5. What are Margins in Futures Trading?

In the world of futures trading, you don’t pay the full value of the contract upfront.
Instead, you pay a margin—a percentage of the total contract value.

This margin acts as a security deposit to ensure you can cover potential losses.
Think of it as a “good faith” deposit that allows you to trade high-value contracts with relatively small capital.

Why Are Margins Required?
Margin = Leverage

The concept of margin enables leverage in futures.
You control large positions with only a fraction of the total value.

Example:

You’re trading a contract worth ₹11 lakh by putting up just ₹1.1 lakh. That’s 10x leverage.

Mark-to-Market (MTM) Settlement

Futures contracts are settled daily using the MTM system. Every day:

If your margin falls below the threshold → Margin Call.

Types of Margins in Futures Trading
TypePurpose
Initial MarginMinimum capital required to enter a position
Maintenance MarginMinimum balance to keep position open
SPAN MarginRisk-based system to handle worst-case scenarios
Exposure MarginAdditional buffer for extreme volatility
MTM MarginDaily gain/loss adjustments
Margin Impact: Profit & Loss

Suppose:

Profit = ₹300 × 50 = ₹15,000 → Added to margin account via MTM

If price drops to ₹21,800:
Loss = ₹200 × 50 = ₹10,000 → Deducted from margin account

If balance < maintenance margin → Margin Call or auto square-off.

Risk Warning

Trading on margin means:

Key Risks:

Margin is Not a Fee

Margin is not a cost.
It’s your money, returned after closing the position (adjusted for gains/losses).

Key Takeaways