Portfolio Margin

Portfolio Margin

Additionally, the New York Stock Exchange’s Rule 431, Nasdaq’s Rule 2860, and the brokerage industry’s self-regulatory agency, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's (FINRA) Rule 721, govern how brokers manage margin accounts. Among FINRA's requirements, broker-dealers who offer portfolio margin accounts must meet “specific criteria and standards to be used in evaluating the suitability of a customer for writing uncovered short option transactions,” and establish and monitor “a minimum equity requirement.” Portfolio margin is a set of risk-based margin requirements designed to offset risks to the lender by aligning margin requirements with the general risk of a portfolio. Margin is the collateral that an investor has to deposit with their broker or exchange to cover the credit risk the holder poses when they borrow cash from the broker to buy financial instruments, borrow financial instruments to sell them short, or enter into a derivatives contract. Portfolio margin requirements have only been recently instituted in the options market, although futures traders have enjoyed this system since 1988. This revised system of derivative margin accounting has freed up capital for options investors, allowing them more leverage, which previously was required for margin deposits under the old strategy-based margin requirements that were instituted in the 1970s.

Portfolio margin is a set of risk-based margin requirements designed to offset risks to the lender by aligning margin requirements with the general risk of a portfolio.

What Is Portfolio Margin?

Portfolio margin refers to the modern composite-margin policy that must be maintained in a derivatives account containing swaps (including credit default swaps), options, and futures contracts. The objective of portfolio margining is to offset the risks to the lender through consolidating, or netting, positions to account for a portfolio’s overall risk. It typically results in drastically lower margin requirements for hedged positions compared to traditional policy rules. Portfolio margin accounting requires a margin position that is equal to the remaining liability that exists after all offsetting positions have been netted against each other.

For example, if a position in the portfolio is netting a positive return, it could offset the liability of a losing position in the same portfolio. This would reduce the overall margin requirement that is necessary for holding a losing derivatives position.

Portfolio margin is a set of risk-based margin requirements designed to offset risks to the lender by aligning margin requirements with the general risk of a portfolio.
Portfolio margin is utilized for derivatives accounts where long and short positions taken in various instruments can be netted against one another.
Often, portfolio margin stipulations result in much lower margin requirements for hedged positions than would otherwise be the case.

Understanding Portfolio Margin

Margin is the collateral that an investor has to deposit with their broker or exchange to cover the credit risk the holder poses when they borrow cash from the broker to buy financial instruments, borrow financial instruments to sell them short, or enter into a derivatives contract.

Portfolio risk is to be measured by simulating the impact of market volatility. This revised system of derivative margin accounting has freed up capital for options investors, allowing them more leverage, which previously was required for margin deposits under the old strategy-based margin requirements that were instituted in the 1970s.

Special Considerations

Margin accounts are also subject to regulatory requirements laid out by the Federal Reserve Bank’s (Fed) Regulation T, a package of rules that govern customer accounts. Additionally, the New York Stock Exchange’s Rule 431, Nasdaq’s Rule 2860, and the brokerage industry’s self-regulatory agency, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's (FINRA) Rule 721, govern how brokers manage margin accounts.

Among FINRA's requirements, broker-dealers who offer portfolio margin accounts must meet “specific criteria and standards to be used in evaluating the suitability of a customer for writing uncovered short option transactions,” and establish and monitor “a minimum equity requirement.” Broker-dealers must also monitor, report, and increase margin requirements on accounts with high concentrations of individual securities. Additionally, broker-dealers must provide customers with and receive their acknowledgment of, FINRA-approved written statements describing the risks involved in the accounts. Broker-dealers are also required by Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Exchange Act rules to segregate customer account assets from the institutions.

Related terms:

Broker-Dealer

The term broker-dealer is used in U.S. securities regulation parlance to describe stock brokerages because the majority of the companies act as both agents and principals. read more

Cboe Options Exchange

The Cboe Options Exchange, formerly known as the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), is the world's largest options exchange read more

Derivative

A derivative is a securitized contract whose value is dependent upon one or more underlying assets. Its price is determined by fluctuations in that asset. read more

Federal Reserve System (FRS)

The Federal Reserve System is the central bank of the United States and provides the nation with a safe, flexible, and stable financial system. 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

Futures

Futures are financial contracts obligating the buyer to purchase an asset or the seller to sell an asset at a predetermined future date and price. read more

Futures Contract

A futures contract is a standardized agreement to buy or sell the underlying commodity or other asset at a specific price at a future date. read more

Hedge

A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more

Liability

A liability is something a person or company owes, usually a sum of money. 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