FAQ – Easily View Answers to Frequently Asked Questions (2024)

Margin Call There are two types of margin calls and both involve a demand from a broker / dealer to either deposit additional equity (in the form of a cash deposit or marginable securities with sufficient loan value) and / or to close enough existing positions to satisfy the call. The first type of margin call occurs when a new position is opened with insufficient overnight buying power. This is known as a Federal or Reg T (RT) call. The second type of margin call involves total equity which is no longer sufficient to maintain the positions that have been opened. This is known as a Required Maintenance (RM) call.

Overnight Buying Power (ONBP) The amount of funds you have to open a new position and hold it overnight. In the majority of cases, beginning of day ONBP is based on two times your maintenance excess (equity – equity requirement). Closing positions can increase your ONBP intraday. It is sometimes referred to simply as ‘Buying Power’.

Day Trade Buying Power (DTBP) The amount of funds you have to place day trades. Beginning of day DTBP is 4 X margin maintenance excess from the end of the previous day. This figure cannot be increased intraday, and is fixed at the start of the day. Closing positions opened that day will replenish DTBP, but never greater than the start of the day DTBP. Closing overnight positions will not replenish DTBP.

Required Maintenance (RM) Call This type of Margin call is the most common type issued. It occurs when the value of the security moves against the customer (price drops when long the stock or price increases when short the stock). All securities have a margin maintenance requirement (25%, or more stringent, up to 100% of the market value), and this type of call simply means that the current equity in the account is no longer sufficient to satisfy the total maintenance requirement of all the positions held. The call can be met in many ways. (1) You can deposit money in the amount of the call. (2) You can deposit securities valued at 1 1/3 times the amount of the call. (3) You can close marginable securities at 4 X the amount of the call. (4) You can sell non-marginable securities at the full amount of the call. Or, (5) the value of the marginable positions move in the account’s favor to the point there is no longer maintenance call. This call is also referred to simply as maintenance call.
Hypothetically, let's say you purchase $20,000 worth of securities by paying $10,000 yourself and borrowing $10,000 from SogoTrade. If the market value of the securities drops to $15,000, the equity in your account falls to $5,000 ($15,000 - $10,000 = $5,000). Assuming a maintenance requirement of 25%, you must have $3,750 in equity in your account (25% of $15,000 = $3,750). So, in this example, since the $5,000 of equity in your account is greater than the maintenance requirement of $3,750, you are not in a maintenance call. But let's say the maintenance requirement is 40% instead of 25%. In this case, your equity of $5,000 is less than the maintenance margin of $6,000 (40% of $15,000 = $6,000). Here, you would be issued a $1000 Maintenance Call. SogoTrade will use best efforts to notify you; however, if you don’t meet the call, we have the right to close positions at our discretion to satisfy the call.

Reg T (RT) Call This type of margin call occurs when you open a position that exceeds your overnight buying power and then hold that position overnight. This call is a request for you to deposit additional equity to prove to the Fed you had the financial capacity to establish such a position. Reg T Calls can only result from opening transactions. Unlike a Required Maintenance call, equity depreciation cannot generate a Fed Call. Fed calls should be met with a new deposit, rather than by closing positions; although closing sufficient positions will satisfy a Reg T (Fed) call. If you close a position to meet a Reg T call, a Liquidation Violation may be charged to the account. These are also known as ‘strikes’. At SogoTrade, you are given 3 ‘strikes’ in your margin account before a 4th one would restrict the account to liquidation only for a 90 day period. Just remember, you can be charged a Liquidation Violation if you sell/close a position to cover a Reg T Call. This call is also sometimes referred to as a Federal (Fed) call. Hypothetically, let’s say you deposit $5000 cash to fund your account. You now have $10,000 ONBP and $20,000 DTBP (4 X your maintenance excess, as you have no positions in this example). You then place an order to buy 1000 shares of XYZ @ $15 per share and hold the position overnight. The principal amount is $15,000. You have overspent your ONBP by $5000, and would be in a $2500 RT Call ($15,000 X .5 = $7500 requirement). You can meet this call by depositing the entire amount in cash, or you could deposit securities with a value twice the amount of the call to meet it. Just remember, you can be charged a Liquidation Violation if you sell/close a position to cover a Reg T Call.

Day Trade Call (DT Call) A Day Trade Call occurs when there is insufficient Day Trade Buying Power (DTBP) to satisfy initial requirements on day trade transactions. This means you have exceeded (overspent) your beginning DTBP for the day, and then day traded (didn’t hold the position overnight). Day Trade calls can only be met with a deposit of new cash (or fully paid securities). You cannot sell securities to meet this type of call. New monies deposited to meet a DT call must stay in the account for at least two business days before withdrawal (at Sogotrade, if made by ACH, there is a 5 business day hold).

Hypothetically, let’s say you start the day with $5,000 of ONBP and $10,000 of DTBP. You then close $15,000 of a marginable position. Now you have $20,000 ONBP and the DTBP remains at $10,000 (note that your ONBP exceeds your DTBP in this scenario). You then place an order to buy 1000 shares of XYZ stock at $15 per share. The principal amount for this trade is $15,000. You have overspent your DTBP by $5000, but you have not exceeded your ONBP. In this case, if you were to sell the position that same day, you would have a $5000 DT margin call, since you overspent your initial DTBP and then day traded. If you were to hold the position overnight, no DT call would be issued.

Equity Maintenance (EM) Call An EM Call occurs when the equity in a Pattern Day Trader (PDT) account (see section on Day Trading) falls below $25,000. The EM call is the additional equity required to get the PDT account back to the required $25,000 so day trading can be permitted again. This call can be appreciated out of or a deposit of cash and / or securities in the amount of the EM call can satisfy it. A Margin account with 4 or more day trades in any rolling 5 business day period is considered ‘pattern’. If a PDT account begins the day with less than $25,000 equity and executes a day trade, the account will be closed at the clearing firm and restricted to closing transactions only for 90 calendar days. There is no way to lift this restriction. For example, depositing funds or closing positions cannot reopen a PDT account closed for day trading while the equity was below $25,000. While in an EM call, the account can still use the overnight buying power to open a new position and hold it overnight.

Good Faith Violation (GFV) This type of violation occurs in Cash Accounts ONLY. We are listing it here for informational purposes, as investors sometime get several of these before they decide for themselves that a margin account may actually suit their trading habits better. A GFV is issued when a position is opened using unsettled funds and then closed before the funding sale has settled. Settlement for a stock trade is trade date plus two business days. An easy way to remember this is T + 2. Settlement on option trades are T + 1. Customers can receive 4 GFV’s in a 12 month period; however, they should try to be avoided in the first place. When an account is issued its fourth GFV within that timeframe, the account will be restricted to settled funds only (intraday sales will no longer increase overnight buying power) for one year. A fifth violation will result in the account being closed (restricted to liquidations only).

Hypothetically, let’s say on Monday, April 10, a customer sells 100 settled shares of XYZ stock which generates proceeds of $5,000. This sale will settle on T+2, which is Wednesday, April 12. He then uses those unsettled funds to purchase shares of ABC. On Tuesday, April 11, the customer sells the shares of ABC (that he is now selling before the funding sale of XYZ from April 10 will settle on the 12th). This customer will be issued a Good Faith Violation because he didn’t hold the purchase made with the unsettled funds until the original XYZ sale had settled.

Some Margin account risks… and tips to avoid Margin Calls.

Cross reference these points with our Education section on ‘Summary of Key Facts to Understand’

Also of importance, you don’t have to maintain a debit balance when you utilize a margin account. You do not have to take advantage of any extra buying power, greater than your cash balance offered. You can choose to ignore the extra buying power and only trade within your cash balance. Only debit balances held overnight will be subject to margin interest.

FAQ – Easily View Answers to Frequently Asked Questions (2024)

FAQs

What is frequently asked questions FAQ document? ›

An FAQ page (short for Frequently Asked Question page) is a part of your website that provides answers to common questions, assuages concerns, and overcomes objections. It's a space where customers can delve into the finer details of your product or service, away from your sales-focused landing pages and homepage.

How does FAQs help you in finding an answer to your questions? ›

But often the visitor needs a simpler way to find the answer they are looking for. A frequently asked questions or FAQ page is a place for visitors to easily find answers to their questions in one place.

Why does FAQs frequently asked questions important? ›

Frequently asked questions, or FAQs as they are known, are a great way to improve your customer's experience of your website. It allows you to answer the questions that are most commonly asked surrounding your product or service.

What is the meaning of FAQs and answers? ›

abbreviation for frequently asked question: a question in a list of questions and answers intended to help people understand a particular subject: If you have any problems, consult the FAQs on our website.

Are FAQs a good idea? ›

FAQs are convenient for writers - they put everything in a long list; it's all neatly organised and the 'Q' does a lot of work for you. But they're more work for readers - questions take longer to scan and understand than simple headings and you can't take any meaning from them in a quick glance.

How long should FAQ answers be? ›

Though you want answers to be thorough, it's equally important to keep them short and to the point. Users come to FAQ pages for answers, you don't want to make them work for it. Include enough information to completely answer the question, but try not to exceed 2-3 sentences for each.

How many questions should be in an FAQ? ›

That said, you want to find a nice middle ground. Fewer than five questions might indicate you haven't done your research… or that you didn't need an FAQ to begin with. Fielding dozens of questions isn't good either, but if they're all necessary, consider splitting your FAQ into multiple pages.

What are the disadvantages of frequently asked questions? ›

Cons of an FAQ

FAQ pages can also be hard to navigate, especially if they are long. It can be difficult for a user to sift through many questions to find the information they seek. It can also be challenging to write questions phrased the way a user would ask them.

What is the value of FAQs? ›

By including an FAQ page on your website, you're showing your customers that you value their time and are ready to help. Additionally, your FAQs demonstrate you've taken the time to get to know your customers, understand their concerns, and anticipate their questions before they ask.

What are the objectives of FAQs? ›

The purpose of FAQs is to provide quick and easily accessible answers to common questions that users may have about a product, service, or website. They help reduce the workload on customer service teams and improve the user experience by providing immediate answers.

What is the frequently asked questions feature? ›

Most companies have an FAQ — or Frequently Asked Questions — page on their website. This page includes a series of questions that are commonly asked by customers and cover topics including product or service usage, business hours, prices, and more.

What is the purpose of the FAQ section? ›

What is the purpose of an FAQ page? An FAQ page is a quick way to provide valuable information to your audience with a useful organization of key information and answers to common questions.

What is a Q&A document? ›

Q&A, or Questions and Answers, is a tool commonly used in media relations. This document, sometimes confidential, contains possible questions and also probable answers to many issues in a company, service or product.

What is the short form of frequently asked questions? ›

FAQ is an abbreviation for `frequently asked questions'.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Foster Heidenreich CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 6708

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (76 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Foster Heidenreich CPA

Birthday: 1995-01-14

Address: 55021 Usha Garden, North Larisa, DE 19209

Phone: +6812240846623

Job: Corporate Healthcare Strategist

Hobby: Singing, Listening to music, Rafting, LARPing, Gardening, Quilting, Rappelling

Introduction: My name is Foster Heidenreich CPA, I am a delightful, quaint, glorious, quaint, faithful, enchanting, fine person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.