SEBI bars US firm Jane Street from Indian markets, directs it to deposit Rs 4,843 crore

IANS July 4, 2025 448 views

SEBI has banned US-based Jane Street and its affiliates from Indian markets, citing illegal gains of Rs 4,843 crore. The regulator found the firm manipulated Bank Nifty prices through aggressive futures and options trading. Jane Street disputes the allegations but faces frozen accounts and trading restrictions. This marks one of SEBI's strongest actions against a foreign trading entity.

"Entities are restrained from accessing the securities market and are further prohibited from buying, selling, or otherwise dealing in securities, direct or indirect" – SEBI
SEBI bars US firm Jane Street from Indian markets, directs it to deposit Rs 4,843 crore
Mumbai, July 4: The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has barred US trading entity Jane Street and three of its related entities from accessing the market, directing them to deposit illegal gains of Rs 4,843.5 crore in an account in favour of the markets regulator.

Key Points

1

SEBI freezes Jane Street bank accounts for alleged market manipulation

2

Firm made Rs 43,289 crore profit trading index options

3

Accused of influencing Bank Nifty expiry prices via aggressive trades

4

Jane Street disputes SEBI findings, plans further engagement

In its order, the regulator has also directed a debit freeze on the bank accounts of these entities, which include JSI2 Investments Private Ltd, Jane Street Singapore Pte. Ltd and Jane Street Asia Trading Ltd.

According to the SEBI order, Jane Street earned Rs 43,289.33 crore in profits through trading in index options on Indian exchanges between January 1, 2023, and March 31, 2025.

As per the order, Jane Street on 14 expiry days used to heavily buy Bank Nifty futures in huge amounts as well in the cash segment and sell Bank Nifty options in big numbers -- all in the morning.

After noon, the Jane Street entities used to aggressively sell large amounts in Bank Nifty futures and influence the closing of the index on expiry days.

According to the SEBI order, in the morning of January 17, 2024, Jane Street aggressively bought Bank Nifty futures worth Rs 4,370 crore and sold Bank Nifty options for Rs 32,115 crore. After noon, it aggressively sold large amounts in Bank Nifty in the underlying futures for Rs 5,372 crore.

This created a peak short position of Rs 46,620 crore in the Bank Nifty index options segment and led to a softer closing of Bank Nifty.

Jane Street made a profit of Rs 735 crore in the options segment, and made an intraday loss of Rs 61.6 crore in cash and futures. Thus, it made a clear-cut gain of Rs 673.4 crore on that expiry day.

The market regulator passed the order as part of enforcement action. It applies to all Jane Street Group entities operating in India and restricts their ability to trade or participate in any market-related activity.

"Entities are restrained from accessing the securities market and are further prohibited from buying, selling, or otherwise dealing in securities, direct or indirect," SEBI said in an order.

Jane Street has disputed the findings of SEBI's interim order and will further engage with the regulator.

—IANS

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone working in finance, I'm shocked at the scale of manipulation. Making ₹735 crore profit in single day through options trading! SEBI needs to strengthen surveillance systems to detect such patterns faster.
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Arjun K
This is why retail investors suffer losses in F&O. Big players like Jane Street manipulate closing prices systematically. Good that SEBI caught them red-handed. But why did it take 2+ years to notice such massive trades?
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Priya S
While the action is welcome, I hope SEBI applies same strictness to domestic players doing similar things. Often foreign firms are easy targets while local big fish escape scrutiny. #EqualTreatmentNeeded
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Vikram M
₹43,289 crore profits in just 2 years! And they call India a developing market 😂 Our markets have become playground for these sophisticated sharks. SEBI should impose even stricter position limits for such players.
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Kavya N
The scale is mind-boggling! But will the penalty actually be recovered? Hope SEBI follows through properly. We've seen many cases where foreign entities delay payment through legal loopholes. Need watertight enforcement.

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