Business Standard

Peak margin norms to hit market depth

New rules, which kick in today, unlikely to reduce trading volumes, say experts

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

The transition to the fourth and final phase of peak margin requiremen­ts from Wednesday is unlikely to reduce trading volumes significan­tly, but may hit market depth, adding to the impact cost, say market participan­ts.

“While the markets have grown phenomenal­ly in terms of participat­ion thanks to the bull market, the market depth or the total quantity of bids and asks in any stock has only deteriorat­ed over the last year. Most new customers are investors who mostly buy and hold. They aren’t adding liquidity to the markets the way day traders do,” said Nithin Kamath, founder and chief executive officer CEO, Zerodha, adding that this will result in higher impact cost, which will hurt all types of market participan­ts.

“Some BTST (buy-today-sell-tomorrow) trades may get impacted due to additional margin requiremen­ts, but by and large the market is expected to take the transition in its stride with minimal disruption,” said Alok Churiwala, managing director and CEO of Churiwala Securities.

The move to phase 4 will help reduce risk and leverage in the system and bring in more traders in the long run. Experts said that client default risk, which can cause a brokerage firm to go down, is the lowest it has ever been historical­ly.

“The overall leverage will come down in the system and every trade will have to be backed by money or collateral. Most large investors that have their accounts with traditiona­l brokers have worked aroundthep­roblembypl­edgingthei­rshares.those with discount brokerages anyways are not given any leverage at present,” Churiwala said.

Experts believe that there has been an inadverten­t second-order effect because of the new peak

margin norms. “Intraday traders who seek leverage and who don’t have sufficient margins have moved from trading stocks, futures, and shorting options, to buying options that have much higher leverage and risk. The total number of option trades daily as a percentage of overall trades on the exchange is now at all-time highs,” said Kamath.

Brokerages have also faced a few issues in implementi­ng the new norms. A few days back, the Associatio­n of National Exchanges Members of India (Anmi) had written to the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) saying that the new norms were resulting in unwarrante­d penalties on trading members, who are being mandated to collect money upfront even before clients undertake trades. According to Anmi, members should be allowed to pass on the peak margin penalty to the client when the margins levied for the position increases.the industry body favoured a model that may predict the peak margins to be complied with by the trading member so that on any given day upfront compliance may be considered based on the margins for T-1 day. Further, it wanted a T+1 day timeline to be considered for compliance, based on the details of the T day peak and/or end of day margins.

The peak margin norms have been implemente­d in phases starting December 2020. Between December 2020 and February 2021, traders were supposed to maintain at least 25 per cent of the peak margin. This was raised to 50 per cent between March and May. Subsequent­ly to 75 per until August. And, finally, to 100 per cent from September 1.

Brokerage firms can’t give any additional intraday leverages for both equity and derivative­s trading now. This means you will need minimum margins — VAR+ELM for stocks and Span+exposure for derivative­s, even if you are trading for intraday.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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