20. Who are the Main Participants in the Futures Market?
The futures market is a dynamic ecosystem where various participants interact based on different motivations. These participants ensure liquidity, price discovery, and efficient risk transfer in the market.
There are three primary types of participants in the futures market:
Hedgers
Speculators
Arbitrageurs
Each plays a distinct role and contributes uniquely to the functioning of the derivatives market.
1. Hedgers
Objective: To reduce or eliminate the risk of adverse price movements in an asset they already own or are planning to buy/sell.
Who They Are:
Farmers (in commodity markets)
Exporters/importers (in currency markets)
Fund managers and institutions (in equity and index markets)
Corporates (hedging fuel, metal, or raw material prices)
How They Use Futures:
They take a futures position opposite to their spot market exposure.
Example:
A mutual fund with ₹100 crore in stocks may short Nifty futures to protect against a market downturn.
Benefit:
Futures help them lock in a price, reducing uncertainty and providing stability to their financial planning.
2. Speculators
Objective: To profit from price fluctuations by taking directional bets in the market.
Who They Are:
Retail traders
Proprietary trading desks
Professional traders
Algo/quant-based traders
How They Use Futures:
Speculators enter futures contracts without owning the underlying asset. They rely on price movement to book profit.
Example:
A trader believes Bank Nifty will rise, so they go long on Bank Nifty Futures. If the price increases, they sell for a profit.
Risk:
They bear the highest risk since they’re not offsetting any existing exposure.
3. Arbitrageurs
Objective: To exploit price differences between two or more markets or instruments for risk-free or low-risk profit.
Who They Are:
Institutional traders
Hedge funds
High-frequency trading firms
Algorithmic traders
How They Use Futures:
They simultaneously buy in one market and sell in another where the price differs.
Types of Arbitrage:
Cash-Futures Arbitrage: Exploiting difference between spot and futures prices.
Index Arbitrage: Mispricing between index futures and basket of underlying stocks.
Calendar Spread Arbitrage: Trading near-month vs far-month contracts.
Example:
If Nifty futures are overpriced compared to the spot index, an arbitrageur may:
Short futures
Buy the index basket (spot stocks)
Profit when prices converge
Result:
Arbitrage keeps prices aligned across markets, contributing to market efficiency.
Comparison Table: Hedger vs Speculator vs Arbitrageur
Participant Type
Objective
Exposure in Spot Market
Risk Level
Market Role
Hedger
Risk reduction
Yes
Low to moderate
Provides market depth
Speculator
Profit from price movement
No
High
Adds liquidity and volume
Arbitrageur
Profit from price discrepancies
Possibly yes
Low to moderate
Maintains price efficiency
Real-Life Examples
Hedger: An airline company buys crude oil futures to hedge rising fuel prices.
Speculator: A retail trader goes long on Nifty Futures ahead of the Union Budget.
Arbitrageur: A quant fund spots a 0.4% pricing mismatch between HDFC spot and futures prices and executes simultaneous trades.
Regulatory View
All participants are required to maintain margins and adhere to exchange rules.
Exchanges monitor speculative limits and ensure arbitrage does not distort prices.
Hedgers may get margin benefits under certain regulatory frameworks (if registered as a hedger).
Key Takeaways
The futures market brings together risk-averse hedgers, risk-seeking speculators, and opportunity-seeking arbitrageurs.
All three groups are essential for healthy market functioning—creating liquidity, stabilizing prices, and facilitating risk transfer.
A well-balanced futures market has a mix of these players, ensuring that both institutional and retail needs are met.