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Margin

What is Margin? Margin is the difference between the total value of securities held in an investor’s account and the loan amount from a broker. Borrowing on margin is the act of borrowing money to buy securities. The practice includes buying an asset where the buyer pays only a percentage of the asset’s value and borrows the rest from the bank or broker. The broker acts as a lender and the securities in the investor’s account act as collateral. Importance of Margin Margin form a key part of the risk management system. The uncertainty in the movement in the share prices leads to risk which is addressed by margining system of stock markets. Margins ensures that buyers bring money and sellers bring shares to complete their obligations even though the prices have moved down or up. Example of Margin Suppose an Investor purchases 1000 Quantities of ABC Ltd shares at a price Rs 100/- per share on 1st Jan 2019 Then the total Purchase amount = 1 Lac For Margin ( Initial Token Payment ) of 15% Investor have to give 15,000/- to Broker before buying the stocks. For every Buyer there is a Seller. To ensure that Seller gives 100 shares similar margin is levied on him. Imposition of Margin Impact Cost Impact cost shall be calculated on the 15th of each month on a rolling basis considering the order book snapshots f the previous six months. For Group 1, Impact cost less than or equal to 1 For Group 2, Impact cost is more than 1 On the basis of the impact cost so calculated, the scrips shall move from one group to another group from the 1st of the next month. For securities that have been listed for less than 6 months, the trading frequency and the impact cost shall be computed using the entire trading history of the security. For the first month and till the time of monthly review a newly listed security shall be categorized in that group where the market capitalization of the newly listed security exceeds or equals the market capitalization of 80% of the securities in that particular group. Subsequently,  after one month, whenever the next monthly review is carried out, the actual trading frequency and impact cost of the security shall be computed, to determine the liquidity categorization of the security. In case any corporate action results in a change in ISIN, then the securities bearing the new ISIN shall be treated as newly listed security for group categorization. Daily Margin payable by Members Value at Risk Margin Extreme Loss Margin Mark-To-Market Margin Daily margin, comprising of the sum of  VaR Margin, Extreme Loss Margin and Mark-to Margin is payable. VaR Margin Suppose you have Rs. 10 Lac in holding and you want to know how much your portfolio can lose in a ‘single day’? For 5% Value at Risk you will lose Rs12,500 per day. It means a)You are 95% confident that, maximum loses will not exceed Rs.12,500 in single day b) There is a 5% chance that portfolio losses will be minimum 12,500  or more in a single day   The VaR(5%) of Rs.12500 indicates that there will be a 5% chance that on any given day, the portfolio will experience a loss of Rs. 12500 or more. Definition of VaR VaR is the Rupee or Percentage loss in Portfolio value that will be equaled or exceeded only ‘X’ percent of the time. VaR is a single number, which encapsulates whole information about the risk in a portfolio. It measures potential loss from an unlikely adverse event in a normal market environment.  How VaR is calculated? Var is computed using exponentially weighted moving averages (EWMA) methodology. Based on statistical analysis, 94% weight is given to volatility on ‘T-1’ day and 6% weight is given to ‘T’ day returns. To compute volatility of 1st Jan 2019, first we need to compute day’s return for Jan 1st 2019 by using Ln (close price on Jan 1 2019/Close price on 31st Dec 2018) .Take volatility computed as on 31st Dec 2018. Use the following formula to calculate volatility for 1st Jan 2019    Square root of [0.94*(Dec 31, 2018 volatility)*(Dec 31, 2018 volatility) + 0.06*(Jan 1st 2019 LN return)*(Jan 1st 2019 LN return)] Example – Share of ABC Ltd Volatility on December 31, 2018 = 0.0314 Closing price on December 31, 2018 = Rs. 360 Closing price on January 1, 2019 = Rs. 330 January 1, 2019 volatility = Square root of [(0.94*(0.0314)*(0.0314) + 0.06 (0.08701)* (0.08701)] = 0.037 or 3.7% VaR Margin is a margin intended to cover the largest loss that can be encountered on 99% of the days (99% Value at Risk). For liquid securities, the margin covers one-day losses while for illiquid securities, it covers three-day losses so as to allow the clearing corporation to liquidate the position over three days. This leads to a scaling factor of square root of three for illiquid securities. For liquid securities, the VaR margin are based only on the volatility of the security while for other securities, the volatility of the market index is also used in the computation. VaR margin specified as per groups Liquidity Categorization One-Day VaR Scaling Factor for illiquidity VaR margin Group I Security VaR  1.00 Security VaR Group II  Higher of Security VaR and 3 times Index VaR  1.73 (square root of 3.00) Higher of 1.73 times Security VaR and 5.20 times Index VaR Group III Five Times Index VaR 1.73 (square root of 3.00) 8.66 times Index VaR Extreme Loss Margin The extreme loss margin aims at covering the losses that could occur outside the coverage of  VaR margins. The extreme loss margin for any security shall be higher of: 5% or 1.5 times the standard deviation of daily logarithmic returns of the security price in the last six months. How Extreme Loss Margin is computed? The margin rate is fixed at the beginning of every month, by taking the price data on a … Read more