Jane Street Deposits Rs 4,800 Crore In Escrow As Mandated, But Won't Resume Trading Immediately

Jane Street has requested SEBI to lift certain restrictions, a source told NDTV Profit, adding that the US-based investment firm intends to continue challenging the order.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India appeared to uphold this principle with its recent, decisive action against Jane Street Group (Photo source: NDTV Profit)

Wall Street high frequency trader Jane Street has deposited the mandated Rs 4843.50 crore in an escrow account in favour of SEBI, the markets regulator confirmed on Monday.

The market regulator through its speaking order had come with an interim order on July 3, 2025, that barred the Wall Street firm from trading in the Indian market till it deposits the Rs 4,843.5 crore in an escrow account.

Jane Street has further requested SEBI to lift certain restrictions imposed in the interim order, according to a statement, adding that SEBI is examining the request.

NDTV Profit had earlier reported that Jane Street had deposited money into escrow account, quoting a person familiar with the matter.

Jane Street does not intend to resume trading in India as yet, the person told NDTV Profit on the condition of anonymity, adding that the US-based investment firm intends to continue to challenge the order.

Also Read: Explained: When Can Jane Street Start Trading On Dalal Street?

In an interim order, the Securities and Exchange Board of India accused global trading firm Jane Street of deliberately manipulating the index through a series of trades that it said lacked “plausible economic rationale.” SEBI called it a case of “intra-day index manipulation,” flagging what it described as aggressive, unhedged positions in Nifty Bank options and other instruments that were rapidly built up and unwound on expiry day.

Jane Street, in its response, said the regulator failed to account for how arbitrage works across markets. “We reject the premise and the substance of the order in the strongest possible terms,” the firm told employees. It said its trades aimed to profit from a mispricing between Nifty Bank’s options and the index value derived from the underlying stocks.

A Jane Street note to its employees included a graph showing a divergence between options-implied index levels and stock-based index prices at the open on Jan. 17. “We traded in a direction consistent with closing that gap,” the firm said. “We believe the trading activity shown here is unambiguously good for the health of financial markets.”

For now Jane Street will continue to trade in the market and the stock exchanges and the market regulator will continously monitor its trades.

The SEBI investigation is expected to take another 6-9 months before a final report and show cause notice will be issued to Jane Street.

Also Read: How Jane Street Tricked Indian Markets To Make Rs 43,000 Crore In Options Profit | Explained

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WRITTEN BY
Sajeet Manghat
Sajeet Kesav Manghat is Executive Editor at NDTV Profit. He is a graduate i... more
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