The Indian stock market has become one of the calmest in the world, pushing option traders to adopt new strategies, with robust domestic investment overwhelming the foreign investors and SEBI restrictions reducing sharp swings, a Bloomberg report said. The India NSE Volatility Index, which measures how much investors expect the market to be volatile in the future, has fallen to its lowest level.

Calmness Affects Option Trading
Options traders have been hit worse by this trend, as derivative trading works best when stock prices become prone to high volatility. Big swings make investors nervous, so they take high stakes in options by buying contracts to hedge risks. This pushes up the price of options, and traders who sell them earn higher profits.
Currently, the market is seen as unusually quiet. Prices have not been changing, and investors are not taking much interest in options. With this, traders have been making less money and have been compelled to rely on different strategies.
Crackdown on speculative trading
A major change came last year when the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), the country's market regulator, introduced strict measures to reduce risky trading by retail investors. SEBI's ban on popular weekly options contracts reduced trading activity, thereby lowering volatility. These contracts had triggered heavy short-term speculation and often caused sharp intraday swings in the market.
Trading volumes fall sharply.
The effect of these changes was apparent. Average daily turnover in derivatives-financial contracts based on the value of stocks-has declined to about 240 trillion rupees (2.7 trillion dollars) this year, a 35 per cent fall compared to 2024. It is also the first yearly decline since 2017.
This slowdown has also been reflected in the benchmark indices. The Nifty 50 moved less than 1.5 per cent for 151 trading sessions in a row, close to breaking a record set in 2023. Its three-month realised volatility, which measures actual past movement, has dropped to around 8 points. This is lower than in any other major global market.
Foreign investors exit, locals step in
Domestic Funds' strong involvement in the market resumed in 2025 too, while foreign funds have withdrawn about 17 billion dollars, the largest outflow ever. Analysts attribute this growing trend to trade tensions with the United States and the limited presence of Indian companies linked to the global artificial intelligence boom.
Indian institutions have invested more than 80 billion dollars in shares since January, the highest on record. For the first time, local investors now own more of the market than foreign funds, according to data from primeinfobase.com, which tracks ownership since 2009.
Performance remains modest compared to global peers
Despite the steady inflow of domestic money, Indian stock market returns remained modest. The Nifty 50 has risen 9.8 per cent this year. By comparison, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has gained 27 per cent, and the MSCI All-Country World Index has climbed 20 per cent.
The stretched valuation continued posing challenges to the Indian market, with the Nifty 50 trading at 20 times projected company earnings, higher than its five-year average and pricier than the broader emerging markets index, which trades at 13 times earnings.
Options traders search for new strategies
The new environment has posed challenges for derivative traders. They have been compelled to implement new strategies, built around selling options and rolling over short-term positions. With lower premiums and fewer short-dated contracts available, these approaches are less effective.
Bhautik Ambani, chief executive officer of AlphaGrep Investment Management Pvt, said that traders now have fewer tools to express short-term views or capture quick profits. The calm market is forcing them to rethink how they operate.
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