Read | F&O trading: Sebi to discuss ways to tighten the screws on retail speculation In addition to their net short index futures positions, client is cumulatively net short index call options by 594,605 contracts and index put options by 375,215 contracts. FIIs, along with proprietary traders, have net purchased index calls sold by client, while the former has purchased index puts sold by client and prop traders, data shows.
“The sale of index futures and of index calls and puts by FIIs indicates they want to hedge their profits against the uncertainty surrounding the Budget," said Rajesh Palviya, senior vice-president and head of derivatives & technical research at Axis Securities. “All the same, they seem to expect the Nifty to trade within a certain range, which is why they are selling index calls and puts." Indeed, options data for 25 July expiry, two days after the budget, shows maximum resistance for Nifty at 26,000, up 5.6% from Tuesday's closing of 24613, and maximum support at 24,000, which is 2.5% below Tuesday's closing.
While retail investors have net purchased cash shares worth ₹35,246.1 crore till 12 July this fiscal year, FIIs have net purchased shares worth ₹16365 crore till 15 July. FIIs, who had sold shares worth ₹34,257 crore in April-May, purchased shares worth ₹50,623 in the past month and a half, after the election results of 4 June heralded economic continuity.
The client category, which net purchased ₹24,274 crore worth of shares in April-May , tamped down on buying since June, net buying ₹10972 crore, with sales of ₹884 crore in the current month through 12 July. “Retail/HNI are baying for a rangebound move through the budget," said Rohit Srivastava, founder, IndiaCharts.
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