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On May 8, 2025, India launched Operation Sindoor, targeting terror camps in Pakistan and PoK. Markets were rattled—Pakistan’s KSE-100 dropped 6%, but India’s Nifty fell just 0.6%. Behind the scenes, U.S. trading firm Jane Street allegedly took advantage of the chaos to manipulate the Nifty 50 index—earning significant gains in a short window. Here’s how they did it, according to SEBI’s findings covered by Mint.

The Key Move: Last‑Minute Momentum Shift

  • On expiry day for Nifty weekly options, Jane Street took aggressive long positions early, then swung the market in the last 45 minutes.

  • Their strategy: buy call options (bullish bets) and short put options (bearish safety), then push prices higher in futures and cash to influence expiry values in their favor.

How the Profit Worked

  • On May 8, Nifty slumped to ~24,150, but rallied to ~24,274 by close—only a small fall.

  • That late rally, fueled by massive futures buying, boosted call option deltas, inflating their value.

  • Even though the index ended lower, Jane Street netted ~₹3.1 crore in Nifty index options on that single day.

The Wider Scheme

SEBI’s interim order found this wasn’t a one-off:

  1. Intraday manipulation: Buy early, push indexes up before expiry, profit on options.

  2. Extended marking the close: Influence close-time prices for favorable settlements.

  3. Multiple instances: 18 expiry days between Jan 2023–May 2025—turning tactical trades into ₹4,844 crore gains.

Why It Worked

  • Hedging with local entity: Jane Street used its arm, JSI Investments, to bypass FPI intraday restrictions.

  • Derivative-driven index settlement: Index closing values directly influence options payouts—prime targets for manipulation.

SEBI’s Response

  • Banned Jane Street and related entities from Indian markets.

  • Froze ₹4,843 crore of alleged “unlawful gains” in escrow.

  • SEBI highlighted the firm’s trades had “no standalone economic rationale”—only to tilt index levels.

  • Jane Street is contesting the charges and preparing for tribunal hearings.

What It Reveals

  • Regulatory breakthroughs: SEBI’s strong action sets a precedent against cross-border manipulation in derivatives-heavy markets.

  • Retail vulnerability: Manipulated expiry days hurt everyday investors, while sophisticated firms profit.

  • Global implications: Echoes concerns over dark-pool tactics and regulatory arbitrage, as seen in U.S. vs. Indian market norms .

Final Takeaway

During Operation Sindoor, Jane Street identified volatility and used expiry-linked strategies to engineer a secretly beneficial market move. Their actions earned them crores in minutes—but have now triggered a sweeping regulatory crackdown. This case marks a watershed moment for market integrity, signaling that even powerful global players have limits in India’s market.

For Future Ready readers: this isn’t just about Operation Sindoor—it’s a lesson in how derivatives and expiry mechanics can be weaponized, and why robust oversight is essential for protecting small investors and fair markets.

Read more on our website: Future Ready, your go‑to platform for the best educational content and latest updates.

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