According to latest SEBI reports (FY22–FY24), approximately 93% of individual traders in Equity Futures & Options (F&O) segment incurred losses, with aggregate losses exceeding ₹1.8 lakh crore.
While 99% figure is used colloquially to highlight extreme difficulty of profession, official statistics confirm that for vast majority of retail participants, trading is not a source of income—it’s a wealth transfer to institutional players and tax.
Here is an answer of why most Indian traders fail.
1. Get Rich Quick
Indian retail traders enters market under the influence of Finfluencers showcasing their flashy lifestyles and edited Profit & Loss (P&L) statements. This creates a psychological trap where trading is viewed as a lottery rather than a business.
-
Trading is a high-skill profession requiring years of training. Treating it like a hobby or quick side hustle leads to gambler’s ruin.
2. Underestimation of Transaction Costs
Many traders focus solely on Buy and Sell price, ignoring hidden cut on their capital. SEBI found that loss-makers spent an additional 28% of net trading losses on transaction costs.
-
Brokerage fees, Securities Transaction Tax (STT), exchange charges, and GST.
3. Poor Risk Management
#1 technical reason for failure is lack of a stop-loss and improper position sizing.
-
Most successful traders never risk more than 1–2% of their total capital on a single trade.
-
Beginners often “YOLO” (You Only Live Once) by putting 50% or even 100% of their margin into a single Nifty or Bank Nifty option trade. One sharp spike is enough to wipe out entire account.
4. Psychology
Humans are biologically wired to be poor traders. We are risk-averse, when in profit (cutting winners early to feel win) and risk-seeking when in loss (holding losers hoping they come back to break-even).
-
Revenge Trading: After a loss, the urge to “make it back” immediately leads to impulsive, larger trades, which usually results in even bigger losses.
-
FOMO (Fear of Missing Out): Entering a trade late because price is already moved often results in buying at peak right before a correction.
5.Institutional Players (FPIs) and Proprietary Desks.
Retail traders often use basic mobile apps and free indicators to compete against Institutional Players (FPIs) and Proprietary Desks.
-
Institutions use High-Frequency Trading (HFT) algorithms, low-latency co-location servers, and PhD-level quantitative analysts.
-
SEBI’s data shows that while retail traders lost billions, Proprietary Traders and FPIs consistently made gross profits in thousands of crores.
Comparison of Retail vs. Institutional Realities
| Feature | Retail Trader | Institutional/Prop Desk |
| Technology | Mobile App / Basic Laptop | HFT Algos / Co-location Servers |
| Capital | Limited (often borrowed/savings) | Massive (deep pockets) |
| Emotion | High (Fear & Greed) | Zero (Rule-based execution) |
| Information | Lagging (News/Telegram) | Leading (Advanced Data/Flows) |
How to Move Toward 1%
If you are determined to beat this, the shift must be from speculation to systems.
-
Prioritize Survival: Focus on not losing money before you focus on making it.
-
Journal Everything: Track your trades to identify if your failures are strategic or emotional.
-
Master One Setup: Stop strategy hopping. Become an expert in one specific market condition.
-
Accept Losses: Treat a stop-loss as a business expense, not a personal failure.