Inside Jane Street India: SEBI Investigation Underway
Jane Street is under investigation by Sebi for alleged market manipulation involving its Indian units, raising concerns about foreign control over local market activities. The firm reportedly engaged in manipulative trading strategies, prompting regulatory scrutiny and the impounding of illegal gains.
Jane Street, a quant trading firm, is under scrutiny in India following an order from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) on July 3. Sebi accused the firm of market manipulation, focusing on its two local units, JSI Investments and JSI2 Investments. These entities are reportedly controlled by foreign executives, raising concerns about offshore influence in sensitive market activities.

JSI Investments has three directors, two of whom are foreigners: Edward James Wieser and Stephen James Ward. Wieser is also linked to Jane Street's operations in Hong Kong and South Korea. The third director, Shradha Bharat Shah, serves as head of compliance and whole-time director for JSI Investments.
Foreign Control Concerns
The other unit, JSI2 Investments, shares a common director with JSI Investments—Shradha Bharat Shah. John Mackenzie is another director at JSI2 and also oversees Jane Street Europe's legal and compliance division. Saksham Bhalothia, involved in business development for Jane Street Hong Kong, completes the trio of directors.
Sebi's investigation revealed that Jane Street engaged in manipulative trading strategies from January 2023 to March 2025. One such strategy involved aggressive buying of Bank Nifty stocks and futures during morning sessions to inflate index prices artificially. Concurrently, they built large short positions in index options.
Trading Strategies Under Scrutiny
Later in the day, Jane Street would sell off these stocks quickly, causing the index to drop while profiting from their options positions. Another alleged tactic involved concentrated buying or selling during expiry days' final hours to manipulate index levels for maximum gains.
Sebi highlighted that despite being incorporated separately in India, these entities were effectively controlled by Jane Street's global operations. This control led to contra-bets compared to Jane Street's foreign entities trading through the foreign portfolio investment route.
Regulatory Actions
The regulator ordered the impounding of alleged illegal gains amounting to Rs 4,843 crore. An email sent to Jane Street seeking comments remained unanswered at the time of reporting.
MCA filings indicate that most directors are foreign employees of Jane Street. This raises questions about the extent of foreign control over Indian market activities through these local units.
The situation highlights growing concerns over offshore control in India's financial markets. As regulatory scrutiny intensifies, it remains crucial for firms operating within India to adhere strictly to local regulations and maintain transparency in their operations.


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