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Margin Trading 101

Margin Jargon Cheat Sheet

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πŸ“˜ Learning the Language of Margin Trading

Getting started with margin trading can feel like learning a whole new language. Like any specialized field, it comes with its own set of terms and definitions.

To help you navigate your trading platform more confidently, here’s a cheat sheet of key margin-related terms:

πŸ“Œ Margin

What it means:
The amount of money you must deposit to open and maintain a position. It acts as collateral to cover potential losses.

πŸ“Œ Leverage

What it means:
Leverage allows you to control a larger position size using only a small amount of capital from your account.

πŸ“Œ Unrealized P/L (also called Floating P/L)

What it means:
Your current profit or loss on open positions that haven’t been closed yet.

πŸ“Œ Balance (also known as Account Balance or Cash)

What it means:
The total amount of cash in your account, not including any floating profits or losses. It only changes when you close trades.

πŸ“Œ Margin Requirement (Per Position)

What it means:
The percentage of the full trade value that must be set aside as margin to open a position.

πŸ“Œ Required Margin (Per Position)

What it means:
The actual dollar amount that gets β€œlocked” when you open a trade. It’s unavailable until the trade is closed.
Example: For a $10,000 position with a 2% margin requirement, $200 will be required as margin.

Also known as:

  • Entry Margin
  • Initial Margin
  • Initial Entry Margin

πŸ“Œ How to Calculate Required Margin

  • If the base currency is the same as your account currency:
    Required Margin = Notional Value Γ— Margin Requirement
  • If the base currency is different:
    Required Margin = Notional Value Γ— Margin Requirement Γ— Exchange Rate

πŸ“Œ Used Margin (also known as Margin Used or Total Margin)

What it means:
The total margin being used to maintain all open positions.

Formula:
Used Margin = Sum of Required Margins for all open trades

πŸ“Œ Equity (also known as Account Equity, Net Equity, or Net Asset Value)

What it means:
The real-time value of your trading account.

Formulas:

  • With open positions: Equity = Balance + Floating P/L
  • No open positions: Equity = Balance

πŸ“Œ Free Margin (also called Available Margin or Usable Margin)

What it means:
Funds available to open new trades. If this reaches zero, you’ll be unable to open more positions.

Formula:
Free Margin = Equity - Used Margin

πŸ“Œ Margin Level (also called Margin Indicator)

What it means:
A ratio that shows the health of your account, expressed as a percentage.

Formula:
Margin Level = (Equity / Used Margin) Γ— 100%
Example: $5,000 Equity / $1,000 Used Margin = 500% Margin Level

⚠️ Margin Call Level

What it means:
The percentage level where you’ll receive a warning and won’t be able to open new trades. It does not mean your positions are being closedβ€”yet.

Example: If the margin call level is 100%, and your margin level falls to 100% or below, you’ll enter Margin Call status.

Also known as:

  • Minimum Margin Requirement
  • Minimum Required Margin

Formula:
Margin Call Level = X%

❌ Stop Out Level

What it means:
This is the critical level where the broker starts automatically closing your trades to prevent your account from going negative.

Example: If the Stop Out Level is 50% and your margin level falls below that, the position with the biggest loss will be closed first. This continues until your margin level rises above 50%.

Also known as:

  • Margin Closeout
  • Liquidation Margin
  • MCO (Margin Close Out)

Formula:
Stop Out Level = X%

⚠️ Margin Call

What it means:
A warning that your margin level is low (at or below the Margin Call Level) and you can’t open new trades. Your current trades stay open unless the Stop Out Level is hit.

❌ Stop Out

What it means:
This occurs when your margin level drops below the Stop Out Level. Your broker will automatically start closing open positions to reduce risk and protect your account from going negative.

Knowledge Check

1. What is the correct formula for Margin Level?