Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Margin Lending ====== Margin lending is a practice where an investor borrows money from a `[[brokerage]]` firm to purchase securities, using the cash and securities in their account as `[[collateral]]` for the loan. Think of it as a mortgage for your stock portfolio. This loan, known as a 'margin loan,' allows you to control more stock than you could afford with just your own cash. This amplification effect is called `[[leverage]]`, and it's a powerful tool that can magnify both your profits and, more dangerously, your losses. While it can boost returns in a rising market, it introduces a significant risk that can wipe out an investor's entire account, a danger that runs counter to the core principles of `[[value investing]]`. For this reason, it must be approached with extreme caution, if at all. ===== How It Works: A Simple Story ===== Imagine you have $10,000 in cash that you want to invest. You could simply buy $10,000 worth of stock. With margin lending, however, your broker might lend you an additional $10,000. You now have $20,000 in buying power and can purchase a much larger position in a company you believe in. Your original $10,000 is your `[[equity]]`. The $20,000 is the total value of your investment, and the $10,000 loan is your debt. This sounds great when stocks are going up, but the mechanics of the loan hide a serious trap. ==== The Key Players and Terms ==== Understanding margin requires knowing a few key terms set by regulators and your broker. * **Initial Margin:** This is the minimum percentage of the purchase price that you must cover with your own funds. In the United States, `[[Regulation T]]` of the `[[Federal Reserve]]` board generally requires an initial margin of at least 50%. In our example, you put down $10,000 (50%) to buy $20,000 worth of stock. * **Maintenance Margin:** This is the minimum amount of equity you must maintain in your margin account //after// the purchase. This is a crucial number. Brokerages typically require a maintenance margin of 25% to 40%. If your equity drops below this level, trouble begins. * **Margin Interest:** The margin loan isn't free. You will be charged interest on the money you borrow. This interest accrues daily and is an automatic drag on your returns, creating a headwind your investments must overcome just to break even. ===== The Double-Edged Sword of Leverage ===== Leverage cuts both ways. The very thing that makes margin attractive—amplified returns—is also what makes it incredibly dangerous. ==== The Upside: Amplified Gains ==== Let's revisit our story. You bought $20,000 of stock using $10,000 of your own money and a $10,000 loan. * The stock's value increases by 25% to $25,000. * You sell the stock and repay your $10,000 loan. * You are left with $15,000. * Your profit is $5,000 on your original $10,000 investment—a 50% return! (Before interest costs). * Without margin, a 25% stock gain would have resulted in only a 25% return. Leverage doubled your profit. ==== The Downside: The Dreaded Margin Call ==== This is the scenario that every margin user fears. It’s the flip side of the coin and the reason most prudent investors avoid margin lending. A `[[margin call]]` is a demand from your brokerage to add more money to your account or sell assets to bring your equity back up to the maintenance margin level. Let's see how this unfolds with our example, assuming a 30% maintenance margin requirement. * Your $20,000 stock position //falls// by 25% to $15,000. * Your loan is still $10,000, but your equity has shrunk to just $5,000 ($15,000 assets - $10,000 loan). * Your equity as a percentage of the account value is now $5,000 / $15,000 = 33.3%. You are safe for now, but getting close to the 30% trigger. * Now, the stock drops further, to $14,000. Your equity is now $4,000 ($14,000 - $10,000). * Your equity percentage is now $4,000 / $14,000 = 28.6%. * **Boom.** You've breached the 30% maintenance margin. You get a margin call. Your broker will demand you either deposit more cash or sell stock immediately. If you can't or don't, the brokerage has the right to sell any of your securities—without your consent—to pay down the loan. This forced selling locks in your losses at the worst possible time, when prices are low, destroying your ability to wait for a recovery. ===== A Value Investor's Perspective ===== The great `[[Warren Buffett]]` famously said, "My partner Charlie says there are only three ways a smart person can go broke: liquor, ladies, and leverage." He also said, "It's insane to risk what you have and need for what you don't have and don't need." This wisdom gets to the heart of the problem. Margin lending is the polar opposite of the `[[margin of safety]]` principle, a cornerstone of value investing. A margin of safety is the buffer you create by buying a stock for significantly less than its `[[intrinsic value]]`. It protects you from bad luck, errors in judgment, and market downturns. Using margin does the exact opposite: * **It removes your safety net.** Instead of a buffer, you create a tripwire. * **It takes control away from you.** A margin call can force you to sell your best ideas at the worst prices, violating the value investor's creed of patience and discipline. * **It turns a temporary paper loss into a permanent, catastrophic real loss.** For the ordinary investor seeking to build long-term wealth, the potential for a single margin call to devastate a portfolio is a risk not worth taking. While professionals may use leverage in complex strategies, for most of us, the path to success is paved with patience and our own capital, not borrowed money and sleepless nights.