Personal Finance & Money Asked by Joseph Tanenbaum on December 17, 2020
Let’s say I am trading in a Reg-T Margin account. When entering a Futures contract, a certain amount of cash is needed as collateral (usually 5%-15%). I’d like to see that collateral generate income instead of being idle.
Examining my account closely, I observe:
I’d like to put the collateral to good use and have it generate a profit seperate from the futures contract, and beyond the paltry interest rate the broker pays me. The futures pricing formula does not compensate for a risk free rate on any margin requirements, which gives me the feeling that there is some freedom in the allocation of the margin deposit?
NB: As I understand, brokers may choose to put extra restrictions on futures margin. Therefore I’m more interested in regulated minimum requirements and industry wide practices than in broker-specific rules.
In theory, an FCM may accept various types of collateral, including assets such as cash, treasuries, certain stocks, sovereign debt, letters of credit, and (as of 2009, I think,) gold.
In practice, most will want you to post cash or cash.
Some will take treasuries, but I think you'll generally have a hard time posting securities or other riskier asset classes at most shops, as dealing with the margining around them is more complex (and less profitible).
Correct answer by Jaydles on December 17, 2020
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