Q&A MARGIN CALL - Everything you need to know

Today's Q&A I want to answer the most common questions I get about Margin Calls.

Let's begin.

Q. What is the Margin Call?

A margin call is a situation where a trader does not have enough funds in their account to keep a trading position open.

Your broker will either phone you or you'll receive an automated message with a margin call warning.

Q. What can you do when you hit a Margin Call?

If you are ever in this situation, you will be instructed to do two things.

Deposit more funds into your portfolio to keep your trading positions opened.

Close your current open position/s that are running at a loss, before your trading platform closes them out for you.

Tip: When setting up a trading account with a broker find out what their minimum margin requirements are.

Q&A: Can you show an example with a Margin Call?

Let’s look at an example with a Margin Call

Here are the specifics:

Equity portfolio: R10,000

Initial margin deposit: R5,500

You buy a CFD trade which says you need to have at least 30% of the margin (initial deposit) in your account, to keep the trade opened.

This means, you need R1,650 (30%) in your account to keep your trade opened.

The next day comes and the market crashes below your stop loss.

Your new account balance is now R1,500…

Unfortunately, you’ll hit a Margin Call as your portfolio only has 27% of the initial margin of your trade.

= Equity ÷ initial margin deposit
= R1,500 / R5,500
= 27%

27% is less than 30% of what you need to maintain an open trade.

The broker now has the right to close the trade and to send you a notification about what happened.

You will receive a margin call to instruct you to deposit more money into your account or to close your trading positions.

Q&A: What if I can't pay back the money when I hit a Margin Call?

Essentially, you will be owing the broker as they will not be carrying the risk.

If you cannot pay it or refuse to clear the negative balance, you will not be allowed to trade with the broker and/or trading platform again until you pay what you owe.

Depending on the size of the debt, if you refuse to pay it then some brokers may have the legal right to pursue the outstanding debt through legal means.

This means they could file a lawsuit.

They could even take the matter to court, where a judgement may be issued where the trader will be required to repay the debt.

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Trade Well,
Timon Rossolimos
Founder, MATI Trader
(Pro trader since 2003)
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