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F&O Volumes Cool 20-25% as RBI Margin Rule Adds to VIX, STT Headwinds, Say Brokers

  • July 8, 2026
  • Posted by: Ankit Jaiswal
  • Category: News
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F&O Volumes Cool 20-25%

F&O volumes cool 20-25% as RBI margin rule, effective 1 April 2026, raises cost of capital for prop desks. 100% collateral, 40% equity haircut. VIX, STT add further headwinds.

F&O volumes have cooled 20 to 25 percent in recent sessions, brokers say, as the Reserve Bank of India’s new margin norms for bank lending to capital market intermediaries raise the cost of capital for proprietary trading desks. The norms, brokers explain, are potentially reducing borrowed capital use and affecting overall market liquidity.

The RBI’s Commercial Banks Credit Facilities Amendment Directions, effective from 1 April 2026, explicitly prohibit banks from funding proprietary trading by brokers, mandate 100 percent collateralisation of credit facilities to capital market intermediaries, and impose a minimum 40 percent haircut on equity pledged as collateral.

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Table of Contents

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  • Why F&O Volumes Are Falling: The RBI Margin Rule Explained
  • How the Margin Rule Compounds VIX and STT Headwinds
  • What Should Investors Watch as F&O Volumes Adjust
  • Conclusion
  • Frequently Asked Questions FAQs
    • Why have F&O volumes cooled 20-25 percent?
    • What is the RBI margin rule affecting F&O volumes?
    • How does the RBI rule affect proprietary trading desks?
    • What other factors are adding to F&O volume headwinds?
    • How much have commodity exchange options volumes fallen?
    • Should investors be concerned about falling F&O volumes?

Why F&O Volumes Are Falling: The RBI Margin Rule Explained

Particulars Details
Effective Date 1 April 2026
Key Change Ban on bank funding for broker proprietary trading
Collateral Requirement 100 percent collateralisation of bank credit to brokers
Equity Haircut Minimum 40 percent, versus 12-25 percent earlier for liquid large caps
Bank Guarantee Norms At least 50 percent collateral, of which 25 percent must be cash
Reported F&O Volume Decline 20 to 25 percent, brokers say

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How the Margin Rule Compounds VIX and STT Headwinds

Brokers say the RBI margin rule is landing at a time when other factors are already weighing on F&O volumes, including periods of elevated India VIX that raise options premiums and discourage retail participation, along with the securities transaction tax on options trades that has made high frequency strategies less economical since being revised. Together, these three headwinds, the margin rule, VIX driven cost swings and STT, are compounding the pressure on F&O volumes across exchanges.

Early data cited by market participants shows options premium average daily turnover on commodity exchanges falling by nearly 40 percent in the first few trading days after the norms kicked in, while cash and derivatives volumes on equity exchanges have also declined in the high single digit to low double digit percentage range.

What Should Investors Watch as F&O Volumes Adjust

Investors and traders should watch how exchange linked stocks and brokerage companies report the impact of lower F&O volumes in their Q1 FY27 results, along with any further regulatory clarifications from the RBI or SEBI on margin norms. A structural decline in proprietary trading driven volumes could also affect market liquidity and bid ask spreads over time.

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Conclusion

F&O volumes have cooled 20 to 25 percent as the RBI’s new margin rule raises the cost of capital for proprietary trading desks, compounding existing VIX and STT related headwinds, brokers say. Investors should track Q1 FY27 commentary from exchanges and brokerages, and consult a SEBI registered advisor before making trading decisions.

Disclaimer: Data and figures in this article are sourced from publicly available information. These may or may not be accurate. Please verify all data with the official NSE (nseindia.com) and BSE (bseindia.com) websites before making any investment decision. Investments in securities are subject to market risk. This content is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice by Univest (SEBI RA INH000013776).

Frequently Asked Questions FAQs

Why have F&O volumes cooled 20-25 percent?

Ans. F&O volumes have cooled 20 to 25 percent as the RBI’s new margin rule, effective from 1 April 2026, raises the cost of capital for proprietary trading desks by requiring 100 percent collateralisation and a minimum 40 percent haircut on equity collateral.

What is the RBI margin rule affecting F&O volumes?

Ans. The RBI’s Commercial Banks Credit Facilities Amendment Directions bar banks from funding broker proprietary trading, require full collateralisation of credit facilities, and mandate stricter bank guarantee norms with at least 25 percent cash collateral.

How does the RBI rule affect proprietary trading desks?

Ans. The rule prevents proprietary trading desks from using low cost, partially secured bank borrowing, forcing them to fund trading with their own equity capital, which raises costs and can reduce trading volumes.

What other factors are adding to F&O volume headwinds?

Ans. Besides the RBI margin rule, brokers cite elevated India VIX, which raises options premiums, and the securities transaction tax on options trades as additional headwinds weighing on F&O volumes.

How much have commodity exchange options volumes fallen?

Ans. Options premium average daily turnover on commodity exchanges has fallen by nearly 40 percent in the first few trading days after the RBI norms took effect, according to market data.

Should investors be concerned about falling F&O volumes?

Ans. Falling F&O volumes primarily affect brokers, exchanges and proprietary trading desks rather than long term investors directly, though liquidity and spreads could be affected. Investors should consult a SEBI registered investment advisor for portfolio specific guidance.



F&O Volumes
Author: Ankit Jaiswal
Ankit Jaiswal is the Senior Research Analyst at Univest, leading the platform's in-house equity research desk and serving as the editorial reviewer for all research and blog content published at univest.in. With 11+ years of experience in Indian equity markets, he oversees stock recommendations, earnings analysis, sector coverage, and ensures every published article meets SEBI Research Analyst Regulations. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce (B.Com) from St. Xavier's College, Kolkata — one of India's most prestigious commerce institutions — and has cleared CMT Level 2 from the CMT Association, a globally recognised certification in technical analysis and market research. His research methodology combines fundamental analysis (earnings quality, balance sheet strength, management commentary) with advanced technical analysis (chart patterns, momentum indicators, market structure) — giving Univest's retail investors a dual-lens approach that most Indian research platforms lack. Ankit is among the most comprehensively certified analysts in Indian financial media, holding five NISM certifications: Series-XV (Research Analyst), Series-VIII (Equity Derivatives), Series-VII (SORM), Series-VI (Depository Operations), and Series-V-A (Mutual Fund Distributors). At Univest — India's SEBI-registered research and advisory platform — Ankit's responsibilities include leading the research team, finalising stock recommendations published across Pro Lite, Pro Super, and Pro Gold advisory services, and maintaining editorial oversight of all YMYL financial content published on the blog.

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