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A clear guide to margin calls, explaining how declining account equity triggers a broker’s demand for additional funds.
A margin call occurs when an investor’s margin account falls below the broker’s required minimum value, prompting the broker to demand additional funds or securities to restore the account to the required maintenance margin.
Definition
A margin call is a broker’s request for an investor to deposit additional equity (cash or securities) into a margin account when the account value drops too low due to market losses.
When investors trade on margin, they borrow money from a broker to buy securities. The broker requires a certain level of equity (maintenance margin) to be maintained at all times.
If the value of the securities declines, the equity in the account shrinks and may fall below the maintenance requirement. When this happens, the broker issues a margin call.
The investor must then:
Failure to meet a margin call may result in the broker liquidating the investor’s assets without consent.
Margin Level:
[ \text{Margin Level} = \frac{\text{Equity}}{\text{Borrowed Funds}} \times 100 ]
Trigger Condition:
Margin Call occurs when:
[ \text{Equity} < \text{Maintenance Margin Requirement} ]
An investor buys P100,000 worth of stock using P50,000 of their own funds and P50,000 borrowed. If the stock price drops and equity falls to P35,000, the broker may issue a margin call requiring the investor to add funds to restore the required margin.
Margin calls:
Widespread margin calls can accelerate market sell-offs.
Often within 24–72 hours, depending on the broker.
Yes, most margin agreements allow immediate liquidation.
Common in stocks, futures, forex, and crypto margin trading.