Crypto Futures Now Account for Over 80% of Trading Volume on Indian Exchanges

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Crypto futures now account for over 80% of trading volume on Indian exchanges, driving roughly $5 billion in daily turnover as traders exploit tax arbitrage from the 2022 Union Budget which imposes a 1% tax on spot but not on futures. The shift toward leveraged derivatives—some venues offering up to 100x leverage and offshore CEXs like Binance and Bybit capturing about 75% of volume—has raised risks with 70–80% of derivatives traders losing money, scant investor protections, regulatory uncertainty, and tokenized assets making up about 15% of some platform volumes.
- Crypto futures now account for more than 80% of trading volume on Indian exchanges.
- Tax rules continue driving traders away from spot markets and toward crypto derivatives.
- Industry participants seek regulatory clarity as leverage, investor losses, and offshore trading continue expanding.
The rise of derivatives in the Indian cryptocurrency market is due to people’s desire to take advantage of the discrepancy and futures tax rates. The reason for this change is the result of the taxation policy applied to cryptocurrency transactions due to the 2022 Union Budget of India. People involved in the spot market should pay a one percent tax, but crypto futures do not need to pay any taxes.
Money control reported that people prefer to use crypto futures since they retain their working capital. Than compared to spot trading in the context of the present-day taxation system in India. The daily crypto trading volume on the exchanges of India is estimated at around $5 billion. Data from internal exchanges indicate that 70% to 80% of derivatives traders suffer losses. While American retail traders have lost around $2.3 billion in crypto futures losses.
Debate on Regulation Remains Intense As Leverage Increases
Indian authorities have not recognized cryptocurrencies as currencies, securities, or commodities, leaving the sector without dedicated regulation. In addition, there is no protection mechanism in place for the investors in crypto futures. Which is a feature of regulation on equity derivatives. Leverage as high as one hundred times the trading money is available with some of the smaller cryptocurrency exchanges. On the other hand, SEBI restricts leverage in equity derivatives to around five times the invested capital. Nevertheless, the industry players keep lobbying the government for reasonable regulations.
Offshore Exchanges Ongoing Dominance in Trading
The foreign cryptocurrency exchanges continue to dominate the Indian crypto trading space even though there is local competition from other platforms. It is estimated by industry experts that the foreign crypto exchanges such as Binance and Bybit account for about 75% of all trading volumes. Tax experts have indicated that the crypto futures gains are treated as speculative gains and can be adjusted in ways not possible under the virtual digital asset taxation. Additionally, Mudrex revealed that the tokenized physical assets account for about fifteen percent of their trading volumes.
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