SEBI Flags 90% Loss Rate in F&O Trades by Retail Investors—Here’s What Data Shows

Outlook Business Desk

SEBI Traders Losses

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), in its latest study, revealed that 9 out of 10 retail traders in the futures and options (F&O) segment lost money in the financial year 2023–24. These losses totalled ₹1.05 lakh crore across 96 lakh individual trading accounts. Only 11% of these traders earned any profits.

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Losses Outpace Traders

Retail losses in the F&O (futures and options) segment surged 2.6 times since FY22, while the number of active traders only grew 2.2 times. This shows that losses are increasing faster than trader participation.

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Who Are these Traders?

The most active traders are under 30 years of age and earn less than ₹5 lakh a year. Many started trading after the COVID-19 pandemic, driven by easy access through mobile apps and online influencers.

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Kamath Calls Out Losing Trend

Zerodha CEO Nithin Kamath, citing SEBI’s study on LinkedIn, said that 16% of active retail traders lost their entire capital in FY25. He compared this with an Elm Wealth experiment, where finance students fared no better, with 40–50% of them losing money.

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Youth Surge Post-Pandemic

The data showed that retail intraday traders under 30 rose from 18% in FY20 to 48% in FY24. Smaller cities, especially Tier-II and Tier-III, saw the fastest growth—indicating a strong youth-driven shift into risky trading.

Cash Market Also Risky

Among the 6.9 million traders in the cash segment, 36% participated in intraday trading. Of those, between 65% and 71% lost money between FY20 and FY24—showing high risk even outside the derivatives space.

Retail Traders Skip SIPs

SEBI’s findings noted that only 10% of the traders also invested through SIPs (Systematic Investment Plans) in mutual funds. This suggests that most retail participants treat the market like a short-term opportunity, not for long-term wealth creation.

Mutual Funds

SEBI’s Takeaway Message

The regulator’s key concern is that young investors—lacking experience and guided by influencers—are entering high-risk trades without proper understanding. SEBI aims to raise awareness to shift their behaviour toward more sustainable investing.

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