Sebi has set the ball rolling by setting up a panel. |
A slew of derivative products aimed at helping investors bet on specific sectors and take a long-term directional call on markets will debut during the year. |
One of the most interesting products, which is a clear front-runner for an India debut, is LEAPS (Long-Term Equity Anticipation Securities), market sources said. This is an ideal instrument for investors to make a long-term option investment, they said. The contract duration would be six months to a year. |
The Securities and Exchange Board of India, at its board meeting on Saturday, set the ball rolling for this by deciding to set up a committee to look into the introduction of more derivatives products. |
In addition to the introduction of long-run products, the F&O segment, almost monopolised by the National Stock Exchange (NSE), is also tipped to witness more index-based derivatives or exchange-traded funds (ETFs). |
LEAPS are traded like normal options but allow investors to benefit from the appreciation of equities while placing a lot less money at risk than is required to purchase stocks, said analysts. |
Currently, only three-month options contracts are available and only near-month contracts are active. Sources believe the introduction of six-month or one-year products will act as a booster for the second- and far-month contracts as well. |
NSE Managing Director and CEO Ravi Narain, at a recent meeting of exchange members, gave enough hints on what to expect from the exchange in the coming months. |
"We will see the introduction of longer-dated contracts in 2007," he said. Analysts expect foreign institutional investors, known to do equity-swaps for long-term maturity, will be able to place a long-term call on the country's markets. |
"If investors want to take a one-year view on the market, the only option now available to go for is three-month contracts and roll them before expiry. So, the introduction of LEAPS will help," Alex Mathews, head of research at Geojit Financial Services. |
The other products on the anvil are sectoral derivatives. The NSE is understood to be weighing introduction of index-based ETFs or derivatives products based on its NSE IT, Bank Nifty (ETF is already available through Benchmark's Bank BeES), Nifty Junior indices. |
"We will consider launching more products based on our other indices," said a senior NSE official.Physical delivery in options, which is expected to boost the now illiquid options market, is also expected to be introduced in the near future. |