7. What are the Types of Margins in Futures Trading?
In futures trading, a margin is the amount of money a trader must deposit to initiate and maintain a position.
This is not a cost—it’s a security deposit used to cover potential daily losses due to market volatility.
Margins allow traders to take large positions with limited capital, but they also introduce higher risk.
To control this risk and maintain market integrity, exchanges require traders to maintain different types of margins at various stages of the trade.
Why Do Margins Exist?
To protect brokers and exchanges from client defaults
To ensure traders have enough funds to absorb potential losses
To manage leveraged trades transparently and securely
Types of Margins in Futures Trading
1. Initial Margin
This is the minimum amount you must deposit upfront to open a futures position.
Usually 5% to 15% of the total contract value.
Acts as your “entry ticket” to take a position.
Blocked in your account by the broker and monitored by the exchange.
Example:
Nifty Futures @ ₹22,000
Lot Size = 50
Contract Value = ₹11,00,000
If Initial Margin = 10% → You need ₹1,10,000 to open the trade
2. Maintenance Margin
This is the minimum amount you must maintain in your margin account after opening the position.
Typically lower than the initial margin (e.g., 75–90% of it).
If your margin balance falls below this level due to MTM losses, your broker will issue a margin call.
You need to top up the margin to avoid your position being squared off.
3. Exposure Margin (Additional Margin)
Exposure margin is collected over and above the Initial Margin to safeguard against unexpected volatility.
Acts as a buffer in case the market moves drastically against your position.
Value depends on the volatility of the underlying asset.
Can be dynamic and subject to change by the exchange or broker.
4. SPAN Margin (Standardized Portfolio Analysis of Risk)
This is the risk-based margining system used by exchanges in India (NSE, BSE).
SPAN Margin is calculated by simulating various market scenarios to determine the worst-case daily loss.
Forms the core part of the Initial Margin.
Brokers use exchange-provided SPAN calculators to determine this amount.
5. Mark-to-Market (MTM) Margin
This is not a margin paid upfront, but a daily settlement mechanism.
Futures positions are revalued every day at market close, and your profit or loss is adjusted.
Profits are credited to your margin account.
Losses are debited from your margin account.
If MTM losses bring your margin balance below the Maintenance Margin → Margin Call is triggered.
Summary Table
Margin Type
Purpose
When It’s Used
Initial Margin
To enter a new futures position
Before trade execution
Maintenance Margin
To keep the position active
Continuously monitored
Exposure Margin
To cover additional volatility risk
Collected upfront, varies by asset
SPAN Margin
Risk-based margin calculated by exchange
Part of the Initial Margin
MTM Margin
Daily profit/loss adjustment
At the end of each trading day
Real-Life Example
You take a long position in Nifty Futures at ₹22,000.
Initial Margin = ₹1,10,000
Maintenance Margin = ₹1,00,000
Exposure Margin = ₹15,000
MTM Loss on Day 2 = ₹12,000
Your margin balance drops to ₹98,000
This triggers a margin call
You need to deposit additional funds, or the broker will square off your position.
Consequences of Margin Shortfall
Margin Call – Broker asks you to add more funds
Auto-Square Off – If ignored, your position is closed at market price
Loss Booking – You bear the actual loss due to market movement
No Carry Forward – You cannot roll over or hold the position unless margin is replenished
Key Takeaways
Margins are critical for risk control in leveraged futures trades.
They vary depending on market volatility, underlying asset, and trade size.
You must monitor your margin balance to avoid forced liquidation.