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India’s markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), on May 25 published a consultation paper proposing a structured framework to manage option strike prices across equity, currency and commodity segments.
The paper would require exchanges to ensure a predictable supply of strikes both above and below prevailing prices, conduct daily reviews to remove strikes far from market levels, and permit intraday introduction of new strikes in the direction of price movement so trading can continue during sharp swings.
SEBI highlighted that the two main exchanges, the National Stock Exchange and BSE, currently follow different practices and invited public comments by June 15.
The proposals envisage segment-specific rules and formulas based on liquidity and participation, and call for exchange-published frameworks with periodic reviews.
SEBI said intraday additions should not necessitate system changes by brokers or market participants during live trading.
Market participants say the move could improve liquidity and hedging during volatile sessions but will increase operational and compliance demands on exchanges and broker platforms.



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