Leverage and Margin


Kevin Crotty
BUSI 448: Investments

Where are we?

Last time:

  • Adverse Selection
  • Market structure
  • Liquidity

Today:

  • Leverage
  • Margin
  • Repurchase agreements

Leverage

Leverage

Leverage is investing borrowed money.

  • The return, good or bad, on every $1 of your own money is amplified.

Example

  • Initial capital to invest of $100,000 + borrow $50,000

  • Buy $150,000 of stocks

Assets Liab/Eq
Stocks 150,000 Debt Equity 50,000 100,000
Total 150,000 Total 150,000
  • Leverage ratio \(=\frac{\text{Assets}}{\text{Equity}}\)
  • Example is levered 1.5 to 1
  • More jargon: 50% leverage

One possible future

Suppose the stocks go up 10% and you’re charged 2% interest on the loan (rolled into the debt balance)

Assets Liab/Eq
Stocks 165,000 Debt Equity 51,000 114,000
Total 165,000 Total 165,000
  • The return is 14% (114,000/100,000-1).

  • You made 10% plus one half of (10% minus 2%) \(= 0.10 + 0.5(0.10-0.02) = 0.14\)

  • “one-half” because you borrowed 50%.

Levered return

Let \(w = \frac{\text{Debt}}{\text{Initial Equity}}\).

Levered portfolio return is:

\[ -w \cdot r_{\text{borrow}} + (1 + w) \cdot r_{\text{stock}} \]

We can rewrite this as:

\[ r_{\text{stock}} + w \cdot (r_{\text{stock}} - r_{\text{borrow}})\,.\]

The return in the example is:

\[ 0.10 + 0.5(0.10-0.02) = 0.14\]

Another possible future

  • Suppose the stocks fell by 10%.
  • You lose 10% plus one half of (\(-\) 10% \(-\) 2% ).
  • So, your loss is 16% on your $100,000 investment.
Assets Liab/Eq
Stocks 135,000 Debt Equity 51,000 84,000
Total 135,000 Total 135,000
  • Check: 84,000/100,000 -1 = -16%.

The good and the bad

  • You always make the stock return plus the fraction borrowed times (stock return minus borrowing rate).
  • With 50% leverage and a 2% interest charge,

\[+10\text{%} \rightarrow +14\text{%}\]

\[-10\text{%} \rightarrow -16\text{%}\]

Levered S&P Returns

  • SPY with leverage in today’s notebook

Margin

Margin

Margin: borrowing from your broker to purchase securities

  • Percent margin = \(\frac{\text{Equity}}{\text{Total Asset Value}}\)

  • Initial margin requirement set by the Fed’s Reg T: 50%

    • Broker may set a higher initial margin requirement
  • Maintenance margin requirement set by broker

    • Protects broker agains default by borrower if asset values drop.

Example with margin

Initial balance sheet

Assets Liab/Eq
Stocks 150,000 Margin loan Equity 50,000 100,000
Total 150,000 Total 150,000

\[ \begin{align*} \text{Percent Margin} &= \frac{\text{Equity}}{\text{Total Asset Value}} \\ &= \frac{100,000}{150,000} \\ &= 66.67\% \end{align*} \]

Example with price drop of 10%

Balance sheet after stocks drop by 10% (and margin interest of 2% rolled into loan)

Assets Liab/Eq
Stocks 135,000 Margin loan Equity 51,000 84,000
Total 135,000 Total 135,000

\[ \begin{align*} \text{Percent Margin} &= \frac{\text{Equity}}{\text{Total Asset Value}} \\ &= \frac{84,000}{135,000} \\ &= 62.22\% \end{align*} \]

Margin Calls

A margin call occurs when the percent margin falls below the maintenance margin set by the broker.

  • Suppose the maintenance margin on the account in our example is 35%.
  • How much could the stock value drop before a margin call occurs? (Ignore the interest expense on the margin loan.)

A margin call occurs when:

\[ \frac{\text{Equity}}{\text{Total Asset Value}} < \text{Maintenance Margin}\,.\]

Margin Calls

  • \(S_0\) = initial stock value
  • \(L\) = margin loan amount
  • \(MM\) = maintenance margin percentage
  • \(r\) = stock return

A margin call occurs when:

\[ \frac{S_0(1+r) - L}{S_0(1+r)} < MM\,.\]

Solving for \(r\):

\[ r < \frac{L}{S_0(1-MM)} - 1.\]

Example

Margin call occurs if stock return is less than:

\[r < \frac{50,000}{150,000(1-0.35)} - 1 = -48.7\%\]

Balance sheet with -50% return

Assets Liab/Eq
Stocks 75,000 Margin loan Equity 50,000 25,000
Total 75,000 Total 75,000

\[\text{Percent Margin} = \frac{25,000}{75,000} = 33.3\% \]

Margin Loan Rates

Repurchase agreements

Repurchase agreements (repos)

  • Simultaneously sell a security and agree to repurchase the same, or similar, asset at a later date at an agreed price.
  • A repo can be thought of as a collateralized loan
    • cash borrower pays the lender interest at the repo rate.
  • Initial collateral is usually greater than the notional loan amount.
    • difference is a haircut or repo margin.

Repo transaction

Repo rates

\[ \text{Repo rate} = \text{short-term rate} - \text{collateral-specific fee} \]

  • General collateral: repo rates slightly below federal funds rate
  • Special collateral: repo rates lower because cash lender (security borrower) wants a particular security
  • Repo rates are lower:
    • higher credit quality bonds
    • more liquid bonds
    • harder to find bonds

Term of repos

  • Repos are short-term
  • Majority are overnight

Source: Krishnamurthy, Nagel, Orlov

Numerical example

  • A dealer needs to finance $20 million par value of 10-year Treasury notes for 1 day. The current market value of the securities is $19,576,026.65. A corporation is willing to take the other side of the repo at a repo rate of 6% with a 1% haircut.

  • At initiation, the dealer surrenders the notes and receives $19,380,266.39 ($19,576,026.65*99%) in cash.

  • In 1 day, the corporation returns the notes and is paid $19,383,496.43 in cash. The interest on the cash loan is calculated as 3,230.04 (19,380,266.39 \(\cdot\) 6% \(\cdot\) (1/360).

Credit risk and repos

  • Both parties are exposed to credit risk.
  • The cash lender is exposed to the possibility of default on the cash borrower’s part.
    • If the market value of the collateral declines, the lender may have a loss.
  • The cash borrower is exposed to the possibility that the cash lender cannot return the collateral (if the market value of the collateral increases)

Mitigating credit risks

  • The haircut is designed to protect the cash lender. If the collateral market value declines, the lender may still be made whole if the drop is less than the haircut.

  • Higher haircuts for riskier borrowers and/or less liquid collateral.

  • Marking-to-market

    • if collateral MV declines, cash borrower can send cash or additional securities to the cash lender.
    • if collateral MV increases, cash lender can send cash or the collateral securities to the cash borrower

Empirical evidence on haircuts

Source: Krishnamurthy, Nagel, Orlov

For next time: Short-selling + Limits to arbitrage