Debit Balance
Definition
A debit balance in a margin account is the amount of money an investor owes their broker for funds borrowed to purchase securities on margin. It represents the loan portion of the position financed by the broker.
How margin and debit balances work
- Cash account: you can only use the cash you have on deposit to buy securities.
- Margin account: you may borrow funds from the broker to buy additional securities or borrow shares to short-sell. The borrowed amount becomes the debit balance.
Example: with $2,000 of your own cash, you buy $3,000 of stock by borrowing $1,000 from the broker. Your debit balance is $1,000.
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Borrowing on margin is leverage: it can magnify gains and losses. Brokers require collateral (cash or securities) in the account to secure the loan.
Adjusted debit balance
The adjusted debit balance is the amount owed to the broker after accounting for:
– profits from short sales, and
– credit balances in a special memorandum account (SMA).
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It indicates how much would be due in a margin call when account equity falls below required levels.
Regulatory and account requirements
- Initial margin: regulations typically limit borrowing to a percentage of the purchase price (commonly up to 50% under standard rules).
- Maintenance margin: brokers require a minimum percentage of equity to be maintained in the account (industry rules often set a floor around 25%, though individual brokers may require more).
If equity drops below the maintenance requirement, a margin call may be triggered.
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Interest on the debit balance
Brokers charge interest on borrowed funds. Rates can be fixed or variable and reduce net returns. Confirm the borrowing rate before using margin.
Special Memorandum Account (SMA)
An SMA holds excess margin—credit available beyond the maintenance requirement. SMA balances:
– preserve realized gains for future use,
– provide buying power for additional margin purchases, and
– can help meet margin requirements if account value falls.
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Margin calls and broker actions
When an account falls below the maintenance requirement, the broker may:
– demand additional cash or securities (margin call), or
– sell securities in the account to restore required equity.
Brokers can often sell positions without prior consent and may liquidate holdings to cover shortfalls. Timely monitoring and action are essential to avoid forced sales.
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Marginable securities
Marginable securities are those brokers allow to be purchased on margin or used as collateral. Firms determine which securities are marginable; non‑marginable securities must be paid for entirely with cash.
How to reduce margin-call risk
- Keep a cash cushion in the margin account.
- Monitor account equity and market movements frequently.
- Use lower leverage or avoid margin if risk tolerance or liquidity is limited.
- Diversify holdings to reduce the impact of any single security’s decline.
Bottom line
A debit balance is the borrowed portion of a margin account. While margin can increase purchasing power and potential returns, it also increases risk—raising the chance of larger losses and margin calls. Understand interest charges, maintenance requirements, and your broker’s policies before trading on margin.