The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) is considering a proposal that could increase margin requirements for single-stock derivatives by 30-60 per cent on expiry days, as the regulator looks to align stock-derivative rules with index contracts.
Removing the benefit on the day the contract expires would therefore require traders to post substantially more capital during market hours, instead of carrying the lower margin until the 3:30 pm close.
A SEBI source said the aim is to “align the calendar spread treatment for single stocks derivatives with that for index derivatives and cross margin framework for index derivatives,”
Market participants say this could tighten expiry-day liquidity.
Under the current system, traders can hold both legs of a spread throughout the session with lower margins, even though one leg will expire after closing.
The resulting jump occurs only after the session ends, creating a risk window for brokers.
By withdrawing the spread benefit on expiry day itself, clearing corporations would need to collect higher margins intraday.
Some fear reduced participation from smaller or cash-constrained traders, who often rely on spread offsets to keep capital requirements manageable.
SEBI did not respond to an email seeking comments.
