Estimated reading time: 5 minutes
Thank you for reading this post, Please bookmark onetrader.in website for regular updates!
Here’s a detailed article on “Why ~90%+ of F&O Traders Lose Money” — with recent SEBI data, psychological & structural factors, and lessons so your readers don’t fall into the same trap.
(Onetrader Guide — by Onetrader)
🚫 91% of F&O Traders Lose Money — Here’s Why (Recent SEBI Proof + Deep Analysis)
“F&O trading is where fortunes are made” — that’s the myth. The reality? Most retail participants lose. According to SEBI, in FY 2025 91% of individual traders in the Equity Derivatives Segment (Futures & Options) incurred a net loss.
Net losses widened to ₹1,05,603 crore from ₹74,812 crore in FY24, a 41% jump year-on-year. Business The trend is persistent. Similar proportions (~91%) were observed in FY24 as well.
So the question is: why is this happening — year after year?
Here’s a breakdown of the causes, backed by data and psychology, along with what traders can do to avoid being part of the 91%.
1. Structural & Market Design Biases:
🧠 Institutional Edge & Speed
- Big institutions and proprietary desks have latency, algorithmic systems, faster execution, and direct access.
- Retail traders often trade via standard platforms, which puts them milliseconds behind — that’s enough in F&O to eat profits or blow stops.
⚙️ Order execution and slippage
- Slippage, delays, rejection of orders at key moments can cost a lot. Many retail traders place market or aggressive orders and get filled poorly.
📉 Lot sizes, margin & leverage
- F&O inherently uses leverage. A small adverse move blows up positions.
- SEBI introduced some controls (like higher lot sizes, limits on weekly expiries) to deter speculation, but many traders still over-leverage.
📊 Asymmetric information & “front-running” risks
- Big players sometimes trade around expiries and influence cash-futures basis.
- Cases like Jane Street being investigated by SEBI — accused of manipulating derivatives / index arbitrage using massive positions — raise concerns that retail traders are swimming against huge players.
2. Psychological Mistakes & Behavioral Biases
📈 Overconfidence & illusion of control
- Many traders overestimate their skills, think they can “beat the market,” and take large trades without respecting risk.
- SEBI Chairman himself has noted that many retail traders believe they are very smart — but data shows otherwise.
🔁 Chasing losses / revenge trading
- After a loss, the natural urge is to recover immediately, often with bigger, riskier trades. That leads to compounding bad decisions.
🏃 Picking trades — overtrading
- Too many trades in high-speed environments. More trades = more commissions + more mistakes.
📅 Misuse of short timeframes
- Trading on 1-min or tick charts without experience increases noise and false signals.
3. Poor Risk Management & Capital Misallocation
🚫 Lack of Stop-Loss Discipline
- Many traders don’t use or don’t strictly adhere to stop-loss. One loss wipes out multiple wins.
🔁 Overexposure to one trade or one side (bull / bear)
- Not hedging or diversifying. A sudden market reversal can hurt.
📉 Poor sizing & low buffer
- Using nearly full margin without a cushion means even small volatility kills you.
4. Regulation, Costs & Market Changes
🧾 Transaction Costs, Brokerage, & Taxes
- Frequent trading eats into profits via brokerage + transaction charges + taxes. Many break even or worse after costs.
📉 Regulatory changes & curbs
- SEBI’s introduction of curbs (lot sizes, reducing weekly expiries) reduced speculative participation.
- But despite that, losses did not narrow — meaning underlying weaknesses still exist.
5. Lack of Strategy, Education & Inexperience
📚 No Plan, No Edge
- Many enter F&O without a verified, backtested strategy. The “random bets” lose over time.
🧩 Ignoring fundamentals or context
- Trading purely on technicals or sensational news without correlating with fundamentals leads to traps.
🔄 No review / feedback loop
- Traders don’t journal performance, don’t study mistakes, so they repeat them.
📊 SEBI’s Findings & Comments
- SEBI’s study covers ~96 lakh individual traders across 13 brokers in F&O. In FY25, ~91% of those had net loss after transaction costs.
- The number of unique individual traders fell by ~20% during FY25 from Q1 to Q4 — some may have left after losses.
- SEBI remains concerned about speculative behavior and is working to “protect retail triangulation” with stronger risk controls.
- SEBI’s chairman: Many retail traders think they’re smarter than the system, but the study proves otherwise.
💡 How to Be in the 9% Who Win
Here are actionable lessons to avoid the 91% trap and become part of the minority who profit:
- Start small, scale slowly — don’t bet your whole capital on one trade.
- Strict risk per trade (1–2% max).
- Use a robust strategy with edge — verified, backtested, with positive expectancy.
- Journal everything — review losses & mistakes monthly.
- Control emotions — no revenge trading, no greed.
- Trade only during high liquidity windows — avoid low-volume times.
- Stay away from crowded trades near expiry — volatility can blow you.
- Capitalize on structure, not noise — trade confirmed setups, not news hype.
