Securities Lending

  

See: Margin.

When you create a margin account at your brokerage, you are essentially using your own securities as collateral for the purposes of "lending them" against incremental purchases.

Like...you have $10 million in MSFT stock. You can lend those securities "to yourself" to generate $5 million more in buying power with a 50% margin limit. Common practice. Risky, if the market goes down. And you'll pay the brokerage a few percent in margin fees for their acting as intermediary in that securities lending experience.

So...here's to bull markets.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What Does It Mean to "Buy on Ma...20 Views

00:00

Finance, a la shmoop. What does it mean to buy on margin? Whoa, okay enough of that

00:11

yeah. That was buying on margarine but okay yeah that was a stretch, buying on [Guy sliding around with blocks of margarine on his feet]

00:17

margin is something totally different. Well margin just means debt or a loan or [Guy in a hospital bed]

00:22

credit and this buying on margin usually refers to an investor buying stocks,

00:28

pledging their portfolio as collateral in making that purchase. (Illustrative example time).

00:37

Grete Greedmonger has a hundred million dollar portfolio filled with very conservative [Greta stood next to a list of her holdings]

00:42

stocks comprising ninety percent of it or ninety million bucks and she has 10

00:47

million in cash. Well Greta, tired of flying in her measly small jet wants to [Greta's jet in the sky]

00:52

be able to afford a really big jet like the kind of the truly wealthy fly like [Warren Buffet and Bill Gates walking up to the bigger jet]

00:57

you know those guys. She wants to be in the billionaire's Club and your [Greta sat in the Billionare's club bar]

01:01

membership card gets you a great discount on private planes, so you know

01:05

like why not. Well anyway she's impatient to just let her stocks compound away and

01:10

get there quote naturally unquote at the 8% a year or so compound growth rate [The value of Greta's investment shown after each 5 years]

01:16

that they kind of have shown last a few decades. Well she wants to add gasoline

01:19

to the relatively slow burning embers of her portfolio and speed up her compound [Pouring gasoline over a fire]

01:25

rate to get to billionaire status from her current hundred millionaire status [The value is shown to be almost 2 billion in 10 years]

01:30

you know and by a G6 and that plan can't possibly backfire right.. So she bets big [Greta's big jet falls out the sky]

01:37

on a few stocks believing that she has a solid understanding of the stock market. [Greta buying amazon stock]

01:41

Specifically she wants to invest 40 million dollars in Amazon, currently

01:45

trading at 2000 bucks a share well she only has 10 million in cash. Well how can

01:49

she buy 40 million dollars when she only has 10. Well she could sell 30 million [Greta holding a big sack of stocks]

01:55

dollars worth of her stock unfortunately though those stocks were acquired years [The broker has a big sack of money]

02:00

ago at a very low price, so if she sold them she would pay massive tax bills and in [The money the broker pays is taxed]

02:05

fact to generate 30 million dollars of net after-tax cash she'd probably have [The tax calculation is shown]

02:11

to sell something north of 50 million dollars of stock to pay for

02:15

it and that's way too high a price in taxes to pay to be worth making the sale [Greta runs away with her stocks]

02:19

at all. So instead she borrows money to invest that 40 million bucks, only she [Greta getting the borrowed money and buying Amazon stock with it]

02:25

borrows it on margin, meaning she is borrowing that money from herself she

02:31

has 90 million dollars in stocks and 10 million in cash and needs another 30

02:35

million beyond the cash she already has to buy that 40 million of Amazon right. Well her

02:39

account at Schwab is already set up as a margin account or margin style account, [Definition of a margin account shown on a 100 dollar bill]

02:44

meaning that she has already signed a bunch papers stating that she understands the

02:48

margin rules the brokerage and the biggest rule is that the maximum margin [The rule is highlighted on the contract]

02:52

she's allowed to take in her account is 50 percent, five zero. So with her account

02:57

value at 100 million the most she could borrow would be 50 million bucks and [Margin limit calculation is shown]

03:03

there's that little dangerous voice whispering in her ear and well there [Devil version of Greta in her ear]

03:08

might be another voice telling her to just spend a few bucks on jet skis and [Angel version of Greta in her other ear]

03:11

vacations instead of that big jet and she just ignores that one and that's [Greta flicks the angel away]

03:15

good because otherwise we wouldn't have this video for you. So if she needs 40

03:19

million bucks to invest in Amazon she'll use up her ten millio in cash

03:23

and then take out a margin loan of thirty million dollars against herself.

03:26

Her account will have a hundred thirty million dollars in equities in it and 30 [Greta's holdings are shown]

03:31

million dollars of debt and no cash and that cash that she's borrowed carries

03:36

interest charges that is in return for borrowing money from herself she will [Greta paying Schwab]

03:41

pay Schwab a few percent a year in interests. That's nice high margin business for

03:46

Schwab because the money to them is almost free so all is good until she

03:50

decides she wants to put 20 million into Netflix as well all on margin so now she [Greta is watching Netflix on her TV]

03:56

has fifty million dollars in margin in an account with a hundred fifty million

04:00

in equities and 50 million in debt so note that her base hundred million

04:05

dollars in value and equity has not changed since the beginning of this [The value of the portfolio is shown]

04:09

awesome story only now she has a hundred fifty million in investments in that

04:14

account and fifty million of debt so if the portfolio goes up 10 percent she'll

04:19

show gains of 15 million versus a situation where if she hadn't done any

04:24

with margin while that gain of 10% would have given her just 10 million in gains [The with and without margin gain calculations]

04:28

right, 10 percent of 100 million invested vs. 10 percent of 150 million invested.

04:33

And yes she'll be paying say 4 percent interest now on the 50 million she

04:37

borrowed or about 2 million a year to rent that money from herself it's really

04:42

Schwab kind of fronting the cash for her using her portfolio as collateral. So all [Schwab demanding that she pay back the loan]

04:46

is great she's thinking about the upholstery color in her g5 and then a

04:50

bomb goes off in North Korea and well all bets are off the stock market freaks [Explosion]

04:55

out printing down 20% in a short period with the high octane names like Amazon

05:01

and Netflix trading down even more and all the sudden 150 million dollars in

05:06

value in her portfolio is cut 40% such that the 150 million dollars is now [The loss on Greta's holings is shown]

05:13

worth only 90 million and that's a really big problem. Why? Because she still

05:19

has 50 million bucks in margin loans on the account and the brokerage has a max

05:25

50% limit that is, clients cannot borrow more than half of their portfolio.

05:30

Because it's just too risky for Schwab to have to potentially bear the burden [Guy holding sacks full of I.O.U.s falls over]

05:35

of making the margin whole on that account like if the market then really

05:39

tanks like if it went down another 30 or 40 percent you can imagine it would be [Stock chart showing price going even lower]

05:43

worth less than 50 million dollars which is the debt that they have [Combined stock value going down]

05:47

outstanding and then it's really bad and Schwab could go bankrupt really fast. So [Money disappearing from Schwab vault]

05:51

Schwab sends her a kindly loving nasty gram requiring her within 24 hours to [Schwab sending an email telling her to pay or never see you precious portfolio again]

05:58

inject 10 million dollars of capital into that margin account to quote true

06:02

it up unquote to be at least a hundred million dollars in value like she could

06:06

wire in 10 million bucks that says sitting around in her BofA account [Greta using an ATM]

06:10

to make it whole and in that case her margin account would go down from 50

06:14

million to 40 million on an account that would have just gone from 90 million to [Greta's holdings are shown]

06:20

a hundred million dollars and she'd be just fine. So that's 40 million bucks of

06:24

margin on a hundred million dollars of an account value and it's ten points

06:29

below the red line threshold of that 50% maximum [Greta's margin level is calculated]

06:33

margin limit. Only problem, she doesn't have 10 million dollars in her BofA

06:38

account just sitting around. So what else can she do well she'll have to sell

06:42

stock in her Schwab account to meet her margin requirements and you can see what [Greta at her stock for sale stand]

06:46

a vicious spiral this is gonna become and if she won't proactively call in the

06:50

orders herself well then Schwab has the right to step in and sell

06:53

them for her and Schwab won't care a whole lot about whether they're making [Schwab guy selling Greta's stock at any price]

06:57

smart sales or not they just need the margin minimums met right away and oh by

07:03

the way she'll pay taxes on those Schwab sales if there were gains on them and [The stock sale being taxed]

07:07

then the IRS is coming after her for dough later so it gets really ugly and [IRS taking money from Greta]

07:12

yes you can imagine that if a whole lot of people were caught in the margin [The word margin being squeezed by two hands]

07:15

squeeze like this in a bad market where they got more greedy than fearful and a [Guy in a suit running around]

07:20

whole lot of brokerages put in sell mortimer, sell, at market orders well that [Guy in a suit waving his arms around]

07:25

the whole system would cave in on itself with massive supplies of stock for [The broker collapses]

07:30

relatively little demand and well that's how stock markets crash and that's why [Big sack of stock and only 1 person left to buy]

07:35

brokerages have you know typically 50 ish percent margin kind of limits at

07:39

least for retail investors. And the general goal of the G-man here is to you

07:44

know, avoid such a slippery set of circumstances and maybe she should just [Guy wants to use a block of margarine as a sled]

07:48

get used to flying commercial. [Greta looks unhappy on a commercial flight]

Up Next

Finance: What is Hypothecation?
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Hypothecation is the process or rules behind pledging collateral for a loan.

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