Jane Street to contest Indian regulator’s manipulation charges

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Jane Street plans to contest a finding by India’s financial regulator that the Wall Street trading firm engaged in “an intentional, well planned, and sinister scheme” to manipulate the country’s markets. 

On Friday, the Securities and Exchange Board of India banned the US trading firm from dealing securities in the country, alleging that it had systematically manipulated Indian bank stocks to trigger huge payouts on related derivatives. SEBI also ordered Jane Street to return more than $550mn of “illegal gains”. 

In a memo sent to its roughly 3,000 employees on Sunday, Jane Street’s senior management said that they were “beyond disappointed” by SEBI’s “extremely inflammatory” accusations and were “working on a formal response” to rebut them.

“It’s deeply upsetting to see the firm mischaracterised this way,” said the memo, a copy of which was seen by the Financial Times. “We take pride in the role we serve in markets around the world, and it’s painful to have our firm’s reputation tarnished by a report based on so many erroneous or unsupported assertions.”

SEBI said last week that Jane Street had 21 days to object to the order and request a hearing.

Jane Street is one of the biggest and most successful of a new generation of “proprietary trading firms” that have emerged over the past two decades and become hugely influential in an array of markets.

The New York-headquartered firm nearly doubled its net trading revenues to $20.5bn last year, outpacing several of Wall Street’s biggest banks. In the first quarter of 2025 Jane Street notched up net trading revenues of $7.2bn, more than Morgan Stanley.

SEBI’s investigation was triggered by revelations from a lawsuit launched by Jane Street last year against Millennium Management and two former traders that had moved to the hedge fund.

Jane Street’s complaint alleged that the traders had stolen a hugely valuable trading strategy, which was later revealed to revolve around Indian options trading.

India Business Briefing

The Indian professional’s must-read on business and policy in the world’s fastest-growing big economy. Sign up for the newsletter here

SEBI’s investigation has so far focused on Jane Street’s trading in shares, futures and options tied to the BANKNIFTY index of Indian banking stocks, but regulators indicated over the weekend that they were also looking at other corners of India’s financial markets.

Jane Street’s memo to staff said that the Indian regulator had used “a metric for market impact and trading aggressiveness which seems disconnected from actual market dynamics”. It argued that the details of its trading on January 17, 2024 — one of the days highlighted in SEBI’s report — actually showed “basic arbitrage trading”, a standard strategy in the industry.

Jane Street’s executives were also incensed by SEBI’s assertion that the firm had ignored concerns voiced by local stock exchanges, which the regulator cited as justification for the sudden and unprecedented ban on the trading firm’s Indian activities.

This allegation “felt especially far from reality”, Jane Street’s memo said. The trading firm said it had at the time immediately turned off its trading “until we could better understand the exchanges’ concerns”, and then modified its strategies to address their “preferences”.

“Once again, we left this process feeling that we had reached an understanding of the concerns and reflected them in modifications to our trading behaviour,” the memo said. “Since February, we have made ongoing efforts to communicate with SEBI and have been consistently rebuffed.”

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

KV Kamath, independent director and non-executive chair of Jio Financial Services Ltd (JFSL), and Subhash S Mundra, Bombay Stock Exchange chair, at the JFSL listing ceremony at the exchange

India seeks to tighten derivatives trading after Jane Street saga

This article is an on-site version of the India Business Briefing newsletter. To receive it in your inbox regularly, sign up if you’re a premium subscriber, or upgrade your subscription here. Good morning. Donald Trump has extended his deadline for reciprocal tariffs on trading partners from tomorrow to August 1. India’s commerce minister Piyush Goyal has

Australia’s NAB business confidence rises to 5, conditions rebound to 9

Australia’s business sentiment improved sharply in June, with NAB Business Confidence rising from 2 to 5, its highest trend level in over a year. Business Conditions surged from 0 to 9 after weakening for five straight months. The rebound was broad-based, with trading conditions jumping from 5 to 15, profitability returning to positive territory from

Most markets rise as Trump sends tariff letters, delays deadline

Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said he ‘won’t easily compromise’ in talks with the White House (Tomohiro Ohsumi) Most stocks rose Tuesday as traders cautiously welcomed Donald Trump’s extension of his tariff deadline and indication he could push it back further, though uncertainty over US trade policy capped gains. Days before the three-month pause on

EURUSD daily chart with 1.1685 support and 1.1750 resistance

EURUSD And DXY Moment Of Truth

EURUSD starts the week in the red as anticipated, but the US dollar faces a significant test this week. Watch today’s video for the details, including key levels and scenarios to watch for EURUSD and the DXY. The EURUSD is following through on the outlook I provided at the start of the month. Despite a

ET logo

Wall Street currency trading: Misfiring models leave Wall Street currency traders flying blind

Some of Wall Street’s tried-and-true currency strategies aren’t working anymore, and it’s baffling even the most seasoned traders. Before President Donald Trump’s policies sent the dollar plunging, investors could reliably use a number of indicators to figure out how to trade. Europe cuts interest rates? Sell euros. Markets look jittery? Buy dollars. Oil prices spike?

S&P and Nasdaq are at record levels nonetheless

Forex Signals Brief July 8: Will Stocks Continue the Retreat Today?

Yesterday US stocks turned lower, ending last week’s rally on tariff talk, so the decline might continue today as well. Written by: Skerdian Meta • Monday, July 7, 2025 • 4 min read • Last updated: Monday, July 7, 2025 Add an article to your Reading List Register now to be able to add articles

Several trade announcements coming in the next 48 hours, says Treasury Secretary Bessent

Trump administration teases trade deals before tariff deadline

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday said the Trump administration will make “several” trade-related announcements in the next 48 hours, signaling imminent progress even as U.S. tariff deadlines appear to be shifting. Speaking on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” Bessent also declined, yet again, to rule out the possibility that he could serve as the next chair

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x