House Call

House Call

A house call is a demand by a brokerage firm that an account holder deposit enough cash to cover a shortfall in the amount of money deposited in a margin account. Fidelity Investments, for example, has a margin maintenance requirement of 30%, and its house call allows an account holder five business days to sell margin-eligible securities or deposit cash or margin-eligible securities. A house call is a demand by a brokerage firm that an account holder deposit enough cash to cover a shortfall in the amount of money deposited in a margin account. A house call is a brokerage house demand that an investor restore the minimum required deposit in order to offset losses in the value of assets bought on margin. When a house call is issued, the account holder must meet the margin maintenance requirement within a stated period.

A house call is a brokerage house demand that an investor restore the minimum required deposit in order to offset losses in the value of assets bought on margin.

What Is a House Call?

A house call is a demand by a brokerage firm that an account holder deposit enough cash to cover a shortfall in the amount of money deposited in a margin account. This typically follows losses in the investments bought on margin.

The call is made when the account balance has fallen below the maintenance margin required by the brokerage firm. If the client fails to make up the shortfall in the time specified by the house, the account holder's positions will be liquidated without further notice until the minimum requirement is satisfied.

A house call is a brokerage house demand that an investor restore the minimum required deposit in order to offset losses in the value of assets bought on margin.
Buyers on margin borrow from "the house," or the brokerage, to multiply their gains.
If the investment tanks, the buyer owes the house.

Understanding House Calls

The house call is a type of margin call. Investors who buy assets using money borrowed from the brokerage firm, or "on margin," are required by the brokerage to retain a minimum amount of cash or securities on deposit to offset losses.

Buying on margin is used by investors who hope to multiply their returns by multiplying the number of shares they buy. They borrow money from the house in order to achieve that goal. If they succeed, and the price of the shares increases, they repay the loan and pocket the rest as profit. If they fail and the price of the shares falls, they owe the house. If they owe more than they have deposited in reserve, they must make up the difference.

A house call goes out if the investment falls in value below the amount of the required deposit. The investor can cover the shortfall by depositing more cash or selling other assets in the account.

When a customer opens a margin account, up to 50% of the purchase price of the first stock in the account can be borrowed by the customer in accordance with Regulation T of the Federal Reserve Board. Individual brokerage firms have the discretion to increase this percentage.

After a stock is purchased on margin, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) imposes further requirements on margin accounts. One requires that a brokerage hold at least 25% of the market value of the securities purchased on margin. The brokerage firm may set a higher minimum.

The minimum deposit may be up to 50%, but some brokerages set a higher amount.

That number effectively becomes the house requirement for a deposit. When a house call is issued, the account holder must meet the margin maintenance requirement within a stated period.

Fidelity Investments, for example, has a margin maintenance requirement of 30%, and its house call allows an account holder five business days to sell margin-eligible securities or deposit cash or margin-eligible securities. After that, the firm will start liquidating securities. Charles Schwab has the same maintenance requirement of 30% but house calls are due "immediately" by the firm.

Related terms:

Brokerage Company

A brokerage company's main responsibility is to be an intermediary that puts buyers and sellers together in order to facilitate a transaction.  read more

Call Loan Rate

A call loan rate is the short-term interest rate charged by banks on loans extended to broker-dealers. read more

Credit Balance

Credit balance refers to the funds generated from the execution of a short sale that is credited to the client's account. read more

Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA)

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is a nongovernmental organization that writes and enforces rules for brokers and broker-dealers. read more

Maintenance Margin

Maintenance margin, currently at 25% of the total value of the securities, is the minimum amount of equity that must be in a margin account. read more

Margin

Margin is the money borrowed from a broker to purchase an investment and is the difference between the total value of investment and the loan amount. read more

Margin Call

A margin call is when money must be added to a margin account after a trading loss in order to meet minimum capital requirements. read more

Rebate

A rebate in a short-sale transaction is the portion of interest or dividends paid by the short seller to the owner of the shares being sold short. read more

Regulation T (Reg T)

Regulation T, or Reg T, governs cash accounts and the amount of credit that broker-dealers can extend to investors for the purchase of securities. read more

Trading Margin Excess

Trading margin excess refers to the funds in a margin account that are available for trading.  read more