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What is Margin?
Margin is the amount of equity that must be maintained in a trading
account to keep a position open. It acts as a good faith deposit by the
trader to ensure against trading losses. A margin account allows
customers to open positions with higher value than the amount of funds
they have deposited in their account.
Trading a margin account is also described as trading on a leveraged
basis. Most online forex firms offer up to 200 times leverage on a mini
contract account. The mini contract size is usually 10,000 currency
unit, 1/200th of 10,000 equals to 50 currency unit, meaning only 0.5%
margin is required for open positions. Compare to future contracts,
which require 10% margin for most contracts, and equities require 50%
margin to the average investor and 10% margin to the professional
equity traders, foreign exchange market offers the highest leverage
among the other trading instruments.
The equity in excess of the margin requirement in a trading account
acts as a cushion for the trader. If the trader loses on a position to
the point that equity is below the minimum margin requirement, meaning
the cushion has completely worn out, then a margin call will result.
Generally, in online forex trading, the trader must deposit more funds
before the margin call or the position will be closed. Since no calls
are issued before the liquidation, the margin call is better known as
‘margin out' in this case. The account will be margined out, meaning
all the positions will be closed, once the equity falls below the
margin requirement.
Example:
| Account |
A |
| Account Equity |
500USD |
| Contract Size |
10,000 |
| Currency |
EUR/USD |
| Spread |
3 pips |
| Margin Requirement |
50USD |
| Leverage |
1,000:50 = 200:1 |
| Pips to margin out (1 lot) |
447 |
Consider Account A, the margin requirement for 1 lot of position is 50USD. The free usable margin is Account Equity - (Margin Requirement + Spread) = 500 - (50 + 3) = 447. The account will be margined out if EUR/USD moves 447 pips against the position.
Why Margin Requirement Matters?
Leverage is a double-edged sword. With proper usage, it can enhance
customers' funds to generate quick returns and increase the potential
return of an investment. However, without proper risk management, it
can lead to quick and large losses. Consider the following example:
|
Account
|
A |
B |
| Account Equity |
500USD |
500USD |
| Contract Size |
10,000 |
10,000 |
| Currency |
EUR/USD |
EUR/USD |
| Spread |
3 pips |
3 pips |
| Margin Requirement |
50USD |
200USD |
| Leverage |
1,000:50 = 200:1 |
1,000:200 = 50:1 |
| Pips to margin out (1 lot) |
447 |
297 |
| Max no. of lots at one time |
9 |
2 |
| Pips to margin out (max lots) |
3 |
47 |
The initial conditions of the accounts are the same, except for
account A, the margin requirement per lot is 50USD and account B is
200USD.
Free usable margin = Account Equity - (Margin Requirement + Spread)*no. of lots
Maximum number of lots open at one time = Account Equity / (margin requirement + spread)
In account A, for 1 lot of position, the free usable margin is 500 -
(50+3) = 447, which means the account will be margined out if EUR/USD
moves 447 pips against the position. The max number of lots open at one
time = (500/(50+3)) = 9 lots, with 500 - (50+3)*9 = 23USD free usable
margin left for 9 lots. Once EUR/USD moves 23/9 = 3 pips against the
positions, there would be not enough usable margin and account A will
be margined out.
In account B, the free usable margin for 1 lot is 500 - (200+3) =
297, which means the account will be margined out if EUR/USD moves 297
pips against the position. The max number of lots open at one time =
(500/(200+3)) =2 lots, with 500 - (200+3)*2 = 94USD free usable margin
for 2 lots. If EUR/USD moves 94/2 = 47 pips against the positions,
account B would be margined out.
With 1 lot of open position, account A has 447USD usable margin as
cushion before being margined out, while account B only as 297USD.
However, with more usable margin, account A has higher probability of
being over traded. As shown in the above example, the more open
positions, the easier is the account to get margin out.
Most forex trading firms offer customizable leverage; traders can
choose the leverage ratio they feel most comfortable with. Customers
should be aware of how to guard against over trading an account and
managing overall risk.
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