
How I Stopped Guessing—and Started Winning—with Automated Index Options
By Ankit Rai, Quintal Minds
For a long time, I traded based on gut feeling. Sometimes I made money, but most times I didn’t. What finally changed my trading results wasn’t a secret formula or an insider tip—it was removing emotion and guesswork from my process. I built a simple, hedged index-options strategy, automated it, and surrounded it with strict risk controls. That shift—from guessing to following rules—turned my trading into a proper business with measurable results and reliable records.
Why automation—and why now?
Automation in trading is no longer just for big institutions. Across the world, algorithmic trading is becoming normal. In the U.S., about one-third of all equity orders were executed using algorithms in 2023, and that number keeps growing every year. The technology behind algorithmic trading is expanding fast, allowing even individual traders to use rule-based systems to trade smarter.
In India, this trend has become even more practical. SEBI, the market regulator, has formalized how retail traders can use automated systems. Every algorithm now needs exchange approval, each order must have a unique ID, and even self-made systems that trade at scale have to be registered. This brings more clarity, transparency, and accountability to algo trading—making it safer and more professional.
The NSE has also simplified index options. From November 2024, weekly contracts will only be available for Nifty 50, while weekly options for Bank Nifty, FinNifty, and Midcap Select have been discontinued (though monthly contracts remain). For automated systems, this change is helpful—it focuses liquidity into one product and reduces the need to juggle multiple instruments.
“Backed by my FD” — what that means today
Many people ask if they can “use an FD as collateral” to let an algorithm generate extra income. The truth is: not anymore. After SEBI’s new client-fund rules, most brokers stopped accepting fixed deposits as margin. Kotak Securities stopped this in December 2023, and Zerodha never allowed it.
But that doesn’t mean you’re stuck. You can keep your FD safe while pledging other cash-equivalent instruments like LiquidBeES, overnight or liquid mutual funds, Treasury Bills (T-Bills), or Government Securities (G-Secs). NSE Clearing treats these as eligible collateral, with a portion (usually at least 50%) needing to be in cash or cash-equivalents after applying “haircuts.” This is my preferred route—keep the FD untouched and let approved cash-equivalent assets provide the trading margin.
Another option is taking an overdraft or loan against your FD. Banks like SBI and Axis offer around 90% of your FD value as a loan, usually at 1–2% higher than your FD rate. You can then use those funds as trading margin. This can increase your profits but also your risks. You’ll need to calculate interest costs, possible drawdowns, and margin requirements carefully before going down this path.
My blueprint (that you can adapt)
Here’s the framework I follow—and it’s simple enough for anyone serious about disciplined trading:
- Pick one liquid playground.
I trade only Nifty 50 weekly and monthly options. Fewer instruments mean fewer surprises. - Code your edges, not opinions.
My strategies focus on selling time value (theta) using hedged structures like spreads and iron condors. Everything is rule-based: entry times, stop losses, daily loss limits, and no trading on major event days. - Manage risk before managing profit.
I cap maximum drawdowns at both trade and portfolio levels. I diversify across strikes and expiries to avoid directional bets. Survival comes before returns. - Use approved infrastructure.
Every strategy runs through a broker API that has exchange approval. I keep detailed logs, monitor latency, and include safety routines like “cancel-all” and “flat-book” in emergencies. - Handle collateral smartly.
Keep at least half your margin in cash-equivalent assets. Understand haircuts and treat collateral management as a core part of the trading system, not an afterthought.
Can this really beat an FD?
Fixed deposits are safe, but their returns are limited. Right now, most banks offer around 6–8% annually, depending on the term and your age. An automated, hedged options strategy isn’t meant to replace an FD but to complement it. Think of it as a barbell: on one side, your secure FD; on the other, a rules-based system trying to earn additional, market-linked income.
There are no guarantees here—only probabilities. You’re trying to earn small, steady returns from market volatility while keeping risk tightly controlled.
Understand the risks first
Options trading carries real risks. Overnight moves can break through your stop losses. Markets can become illiquid, slippage can occur, and models that look perfect in backtests can fail in live trading. Regulations also change—contract sizes, expiry rules, and margin systems can shift, as we saw recently.
Costs matter too. Brokerage fees, exchange charges, taxes, and interest on borrowed money (if you use an FD loan) can eat into profits. SEBI’s stricter rules for retail traders—like reducing the number of weekly contracts and tightening margin norms—are there for a reason: to make traders more cautious and professional.
The bottom line
There was no secret strategy behind my turnaround. The big change was discipline. By removing guesswork and sticking to a handful of tested, exchange-approved algorithms, I built consistency. Small, repeatable gains add up over time—especially when risk is controlled.
If you’re thinking about a “second income” from trading, don’t gamble with your savings. Keep your FD as your safety cushion, use approved collateral for margins, and run your automated systems like a business—with proper logs, limits, and accountability.
Trading success isn’t about being smarter than the market; it’s about being more disciplined than your past self.
Connect with Ankit Rai
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📱 Follow on Twitter: @ankitrai259
💼 Founder — Quintal Minds
Disclosure:
This article is for education only. It is not investment advice. Derivatives and leveraged trading can cause quick and large losses. Always consult a SEBI-registered adviser and your broker about approvals, collateral rules, and taxes before using real money.