Nithin Kamath Praises Indian Markets for Tight Control in Grey Zones

Nithin Kamath, CEO of Zerodha, praised Indian markets for their tight control in grey zones compared to Western markets. He noted that gold and silver prices showed no unusual movements before the government announced a duty hike from 6% to 15%. Kamath contrasted this with the US, where he believes privileged information often gets traded. He criticized the casual monetization of privileged information in Western markets as blatant insider trading.

Key Points: Nithin Kamath: Indian Markets Tightly Controlled

  • Indian markets showed no unusual volatility before gold duty hike
  • Kamath contrasts with US where insider trading is common
  • Ministry of Finance raised gold import duty from 6% to 15%
  • Kamath criticizes Western insider trading as "blatant"
  • Platinum duty also increased to 15.4%
2 min read

Indian markets far more tightly controlled in grey zones than many Western markets: Nithin Kamath

Zerodha CEO Nithin Kamath says Indian markets are more tightly controlled in grey zones than Western markets, citing no unusual moves before gold duty hike.

"Just another reason why Indian markets, despite all their flaws, are far more tightly controlled in these grey zones than many Western markets. - Nithin Kamath"

New Delhi, May 13

The Ministry of Finance has updated the customs duty rates for various precious metals and jewellery findings from 6 per cent to 15 per cent, which comes into effect today. However, the Gold and Silver markets did not show any unusual movements in the hours leading up to the announcement.

Highlighting this, Nithin Kamath, Founder & CEO of Zerodha, hailed the Indian markets on Wednesday. "Just another reason why Indian markets, despite all their flaws, are far more tightly controlled in these grey zones than many Western markets," Kamath said on X.

He also noted the lack of volatility or suspicious volume shifts before the official government notification became public.

"The news about import duties on gold and silver going up to 15 per cent came late last night. The interesting thing: neither open interest, prices, nor volume in Gold and Silver showed any unusual moves in the hours leading up to the announcement," Kamath said.

Source: Nithin Kamath on X (@Nithin0dha)

Kamath contrasted this market discipline with the regulatory environment in the United States and other Western nations, where sensitive information often impacts markets before an official statement.

"If this had happened in the United States, I'm fairly sure some of the people close to the decision-making process would have found a way to trade it, either through regulated futures markets, other derivative contracts, or prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi," Kamath said.

The CEO gave examples of previous instances involving crude oil and the Iran conflict, where allegations surfaced regarding individuals close to government circles trading on privileged information.

"It's kind of insane how casually people in power seem to monetize privileged information. At some point, this stops looking like 'market participation' and starts looking like blatant insider trading with better branding," Kamath mentioned.

The Ministry of Finance raised the import duty on gold and silver from 6 per cent to 15 per cent, while platinum will now attract a duty of 15.4 per cent, up from 6.4 per cent. The changes also apply to related items such as gold and silver dore, coins, and findings.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
While I appreciate the transparency, let's not get too complacent. We still have huge issues like the Nirav Modi scam and bank frauds that went undetected for years. One good example doesn't mean our system is perfect. Need stronger enforcement, not just praise. 🤔
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Vikram M
As a trader for 15 years, I can confirm this. Indian markets have always been more disciplined than Western ones when it comes to leaks. Remember the Budget announcements? They never leak before 11am on Feb 1. Meanwhile, UK budgets leak a week in advance. Our babus may be slow but they're tight-lipped. 😄
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Ananya R
I'm skeptical. Just because there wasn't price movement in gold/silver doesn't mean there wasn't insider trading. Maybe people just didn't care about 9% duty hike on something already heavily tax-avoided. And let's not forget the Harshad Mehta days. We have a long way to go. But credit where due - good job this time. 👏
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Rohit P
Wait, so Nithin Kamath is saying Indian markets are better than US markets? The same US markets that have been running 100-year bull runs while we barely recovered from 2008? Let's not confuse discipline with lack of development. Our markets are smaller and less sophisticated, so naturally less leakage. Not necessarily better. 🤷‍♂️
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Meera T
As someone who trades both Indian and US markets, I can say Nithin is spot on. In the US, I've seen multiple times where stocks move 5% before earnings announcements. Here,

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