivatives.
Equity Derivatives
- What is it?:
- Derivative: A financial instrument whose value is derived from an underlying asset (e.g., equity shares, commodities, currencies, indices).
- Equity Derivatives: An equity derivative is a financial instrument whose value is derived from the price movements of an underlying equity asset, such as a stock.
- Traders use equity derivatives to speculate and manage risk.
- Types:
- Forwards: OTC contracts, customized, high default risk.
- Futures: Exchange-traded, standardized, lower counterparty risk.
- Example: NIFTY Futures, Stock Futures.
- Options: Gives right but not obligation to buy/sell.
- Call Option: Right to buy.
- Put Option: Right to sell.
- Example: NIFTY Call Option (strike price ₹20,000).
- Swaps: Exchange of cash flows linked to equity returns. Rare in India for equity.
- Purpose of Equity Derivatives:
- Hedging: Protects investors from adverse price movements.
- Speculation: Traders take positions for profit from expected price changes.
- Arbitrage: Exploiting price differences between cash and derivative markets.
- Portfolio Management: Diversification and risk management using index derivatives.
- Regulatory Framework in India:
- Regulated by SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India).
- Derivative trading was introduced in India in 2000 (NSE launched index futures first).
- Derivatives allowed only in dematerialised & exchange-traded form (not OTC for retail).
- Trading occurs mainly on NSE and BSE.
- Concerns:
- High Volatility: Can magnify gains and losses.
- Leverage Risk: Small investment controls large value → high exposure.
- Counterparty Risk: Minimal on exchanges but exists in OTC.
- Speculative Bubble: Over-speculation may destabilize equity markets.