Margin Call Trading Scenario: A Practical Walkthrough
Let’s now apply all the margin concepts you’ve learned in previous lessons by examining a trading scenario involving a broker with a 100% Margin Call Level and no separate Stop Out Level.
Keep in mind that different brokers may follow different margin policies. Some only use a Margin Call level, while others also implement a separate Stop Out Level.
In this lesson, we’ll walk through a scenario using a broker that only issues Margin Calls when your Margin Level drops to 100%.
Step 1: Initial Deposit
You fund your trading account with $1,000.
Step 2: Open a Trade
You decide to go long on EUR/USD at 1.15000 by opening a 1 mini lot (10,000 units) position.
- Margin Requirement: 2%
- Notional Value: €10,000 = $11,500
- Required Margin: $11,500 x 2% = $230
Since this is your only trade, the Used Margin = Required Margin = $230.
Step 3: Account Overview (Breakeven)
The trade moves slightly in your favor and is now at breakeven.
- Floating P/L: $0
- Equity: $1,000 + $0 = $1,000
- Free Margin: $1,000 – $230 = $770
- Margin Level: ($1,000 / $230) × 100% = 435%
The Trade Moves Against You: EUR/USD Drops 500 Pips
EUR/USD falls to 1.10000.
- New Notional Value: €10,000 = $11,000
- New Required Margin: $11,000 x 2% = $220
- Floating Loss: (1.10000 – 1.15000) × 10,000 = -500 pips = -$500
- Equity: $1,000 – $500 = $500
- Free Margin: $500 – $220 = $280
- Margin Level: ($500 / $220) × 100% = 227%
The Pair Drops Further: EUR/USD Falls Another 288 Pips
EUR/USD drops to 1.07120.
- New Notional Value: €10,000 = $10,712
- Required Margin: $10,712 x 2% = $214
- Floating Loss: (1.07120 – 1.15000) × 10,000 = -788 pips = -$788
- Equity: $1,000 – $788 = $212
- Free Margin: $212 – $214 = -$2
- Margin Level: ($212 / $214) × 100% = 99%
Your Margin Level has now dropped below the 100% threshold—triggering a Margin Call.
Margin Call Triggered!
Since the broker’s policy is to close positions at 100% Margin Level:
- Your position is liquidated automatically.
- The Used Margin is released.
- Your Floating Loss becomes realized, and your Balance updates.
Final Account Status:
With no open positions:
- Equity = Balance = $212
- Used Margin = $0
- Free Margin = $212
- Floating P/L = $0
- Margin Level = N/A
Summary
You started with $1,000 and ended with $212.
- Loss: $788
- Percentage Loss: (($212 – $1,000) / $1,000) × 100% = -79%
This shows how quickly leverage can amplify losses if the market moves against you and highlights the importance of managing risk and margin levels.
In the next lesson, we’ll explore a different setup: using a broker with both a Margin Call Level and a Stop Out Level—and how the outcome differs from this example.
