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Trade Derivatives with Confidence

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 NSE & BSE F&O
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What is Derivatives Trading?

Derivatives trading involves financial contracts whose value is derived from an underlying asset — such as stocks, indices, commodities, or currencies. In the Indian market, these instruments are pivotal for both institutional and retail traders, enabling sophisticated risk management and speculative positioning.

A derivative contract represents an agreement between a buyer and a seller to trade an asset at a predetermined price on a future date. For retail investors in India, derivatives are predominantly traded on the NSE and BSE through Futures and Options (F&O), making India one of the largest derivative markets globally — with high daily volume and robust regulatory oversight by SEBI.

Underlying Asset

The stock, index, commodity, or currency the contract is based on (e.g. NIFTY, RELIANCE, GOLD).

Expiry Date

Date the contract terminates. Weekly: every Thursday. Monthly: last Thursday of the month.

Lot Size

Minimum number of units per contract — e.g. 75 units for NIFTY, 35 for BANKNIFTY.

Strike Price / Premium

Strike is the pre-agreed price for options; premium is the cost paid by the option buyer.

How Derivatives Trading Works

Two contract types — each with distinct rights, obligations, and risk profiles.

Futures Contract

A binding agreement to buy or sell an asset at a preset price on expiry. Both parties must honour the contract regardless of the market price. P&L is settled daily via mark-to-market (MTM).

  • Both buyer and seller are obligated
  • Daily MTM settlement
  • Higher margin requirement
  • Unlimited profit and loss potential

Options Contract

The right — not the obligation — to buy (Call) or sell (Put) at a strike price before expiry. The buyer pays a premium; the seller (writer) collects it but takes on the obligation.

  • Buyer has a right, not obligation
  • Maximum loss = premium paid (buyer)
  • Seller faces potentially unlimited risk
  • Weekly and monthly expiry cycles

Worked Example: You expect NIFTY to rise from 24,000 to 24,500. You buy a NIFTY 24,200 Call at ₹150 premium (lot size: 75 units). Total cost = ₹150 × 75 = ₹11,250. If NIFTY closes at 24,600, intrinsic value = ₹400 → profit = (₹400 − ₹150) × 75 = ₹18,750. If NIFTY falls, your maximum loss is the ₹11,250 premium paid.

Types of Derivatives

Derivatives available to Indian retail investors span indices, stocks, currencies, and commodities.

Index Futures

Trade NIFTY 50, BANKNIFTY, FINNIFTY futures. Cash-settled on expiry every Thursday.

Stock Futures

Futures contracts on 180+ SEBI-approved stocks. Physical delivery on monthly expiry.

Index Options

Call & put options on NIFTY/BANKNIFTY. Most liquid derivative instruments in India.

Stock Options

Options on individual stocks with monthly expiry. Lower liquidity than index options.

Currency Derivatives

Trade USD-INR, EUR-INR, GBP-INR pairs on NSE/BSE. Used by importers, exporters, and speculators.

Commodity Derivatives

Futures & options on gold, silver, crude oil, and agri commodities — traded on MCX and NCDEX.

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Advantages of Derivatives Trading

When used with discipline and the right strategy, derivatives offer unique advantages unavailable in the equity cash market.

Hedging & Risk Management

Protect your equity portfolio against market downturns using index put options or futures as a hedge.

Leverage Your Capital

Control a large position with a fraction of the capital required in the cash market. Initial margin is typically 8–22% of contract value.

Income Generation

Sell covered calls or cash-secured puts to earn regular premium income on your existing portfolio.

Price Discovery

F&O markets reflect future expectations, acting as a leading indicator for spot markets and helping informed decision-making.

High Liquidity

NIFTY and BANKNIFTY options are among the most liquid instruments globally — tight spreads and deep order books at all times.

Low Transaction Costs

Flat ₹20 per executed order brokerage — no percentage-based fees. Statutory charges (STT, exchange fee) are standard across all brokers.

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Limitations to Be Aware

Derivatives carry significant risks. Understanding these limitations is essential before trading F&O.

Leverage Risk

F&O positions are leveraged — a small adverse move in the underlying can result in losses far exceeding the initial margin deposited. Always use stop-losses and size positions appropriately.

Time Decay (Theta)

Options lose time value as they approach expiry. Theta decay accelerates in the final week before expiry, making it difficult for option buyers to recover unless the underlying moves significantly.

Complexity

F&O requires understanding of Greeks (Delta, Theta, Vega, Gamma), margin mechanics, and strategy construction. It is not suitable for beginners without adequate education and practice.

Margin Calls

If the market moves against your position, your broker may issue a margin call requiring you to top up your account. Failure to add funds within the stipulated time results in forced square-off of positions.

Counterparty Risk (Exchange-Managed)

Derivatives traded on NSE/BSE are settled by clearing corporations (NSCCL/ICCL), virtually eliminating direct counterparty risk — but OTC derivatives carry this risk fully.

Volatility Risk

Sharp, unexpected volatility events — gap openings, earnings surprises, macro news — can cause large overnight losses on open futures positions or in short options portfolios.

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How to Trade Derivatives

Three prerequisites you must have before placing your first F&O order on NSE or BSE.

F&O Account Activated

Request F&O segment activation on your Shriram trading account. This is a one-time, digital process.

Sufficient Margin

Maintain SPAN + Exposure margin in your account at all times. Your broker will alert you if the balance drops.

Strategy Knowledge

Start with buying options (limited risk = premium paid) before moving to selling or complex multi-leg strategies.

How to Trade Derivatives — Step by Step

Five steps from account opening to your first F&O order — fully online, no branch visit needed.

01

Open a Demat Trading Account

Register with Shriram Financial Services and open a Demat + Trading account digitally in under 10 minutes — 100% paperless with Aadhaar OTP.

02

Activate F&O Segment

Request F&O segment activation from your account dashboard. Submit a 6-month bank statement or ITR as income proof if required by SEBI guidelines.

03

Add Margin Funds

Transfer SPAN + Exposure margin to your trading account. F&O positions require upfront margin — the margin requirement is displayed per contract before placement.

04

Choose Strategy and Contract

Select your underlying (NIFTY / BANKNIFTY / stock), expiry date, strike price, and order type. Start with buying options to cap your maximum loss at the premium paid.

05

Place and Manage Your Order

Place a market or limit order. Set a stop-loss immediately after entry. Monitor your open P&L and margin utilisation — square off before expiry to avoid delivery obligations.

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Futures vs Options — Key Differences

Choose the right instrument based on your strategy, capital available, and risk appetite.

Feature

Futures

Options

Obligation

Both buyer and seller must settle at expiry

Buyer has a right only; seller is obligated

Premium / Cost

No premium — margin-based

Buyer pays premium upfront

Max Loss (Buyer)

Unlimited (mark-to-market daily)

Limited to premium paid

Max Loss (Seller)

Unlimited

Unlimited for naked positions

Capital Required

Higher (SPAN + Exposure margin)

Lower (premium amount for buyers)

Best For

Strong directional bets, portfolio hedging

Hedging, income strategies, speculation

Time Decay

No time decay

Theta erodes option value daily

Risks in Derivatives Trading

Understand these risks before activating your F&O segment. Knowledge is your first line of defence.

Leverage Risk

A small adverse price move can produce losses far exceeding initial margin. Manage position sizing strictly.

Time Decay

Options lose time value daily (theta). Buyers must be right on direction, magnitude, AND timing.

Volatility Risk

Gap openings, earnings events, and macro shocks can cause large overnight losses in open futures positions.

Margin Calls

Adverse moves trigger margin calls. Failure to add funds leads to forced square-off of positions.

Margin in Derivatives — SPAN & Exposure

SEBI mandates two margin components for every F&O position. Know what you need before you trade.

Margin Type

Purpose

Typical Range

SPAN Margin

Covers worst-case 1-day loss based on VaR (Value at Risk) model

5–15% of contract value

Exposure Margin

Additional buffer against extreme intraday volatility

3–7% of contract value

Total Required Margin

SPAN + Exposure — the amount you must have upfront

8–22% of contract value

Example: NIFTY Futures (1 lot = 75 units × ₹24,000 spot = ₹18L notional value). SPAN + Exposure ~12% → ₹2.16L margin required per lot. Always verify current margins on NSE or via your broker's margin calculator before taking positions.

Popular Derivatives Strategies

From simple directional plays to sophisticated multi-leg strategies — match your strategy to your market view.

Bullish

Long Call

Buy a call option. Profit if underlying rises above strike + premium. Max loss = premium paid.

Bullish

Bull Call Spread

Buy a lower strike call, sell a higher strike call. Limits both profit and loss. Lower cost than outright call.

Bearish

Long Put

Buy a put option. Profit if underlying falls below strike. Ideal hedge for existing equity positions.

Neutral

Iron Condor

Sell OTM call spread + OTM put spread. Profits in range-bound markets. Maximum profit = net premium received.

General Questions

What is derivatives trading in India?

Derivatives trading involves contracts whose value is derived from an underlying asset — a stock, index, commodity, or currency. In India, retail traders primarily trade Futures and Options (F&O) on NSE and BSE. India is now one of the largest derivative markets globally by volume.

What is the difference between Futures and Options?

Futures obligate both buyer and seller to transact at the agreed price on expiry. Options give the buyer the right — not the obligation — to buy (call) or sell (put) at a strike price. Options buyers risk only the premium paid; futures traders risk mark-to-market losses daily.

How much capital do I need to start F&O trading?

Buying one NIFTY/BANKNIFTY options lot needs ₹5,000–₹20,000 in premium. Futures require ₹50,000–₹2,00,000 in SPAN + Exposure margin per lot depending on the underlying. Start with options buying to limit risk.

Is F&O income taxed differently from equity?

Yes — F&O P&L is treated as non-speculative business income, not capital gains. You must file ITR-3, can offset F&O losses against other business income, and carry forward losses for up to 8 years.

What is "writing" or "selling" an option?

Writing (selling) an option earns you the premium upfront but creates an obligation to fulfil the contract if the buyer exercises it. Sellers profit when the option expires worthless; naked call writers face theoretically unlimited downside.

How does margin work in F&O?

SEBI requires SPAN + Exposure margin upfront for every F&O position. SPAN covers worst-case one-day losses; Exposure adds a buffer for extreme volatility. If your margin falls below the required level, your broker may square off positions automatically.

Can I trade F&O on any stock?

No. SEBI approves approximately 180+ stocks for F&O trading based on liquidity, market capitalisation, and volatility. Index derivatives (NIFTY, BANKNIFTY, FINNIFTY) are the most liquid instruments available.

What are options Greeks and why do they matter?

Greeks measure an option's sensitivity to various market factors. Delta: sensitivity to price change. Theta: time decay per day. Vega: sensitivity to volatility changes. Gamma: rate of change of Delta. Understanding Greeks is essential for advanced options strategies.

What is the lot size for NIFTY futures?

The current NIFTY lot size is 75 units per contract. BANKNIFTY lot size is 35 units. Lot sizes are revised periodically by NSE based on the underlying value to maintain minimum contract value thresholds.

What is weekly vs monthly expiry in options?

NIFTY and BANKNIFTY have weekly expiry contracts (every Thursday) in addition to monthly contracts (last Thursday of the month). Weekly options have lower premiums but higher theta decay, making them more suitable for short-term directional plays.

Can NRIs trade derivatives in India?

NRIs can trade derivatives in India through RBI-approved routes using NRE/NRO accounts, subject to specific FEMA regulations. They must use a SEBI-registered broker with NRI trading facilities. Please contact our support team for NRI-specific guidance.

What is an Iron Condor strategy?

An Iron Condor is a neutral options strategy where you sell an OTM call spread and an OTM put spread simultaneously. It profits when the underlying stays within a defined range till expiry. Maximum profit is the net premium received; maximum loss is capped.

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