HomeNewsBusinessMarketsSebi's peak margin, intraday leverage rules explained by Zerodha's Nithin Kamath

Sebi's peak margin, intraday leverage rules explained by Zerodha's Nithin Kamath

Starting today, there is going to be a restriction on maximum intraday leverages offered by brokerage firms. 80% of credit from selling holdings will be available for further trades on the same day.

December 02, 2020 / 08:43 IST
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Peak margin reporting has been brought about to restrict brokers from providing additional leverage over and above what VAR+ELM (with minimum 20% for stocks) and SPAN + Exposure (F&O – Equity, Commodity, Currency) already offer.

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(Note: VaR stands for Value at Risk and ELM stands for Extreme Loss Margin)

Starting December 1, 2020, the maximum intraday leverage that can be offered by a broker will be restricted and this maximum leverage will keep reducing until September 1, 2021 post which a broker can give maximum leverage = VAR+ELM (min 20%) or SPAN + Exposure.

Firstly, as I explained earlier, you will now be able to use only Rs 1.6lks and not Rs 2lks. But there is another issue. Assuming you used this Rs 1.6lks to intraday trade (Buy & Sell) 1 lot of Nifty futures and also bought back Rs 1.6lks worth of Reliance shares that you had earlier sold on the same trading day.Going forward, there can potentially be a peak margin penalty for the intraday Nifty future trade, here is why.

As we have explained in this post, the reason we can allow you to use the credit from selling stocks to buy other stocks or trade F&O on the same day is that we debit the shares from your Demat and give it to the clearing corporation(CC) on the same trading day (Early payin or EPI).

These stocks transferred as EPI can be then considered as margins, both for upfront and peak margin requirements.

But in the above example, if you bought back 80% of stocks sold, there will be only 200 shares or Rs 40,000 worth of Reliance that will be transferred to the CC.

This means that when you traded Nifty futures, you were short Rs 1.2lks (Rs 1.6lks – Rs 40k) on which there can potentially be a peak margin penalty.

So, if you exit your holdings and buyback the sold holdings on the same day, and if you had used the proceeds of the holdings sold to take another intraday trade, there could be a peak margin penalty on the intraday trade if you didn’t have sufficient funds available other than the credit from selling your holdings.

We will alert you on the order form when you are buying back the stock sold on the same day, so you can make sure to add funds to avoid margin penalty if you didn’t have any other margins for the intraday trade.

Also, one of the brokerage firms as part of their policy has decided to not allow multiple intraday trades with the same margin for whatever internal technological limitations. This news has been creating chaos on social media.

So in gist, starting Dec 1st, 2020, there is going to be a restriction on maximum intraday leverages offered by brokerage firms. 80% of credit from selling holdings will be available for further trades on the same day.

Always exit the higher risk/margin position first if you hold a portfolio of F&O positions. If you sell your holdings and used the proceeds for intraday trading, avoid buying back the stock sold if you don’t have sufficient funds for the intraday trade.'

(Nithin Kamath, CEO, Zerodha)

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