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Good Faith Violation

A Good Faith Violation (GFV) is a trading blunder that occurs in a Cash Account when you sell a security that was purchased with funds that have not yet settled. Imagine you sell your old bike for $100, and the buyer promises to pay you on Friday. On Tuesday, you use that promised $100 to buy a new helmet. On Wednesday, you decide you don't like the helmet and sell it. The problem? You sold the helmet before you ever actually received the cash for the bike. In the investment world, this is a GFV. When you sell Securities like stocks or ETFs, the cash from that sale isn't officially yours instantly. It must go through a Settlement Period (typically one business day, or T+1, for stocks in the US and two days, T+2, in Europe). A GFV happens when you buy a new security with those “unsettled” funds and then sell that new security before the original funds have cleared. It violates the “good faith” principle that you will fully pay for your investments with settled money, and your broker takes it seriously.

How a Good Faith Violation Happens: A Simple Story

Understanding the timing is key to avoiding a GFV. Most Brokerage Account platforms show you “cash available to trade” and “settled cash.” A GFV happens when you mix them up. Let's follow an investor named Alex:

The key mistake was selling the second investment (Company B) before the funds used to purchase it (from the sale of Company A) were officially settled.

What Are the Consequences?

Brokers are required by regulators to enforce rules against GFVs. The penalties are not fines, but they are certainly inconvenient.

How to Avoid a Good Faith Violation

Avoiding a GFV is simple once you know the rules. It's all about patience and paying attention to your account details.

The Value Investor's Takeaway

For a disciplined value investor, a Good Faith Violation should be a non-issue. The entire philosophy of value investing is built on long-term holding periods, patience, and avoiding the kind of rapid, speculative trading that leads to GFVs in the first place. These violations are a byproduct of a short-term mindset—trying to make a quick buck by flipping stocks in a day or two. A true value investor buys a business, not a ticker symbol, with the intention of holding it for years. Therefore, the settlement period is just a minor administrative delay, not a barrier to your strategy. If you find yourself frequently running into GFVs, it might be a good moment to reflect on whether you are investing or simply trading.