Has options volume overtaken cash volumes in Indian market? Zerodha's Nithin Kamath explains
2 min read . Updated: 27 Feb 2023, 11:27 PM IST
- Nithin said, in the last two years, the rise in options trading volumes is due to intraday stock traders switching to the F&O segment.
Over many reports on options volume overtaking cash volumes in the Indian market, leading online stock brokerage, Zerodha's co-founder and CEO Nithin Kamath on Monday said, just looking at the volumes and not unique users can be misleading. Nithin said, in the last two years, the rise in options trading volumes is due to intraday stock traders switching to the F&O segment.
Through his Twitter handler, Nithin said, "news headlines scream about options volumes overtaking cash volumes. But just looking at volumes and not unique users can be misleading."
He added, "jump in options last 2 yrs is mostly due to intraday stock traders switching to options after intraday leverage restrictions in early 2021."
In a thread, Nithin, 10% of active traders --- contributes 90% of trading volumes, in mostly intraday cash and F&O.
"Comparing trading volumes of traders to equity investors is like comparing apples to oranges or brinjals," he said.
Until 2021, Nithin explained that brokers could offer as much intraday leverage as they wanted. He added, "this made trading stocks attractive."
But once maximum leverage was capped at 5X, he said, "intraday traders switched to F&O, given the ability to hold shorts and leveraged positions overnight."
Thereby, F&O volumes grew faster than cash volumes, he added, "because the most active traders switched to F&O. But if you look at unique traders, equity as a percentage continues to be much more than F&O."
But Nithin also said, "yes, F&O participation has increased, but equity has increased much more."
Further, Nithin believes that there is another regulatory reason behind the rise in retail contribution from 27% to 36%.
He highlighted that in March 2020, due to COVID-induced volatility, the notional F&O exposure value at a client level was capped at ₹500 crores to reduce risk.
Accordingly, he said, "this capped the position limit for institutions in derivatives at ₹500 crores or ~6000 lots Nifty, which restricted the trading volumes of others except retail. This, I think, is why retail % contribution in derivatives has picked up in the last 3 years."
Lastly, he concluded, "in this post, I explain why you shouldn't compare only trading volumes and conclude that speculative activity is unusually high just because option trading volumes are at all-time highs. It is important to track participation by unique users as well."
Here's the thread of his tweet: