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SEBI Approves Jane Street India Re‑Entry After ₹4,844 crore Deposit

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The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has approved the re-entry of U.S. high-frequency trading firm Jane Street into Indian markets. This follows the firm’s payment of ₹4,843.57–₹4,844 crore into an escrow account by July 14, satisfying regulatory requirements to lift a trading ban from earlier this month


Why the Ban Happened

SEBI had imposed the ban on July 3, alleging Jane Street manipulated Nifty and Bank Nifty indices via coordinated expiry-day trades. The regulator identified approximately ₹36,500 crore in profits as “unlawful gains” and froze equivalent assets


What Comes Next

  • With the escrow deposit complete, SEBI lifted restrictions, but trading remains conditionally monitored. Exchanges like NSE and BSE have been instructed to closely surveil Jane Street’s activities
  • The firm remains barred from options trading and has pledged to hold off on cash market trading until it fully addresses SEBI’s concerns Business Standard
  • SEBI’s investigation is still ongoing, and the firm may be liable for penalties up to three times the ₹4,844 crore deposit if manipulation is substantiated

Market Reaction & Outlook

  • BSE shares rose ~3%, reflecting investor optimism about the return of liquidity and trading activity
  • Derivatives turnover, briefly disrupted by Jane Street’s ban, should rebound—but tight oversight remains a key focus

Impact and Implications

  • Sealing this deal sends a broader signal: India is open to global HFT firms, provided they comply with regulations and ethical standards.
  • Traders and regulators alike will be watching closely—this episode renews focus on expiry‑day trading patterns, market stability, and investor protection.
  • While Jane Street returns, the expanded probe could reshape derivatives regulation in India, particularly around quant-driven strategies

🔍 Summary Table

✅ StatusDetails
Escrow Deposit₹4,843.6–₹4,844 crore by July 14
Ban LiftedSEBI cleared re-entry post‑deposit
Restrictions RemainOptions barred; cash trades pending final clarification
Regulatory OversightNSE/BSE mandated to monitor activity
Investigation OngoingRisk of fines up to 3× escrow deposit

Feature Image Concept: A stock exchange trading floor in India overlaid with a large “APPROVED” stamp and Jane Street’s logo—symbolizing regulated return.

Suggested External Links:

  • Reuters: India markets regulator allows Jane Street to resume trading
  • Economic Times: SEBI nod after escrow deposit
  • Financial Times: Initial escrow payment and continued probe

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