Market Updates - Support | Samco https://www.samco.in/help-support Need help and Support? Browse our support categories and find articles, videos, training, and tutorials on Samco’s products and services. Mon, 15 Dec 2025 07:46:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.14 https://www.samco.in/help-support/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/favicon.ico Market Updates - Support | Samco https://www.samco.in/help-support 32 32 Everything you should know about the F&O Ban Period? https://www.samco.in/help-support/article/everything-you-should-know-about-the-fo-ban-period/ https://www.samco.in/help-support/article/everything-you-should-know-about-the-fo-ban-period/#respond Wed, 10 Dec 2025 14:23:23 +0000 https://www.samco.in/help-support/?post_type=ht_kb&p=24793 If you trade in Futures & Options, you may have come across the word many times “This stock is in the F&O ban period.” Suddenly, your new orders get blocked and confusion starts. So what exactly is the F&O ban period? Why does it happen? And what should you do […]

The post Everything you should know about the F&O Ban Period? first appeared on Support | Samco.

]]>
If you trade in Futures & Options, you may have come across the word many times

“This stock is in the F&O ban period.” Suddenly, your new orders get blocked and confusion starts.

So what exactly is the F&O ban period? Why does it happen? And what should you do as a trader? Let’s understand this in simple, real-world language.

What Is the Ban Period?

The Ban period is a situation where you are not allowed to take any new trades in a particular stock. You can only close your existing positions.

In short:

  • Exit is allowed
  • Fresh entry is not allowed

This restriction is placed when trading in that stock becomes too crowded and risky.

Why Does a Stock Enter the Ban Period?

Every stock has a fixed maximum limit for how much it can be traded in Futures & Options. This limit is called the Market-Wide Position Limit (MWPL).

When 95% or more of this limit is already used, the stock automatically enters the F&O ban period.
This simply means: too many traders are already active in that stock, and the exchange wants to stop further risk.

Let’s say for ABC Futures, the exchange has fixed this rule:

ABC stock has a total F&O trading limit of 100 lots

  • All traders together can take positions only up to these 100 lots
  • During the day, when total open positions reach 95 lots
  • That means 95% of the limit is used
  • At this point, ABC stock enters the F&O ban period

What’s New in the Ban Rule? 

Earlier, the exchange only checked how many lots were open in Futures & Options.

Now, the system has become smarter. It measures real risk, not just quantity. This is done using a method called Future Equivalent Open Interest (FutEq OI).

The exchange does not just count how many trades you have. It checks how strong your trades are. This strength is called Future Equivalent (FutEq).

It simply means: “How much does your trade actually move the stock price?”

Different Trades = Different Power

Not every trade has the same power. See this:

  • 1 Future lot
    → Full power
    → Moves exactly like the stock
    → So its FutEq = 1
  • 1 Call Option (very strong / deep ITM)
    → Moves almost like a Future
    → So its FutEq is almost 1
  • 1 Call Option (weak / OTM)
    → Moves very little
    → So its FutEq is much less than 1

So even if the number of lots is same, The real risk is different.

How Does Delta Affect the Ban Period?

Delta matters because the exchange no longer counts just the number of lots it now counts how powerful each lot is.

That “power” comes from delta, so delta decides how much your trade adds to the total market exposure, and that total exposure is what pushes a stock into the 95% ban limit.

Think of it like this:

  • Future = Delta 1 → full weight
  • Strong ITM Option = Delta near 1 → almost full weight
  • Weak OTM Option = Delta near 0 → very little weight

Delta decides how much your position counts in the 95% limit.

  • Higher delta = adds more to exposure = stock reaches ban faster
  • Lower delta = adds less = stock reaches ban slowly

This is why the exchange uses FutEq (delta-based) .In simple words, a stock enters the F&O ban period not just because of the number of trades, but because the total delta-based exposure becomes too high for the market to safely handle.

Penalties

When a stock enters the BAN period, exchanges closely monitor open positions. Even if no new trades are placed, actions taken on existing positions can lead to penalties. Below are two common scenarios explained for better clarity:

Scenario 1: Hedge Broken During BAN Period
If a client is holding a hedged position (for example, a buy and sell leg) and sells or exits only one leg of the hedge during the BAN period, the position may become unhedged.In such cases:

  • The exchange may treat this as an increase in directional exposure during BAN.
  • A BAN-period penalty may be levied by the exchange, which can range from a minimum of ₹5,000 up to ₹1,00,000 per day, as prescribed by exchange regulations.
  • Any such penalty charged by the exchange will be borne entirely by the client.
  • Additionally, open orders may be cancelled, and positions may be squared off to reduce risk.
  • The penalty will continue to be charged for each day the position remains unhedged until the second leg of the hedge is closed.

Scenario 2: Hedge Maintained or Fully Closed
If the client does not take any action during the BAN period or exits both legs of the hedged position together, the hedge integrity is maintained or the exposure is fully reduced.In such cases:

  • No incremental exposure is created during the BAN period.
  • No BAN-period penalty is applicable, provided exchange guidelines are adhered to.

Conclusion

The F&O ban period is simply the market’s way of preventing risk from getting out of control. When too many positions pile up and exposure reaches 95% of the allowed limit, the exchange steps in and blocks new trades to keep things stable. With the new FutEq and delta-based calculations, exposure is tracked more accurately and more frequently, which means traders must stay alert and manage their positions responsibly. Understanding how limits work, how delta affects exposure, and what triggers a ban helps you avoid surprises, avoid penalties, and trade with more confidence.

The post Everything you should know about the F&O Ban Period? first appeared on Support | Samco.

]]>
https://www.samco.in/help-support/article/everything-you-should-know-about-the-fo-ban-period/feed/ 0
NSE Introduces a Pre-Open Session for Futures: A Quick Breakdown for Traders https://www.samco.in/help-support/article/nse-introduces-a-pre-open-session-for-futures-a-quick-breakdown-for-traders/ https://www.samco.in/help-support/article/nse-introduces-a-pre-open-session-for-futures-a-quick-breakdown-for-traders/#respond Wed, 03 Dec 2025 04:12:38 +0000 https://www.samco.in/help-support/?post_type=ht_kb&p=24763 NSE is set to bring a small but meaningful change to the futures market. Starting Monday, 8th December 2025, there will be a pre-open session for index and stock futures. Here’s the update in the simplest terms. What Is the Pre-Open Session? Every morning from 9:00 AM to 9:15 AM, […]

The post NSE Introduces a Pre-Open Session for Futures: A Quick Breakdown for Traders first appeared on Support | Samco.

]]>
NSE is set to bring a small but meaningful change to the futures market. Starting Monday, 8th December 2025, there will be a pre-open session for index and stock futures. Here’s the update in the simplest terms.

What Is the Pre-Open Session?

Every morning from 9:00 AM to 9:15 AM, futures will now have a short preparation window before the regular market begins.

During pre opening, you can:

  • Place orders
  • Modify orders
  • Cancel orders

No trades are executed instantly. All orders are first collected and later matched to decide the official opening price of each contract.

Timing Snapshot

  • 9:00–9:08 AM: Order entry, Modification and Cancellation
  • 9:08–9:12 AM: Order matching & price discovery
  • 9:12–9:15 AM: Buffer period
  • 9:15 AM: Regular trading starts

Which Futures Are Applicable For This?

The pre-open session will apply to:

  • Current-month stock futures
  • Current-month index futures

Also, during the last five trading days before expiry, next-month futures will be included as well.

The session will not apply to:

  • Options
  • Far-month futures
  • Spread contracts
  • Futures of stocks undergoing a corporate action on that day

How Will the Opening Price Be Decided?

Here’s the process:

  • All orders placed between 9:00 AM and 9:08 AM are collected.
  • The system identifies a single price where maximum buy and sell orders can match.
  • This becomes the opening price for that futures contract.

If several prices qualify, the one with the smallest order imbalance is picked. If that still ties, the price closest to the previous day’s close is used.

If no match is found in this session, the first trade in the regular market sets the opening price.

Unmatched limit orders move forward into the normal session, while unmatched market orders convert into limit orders at the opening price. If no equilibrium price is discovered, market orders move at the base price (previous day’s closing).

You can read the exchange circular here

The post NSE Introduces a Pre-Open Session for Futures: A Quick Breakdown for Traders first appeared on Support | Samco.

]]>
https://www.samco.in/help-support/article/nse-introduces-a-pre-open-session-for-futures-a-quick-breakdown-for-traders/feed/ 0