Jane Street’s ₹4,843 crore scandal exposed how global giants exploit India’s regulatory grey zones—forcing a reckoning on market integrity, algorithmic abuse, and FPI loopholes.
The next time you see a post featuring a sari-clad woman at a party or a travel reel from an unknown location, ask yourself — how does her joy threaten yours?
From Munir’s point of view, a few bumps here and there is par for the course. He isn’t going to drive his dumper truck to its doom. He wants to use it as a weapon.
There are three truths of trading:
(1) The game is rigged
(2) Odds are not in your favour
(3) The house always wins.
There supposedly “innocent” fools knew these rules, yet they believed that after 5 reels, they will still game the market.
Anyone sympathising with these losers must know that had they tried to convince them that they will lose money one day before their option expiry, these losers would have in return given them trading knowledge they got from podcasts of the bald stupider Abhisekh Kar.
Anyone who has interacted with these dumbasses while they were in euphoria of making millions and after reality hit them would understand that there is no other way to make them understand their mistake, but with large loss and mockery thereafter.
Had they been successful in their gamble, they would have credited it to their gutter analysis and super intelligence, and showed off on social media luring new batch of stupids. Once the results are out, they seek sympathy from everyone. It is actually good that this pyramid scheme stops as soon as possible.
Futures and options are indeed for large organisations because they are essentially ways of hedging. Retail traders can never have the risk appetite needed for them.
There should be higher STT on higher volume transactions in the stock market. Like multiple slabs. And also multiple slabs for Capital gains. So, that ultra-big players pay more tax, and are forced to slow down their pump and dump schemes, and give small investors time to get out of the market. Big players armed with supercomputers, AI and algos, must be taxed more.
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
There are three truths of trading:
(1) The game is rigged
(2) Odds are not in your favour
(3) The house always wins.
There supposedly “innocent” fools knew these rules, yet they believed that after 5 reels, they will still game the market.
Anyone sympathising with these losers must know that had they tried to convince them that they will lose money one day before their option expiry, these losers would have in return given them trading knowledge they got from podcasts of the bald stupider Abhisekh Kar.
Anyone who has interacted with these dumbasses while they were in euphoria of making millions and after reality hit them would understand that there is no other way to make them understand their mistake, but with large loss and mockery thereafter.
Had they been successful in their gamble, they would have credited it to their gutter analysis and super intelligence, and showed off on social media luring new batch of stupids. Once the results are out, they seek sympathy from everyone. It is actually good that this pyramid scheme stops as soon as possible.
Futures and options are indeed for large organisations because they are essentially ways of hedging. Retail traders can never have the risk appetite needed for them.
There should be higher STT on higher volume transactions in the stock market. Like multiple slabs. And also multiple slabs for Capital gains. So, that ultra-big players pay more tax, and are forced to slow down their pump and dump schemes, and give small investors time to get out of the market. Big players armed with supercomputers, AI and algos, must be taxed more.