Derivatives

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Hand book

on
Derivatives Trading

NATIONAL STOCK EXCHANGE


OF INDIA LIMITED
Derivatives Trading

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS

What are various types of derivatives?


Futures : A futures contract is an agreement between two parties to buy or
sell an asset at a certain time in the future at a certain price. Presently
Index futures on S&P CNX NIFTY and CNX IT , Stock futures on certain
specified Securities and Interest Rate Futures are available for trading at
NSE. All the futures contracts are settled in cash.
Options : An Option is a contract which gives the right, but not an obligation,
to buy or sell the underlying at a stated date and at a stated price. While a
buyer of an option pays the premium and buys the right to exercise his
option, the writer of an option is the one who receives the option premium
and therefore obliged to sell/buy the asset if the buyer exercises it on him.
Options are of two types - Calls and Puts options :
"Calls" give the buyer the right but not the obligation to buy a given quantity
of the underlying asset, at a given price on or before a given future date.
"Puts" give the buyer the right, but not the obligation to sell a given quantity
of underlying asset at a given price on or before a given future date. Presently
Index Options on S&P CNX Nifty and CNX IT and options on certain
specified securities are available for trading at NSE. All the options contracts
are settled in cash.
Further the Options are classified based on type of exercise. At present the
Exercise style can be European or American.
American Option - American options are options contracts that can be
exercised at any time upto the expiration date. Options on individual
securities available at NSE are American type of options.
European Options - European options are options that can be exercised
only on the expiration date . S&P CNX Nifty and CNX IT options available
at NSE are European type of option.

Why Should I trade in derivatives?


Futures trading will be of interest to those who wish to:
1) Invest - take a view on the market and buy or sell accordingly.

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Derivatives Trading
2) Price Risk Transfer- Hedging - Hedging is buying and selling futures
contracts to offset the risks of changing underlying market prices.
Thus it helps in reducing the risk associated with exposures in
underlying market by taking a counter- positions in the futures market.
For example, the hedgers who either have security or plan to have a
security is concerned about the movement in the price of the
underlying before they buy or sell the security. Typically he would
take a short position in the Futures markets, as the cash and futures
price tend to move in the same direction as they both react to the
same supply/demand factors.
3) Arbitrage - Since the cash and futures price tend to move in the same
direction as they both react to the same supply/demand factors, the
difference between the underlying price and futures price called as
basis. Basis is more stable and predictable than the movement of the
prices of the underlying or the Futures price. Thus arbitrageur would
predict the basis and accordingly take positions in the cash and future
markets.
4) Leverage- Since the investor is required to pay a small fraction of the
value of the total contract as margins, trading in Futures is a leveraged
activity since the investor is able to control the total value of the
contract with a relatively small amount of margin. Thus the Leverage
enables the traders to make a larger profit or loss with a comparatively
small amount of capital.
Options trading will be of interest to those who wish to :
1) Participate in the market without trading or holding a large quantity
of stock
2) Protect their portfolio by paying small premium amount
Benefits of trading in Futures and Options.
1) Able to transfer the risk to the person who is willing to accept them
2) Incentive to make profits with minimal amount of risk capital
3) Lower transaction costs
4) Provides liquidity, enables price discovery in underlying market
5) Derivatives market are lead economic indicators.
6) Arbitrage between underlying and derivative market.
7) Eliminate security specific risk.

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Derivatives Trading
What are the benefits of trading in Index Futures compared to any
other security ?
An investor can trade the 'entire stock market' by buying index futures
instead of buying individual securities with the efficiency of a mutual fund.
The advantages of trading in Index Futures are:
- The contracts are highly liquid
- Index Futures provide higher leverage than any other stocks
- It requires low initial capital requirement
- It has lower risk than buying and holding stocks
- It is just as easy to trade the short side as the long side
- Only have to study one index instead of 100's of stocks
- Settled in cash and therefore all problems related to bad delivery,
forged, fake certificates, etc can be avoided.
The growth in turnover of index futures and options is depicted in the
graph below:

Growth of Index Futures and Option in F&O Segment

350000

300000

250000

200000

T u r no v e
r ( R s1. 5 0 0 0 0
c r .)

100000

50000

0
C Y 20 0 0 C Y 2 0 01 CY 2002 CY 2003

How do I start trading in the derivatives market?


Futures/ Options contracts in both index as well as stocks can be bought
and sold through the trading members of National Stock Exchange. Some
of the trading members also provide the internet facility to trade in the
futures and options market. You are required to open an account with one
of the trading members and complete the related formalities which include

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Derivatives Trading
signing of member-constituent agreement, constituent registration form and
risk disclosure document. The trading member will allot to you an unique
client identification number. To begin trading, you must deposit cash and/or
other collaterals with your trading member as may be stipulated by him.
What is the Expiration Day ?
It is the last day on which the contracts expire. Futures and Options contracts
expire on the last Thursday of the expiry month. If the last Thursday is a
trading holiday, the contracts expire on the previous trading day. For E.g
The January 2004 contracts mature on January 29, 2004.
What is the contract cycle for Equity based products in NSE ?
Futures and Options contracts have a maximum of 3-month trading cycle -
the near month (one), the next month (two) and the far month (three). New
contracts are introduced on the trading day following the expiry of the
near month contracts. The new contracts are introduced for a three month
duration. This way, at any point in time, there will be 3 contracts available
for trading in the market (for each security) i.e., one near month, one mid
month and one far month duration respectively. For example on January
26,2004 there would be three month contracts i.e. Contracts expiring on
January 29,2004, February 26, 2004 and March 25, 2004. On expiration
date i.e January 29,2004, new contracts having maturity of April 29,2004
would be introduced for trading.
What is the concept of In the money, At the money and Out of the
money in respect of Options?
In- the- money options (ITM) - An in-the-money option is an option that
would lead to positive cash flow to the holder if it were exercised
immediately. A Call option is said to be in-the-money when the current
price stands at a level higher than the strike price. If the Spot price is much
higher than the strike price, a Call is said to be deep in-the-money option.
In the case of a Put, the put is in-the-money if the Spot price is below the
strike price.
At-the-money-option (ATM) - An at-the money option is an option that
would lead to zero cash flow if it were exercised immediately. An option
on the index is said to be "at-the-money" when the current price equals the
strike price.

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Derivatives Trading
Out-of-the-money-option (OTM) - An out-of- the-money Option is an
option that would lead to negative cash flow if it were exercised
immediately. A Call option is out-of-the-money when the current price
stands at a level which is less than the strike price. If the current price is
much lower than the strike price the call is said to be deep out-of-the money.
In case of a Put, the Put is said to be out-of-money if current price is above
the strike price.
Is there any Margin payable?
Yes. Margins are computed and collected on-line, real time on a portfolio
basis at the client level. Members are required to collect the margin upfront
from the client & report the same to the Exchange.
How are the contracts settled?
All the Futures and Options contracts are settled in cash on a daily basis
and at the expiry or exercise of the respective contracts as the case may,
be. Clients/Trading Members are not required to hold any stock of the
underlying for dealing in the Futures / Options market. All out of the money
and at the money option contracts of the near month maturity expire
worthless on the expiration date.

What are the Contract Specifications of Equity based derivatives


traded in NSE.
Underlying
1. Index Futures and Options : S&P CNX Nifty and CNX IT
2. Futures/Options on Individual : Individual Securities, At
Individual Securities present 53 stocks
Exchange of Trade
National Stock Exchange of India Limited
Security descriptor
1. S&P CNX Nifty Futures N FUTIDX NIFTY MATURITY DATE
2. S&P CNX Nifty Options N OPTIDX NIFTY MATURITY DATE
STRIKE PRICE OP TYP
3. Futures on individual securities N FUTSTK ABC MATURITY DATE
4. Options on individual securitiesN OPTSTK ABC MATURITY DATE
STRIKE PRICE OP TYP

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Derivatives Trading
Contract Size
1. S&P CNX Nifty Futures / Permitted lot size 200 and multiples
S&P CNX Nifty Options there of (minimum value Rs.2 lakh)
2. Futures / Options on Minimum value of Rs 2 Lakh for each
individual securities Individual Security

Strike price interval


1. S&P CNX Nifty Options Rs. 10/-
2. Options on individual Between Rs.2.50 and Rs. 100.00
securities : depending on the price of underlying
Price Steps Rs. 0.05
Price Bands Not Applicable
Trading Cycle Maximum of three month trading cycle
- near month(one), the next month (two)
and the far month (three). New series
of contract will be introduced on the next
trading day following expiry of near
month contract
Expiry date The last Thursday of the expiry month
or the Previous trading day if the last
Thursday of the month is a trading
holiday

Settlement basis
1. Index Futures / Futures Mark to Market and final settlement
on individual securities be settled in cash on T+1 basis
2. Index Options Premium settlement on T+1 Basis and
Final Exercise settlement on T+1 basis
3. Options on individual Premium settlement on T+1 basis and
securities option Exercise settlement on T+2 basis.

Settlement price
1. S&P CNX Nifty Futures / Daily settlement price will be the closing
Futures price on individual securities of the

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Derivatives Trading
futures contracts for the trading day and
the final settlement price shall be the
closing value of the underlying index/
security on the last trading day
Index Options /options The settlement price shall be closing
on individual security price of underlying security

What are the contract specifications of the Interest rate Derivatives traded
in National Stock Exchange.

Contract Specification
Security descriptor
The security descriptor for the interest rate future contracts is:
Market type :N
Instrument Type : FUTINT
Underlying : Notional T- bills and Notional 10 year bond (coupon
bearing and non-coupon bearing)
Expiry Date : Last Thursday of the Expiry month.
Instrument type represents the instrument i.e. Interest Rate Future Contract.
Underlying symbol denotes the underlying.
Expiry date identifies the date of expiry of the contract

Underlying Instrument
Interest rate futures contracts are available on Notional T- bills , Notional
10 year zero coupon bond and Notional 10 year coupon bearing bond
stipulated by the Securities & Exchange Board of India (SEBI).

Trading cycle
The interest rate future contract shall be for a period of maturity of one
year with three months continuous contracts for the first three months
and fixed quarterly contracts for the entire year. New contracts will be
introduced on the trading day following the expiry of the near month
contract.

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Derivatives Trading
The schedule of contracts for the next one year will be as follows :

Jun-03 Jul-03 Aug-03 Sep-03 Oct-03 Nov-03 Dec-03 Jan-04 Feb-04 Mar-04 Apr-04 May-04
Jul-03 Aug-03 Sep-03 Oct-03 Nov-03 Dec-03 Jan-04 Feb-04 Mar-04 Apr-04 May-04 Jun-04
Aug-03 Sep-03 Oct-03 Nov-03 Dec-03 Jan-04 Feb-04 Mar-04 Apr-04 May-04 Jun-04 Jul-04
Sep-03 Dec-03 Dec-03 Dec-03 Mar-04 Mar-04 Mar-04 Jun-04 Jun-04 Jun-04 Sep-04 Sep-04
Dec-03 Mar-04 Mar-04 Mar-04 Jun-04 Jun-04 Jun-04 Sep-04 Sep-04 Sep-04 Dec-04 Dec-04
Mar-04 Jun-04 Jun-04 Jun-04 Sep-04 Sep-04 Sep-04 Dec-04 Dec-04 Dec-04 Mar-05 Mar-05

Expiry day
Interest rate future contracts shall expire on the last Thursday of the expiry
month. If the last thursday is a trading holiday, the contracts shall expire
on the previous trading day.
Further, where the last Thursday falls on the annual or half-yearly closing
dates of the bank, the expiry and last trading day in respect of these
derivatives contracts would be pre-poned to the previous trading day.

Product Characteristics

Contract underlying Notional 10 year Notional 10 year Notional 91 day


bond (6 % coupon ) zero coupon bond T-Bill

Contract descriptor N FUTINT NSE10Y06 N FUTINT NSE10YZC N FUTINT NSETB91D


26JUN2003 26JUN2003 26JUN2003

Contract Value Rs.2,00,000

Lot size 2000

Tick size Re.0.01

Expiry date Last Thursday of the month

Contract months The contracts shall be for a period of a maturity of one year with
three months continuous contracts for the first three months
and fixed quarterly contracts for the entire year.

Price limits Not applicable

Settlement Price As may be stipulated by NSCCL in this regard from time to time.

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Derivatives Trading
The trading volumes on NSE's Derivatives market has seen a steady
increase since the launch of the first derivative contract. The average daily
turnover now exceeds Rs. 8000 cr on daily basis.

F&O Segment Volume Growth


350000

300000
Turnover (Rs. Crores)

250000

200000

150000

100000

50000

0
Aug-00

Aug-01

Aug-02

Aug-03
Jun-00

Oct-00

Feb-01
Apr-01
Jun-01
Dec-00

Oct-01

Feb-02

Feb-04
Dec-01

Apr-02
Jun-02

Oct-02

Feb-03
Apr-03
Jun-03
Dec-02

Oct-03
Dec-03

Apr-04
Jun-04
Monthly Turnover (Rs. Crores)

A FEW BASIC STRATEGIES


Have a view on the market?
A. Assumption: Bullish on the market over the short term
Possible Action by you: Buy Nifty calls
Example:
Current Nifty is 1880. You buy one contract of Nifty near month
calls for Rs.20 each. The strike price is 1900, i.e. 1.06% out of the
money. The premium paid by you will be (Rs.20 * 200) Rs.4000.Given
these, your break-even level Nifty is 1920 (1900+20). If at expiration
Nifty advances by 5%, i.e. 1974, then
Nifty expiration level 1974.00
Less Strike Price 1900.00
Option value 74.00 (1974-1900)
Less Purchase price 20.00
Profit per Nifty 54.00
Profit on the contract Rs.10800 (Rs. 54* 200)

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Derivatives Trading
Note :
1) If Nifty is at or below 1900 at expiration, the call holder would not
find it profitable to exercise the option and would loose the entire
premium, i.e. Rs.4000 in this example. If at expiration, Nifty is
between 1900 (the strike price) and 1920 (breakeven), the holder
could exercise the calls and receive the amount by which the index
level exceeds the strike price. This would offset some of the cost.
2) The holder, depending on the market condition and his perception,
may sell the call even before expiry.

B. Assumption: Bearish on the market over the short term


Possible Action by you: Buy Nifty puts
Example:
Nifty in the cash market is 1880. You buy one contract of Nifty near
month puts for Rs.17 each. The strike price is 1840, i.e. 2.12% out of
the money. The premium paid by you will be Rs.3400 (17*200). Given
these, your break-even level Nifty is 1823 (i.e. strike price less the
premium). If at expiration Nifty declines by 5%, i.e.1786, then
Put Strike Price 1840
Nifty expiration level 1786
Option value 54 (1840-1786)
Less Purchase price 17
Profit per Nifty 37
Profit on the contract Rs.7400 (Rs.37* 200)

Note :
1) If Nifty is at or above the strike price 1840 at expiration, the put
holder would not find it profitable to exercise the option and would
loose the entire premium, i.e. Rs.3400 in this example. If at
expiration, Nifty is between 1840 (the strike price) and 1823
(breakeven), the holder could exercise the puts and receive the
amount by which the strike price exceeds the index level. This
would offset some of the cost.

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Derivatives Trading
2) The holder, depending on the market condition and his perception,
may sell the put even before expiry.

Use Put as a portfolio Hedge?


Assumption: You are concerned about a downturn in the short term in the
market and its effect on your portfolio. The portfolio has performed well
and you expect it to continue to appreciate over the long term but would
like to protect existing profits or prevent further losses.
Possible Action: Buy Nifty puts.

Example:
You held a portfolio with say, a single stock, HLL valued at Rs.10 Lakhs
(@ Rs.200 each share). Beta of HLL is 1.13. Current Nifty is at 1880.
Nifty near month puts of strike price 1870 is trading at Rs.15. To hedge,
you bought 3 puts 600{Nifties, equivalent to Rs.10 lakhs*1.13 (Beta of
HLL) or Rs.1130000}. The premium paid by you is Rs.9000, (i.e.600 *
15). If at expiration Nifty declines to 1800, and Hindustan Lever falls
to Rs.195, then
Put Strike Price 1870
Nifty expiration level 1800
Option value 70 (1870-1800)
Less Purchase price 15
Profit per Nifty 55
Profit on the contract Rs.33000 (Rs.55* 600)
Loss on Hindustan Lever Rs.25000
Net profit Rs. 8000

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Derivatives Trading

Disclaimer
Market conditions can lead to substantial profit or loss. Investors are advised to
seek adequate product and market knowledge as well as proper investment advice
before trading futures. The material provided here is for general information
purposes only. While care has been taken to ensure accuracy, the information
furnished to reader with no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of its
contents and on condition that any changes, omissions or errors shall not be
made the basis for any claim, demand or cause for action. "Standard & Poor's"
and "S&P" are trademarks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and have been
licensed for use by India Index Services & Products Limited, which has
sublicensed such marks to NSE. The S&P CNX Nifty Index is not compiled,
calculated or distributed by Standard & Poor's and Standard & Poor's makes no
representation regarding the advisability of investing in the products that utilise
any such Index as a component.

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NATIONAL STOCK EXCHANGE OF INDIA LTD.
“Exchange Plaza”, Bandra - Kurla Complex,
Bandra (East), Mumbai - 400 051. INDIA.
Tel. : 91-22-2659 8100-8114/56418100-08 • Fax : 91-22-26598120
Website : www.nseindia.com
August 2004

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