Retail traders borrowing cash from brokers to purchase shares have been doubling down on a few of India’s worst-performing blue chips, within the hope that these shares will bounce again regardless of steep declines over the previous yr.
Stockbrokers supply a so-called margin buying and selling facility (MTF) for traders to borrow funds to purchase shares. MTF refers to an association the place an investor buys shares by partly utilizing her personal cash and partly by borrowing from a dealer.
4 of the highest 5 shares within the MTF e-book by worth—Jio Monetary Companies Ltd, Tata Consultancy Companies Ltd, Tata Motors Ltd, and Reliance Industries Ltd—have fallen 13%, 31%, 22%, and three%, respectively, over the previous yr, Nationwide Inventory Trade knowledge present. Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd is an exception; its shares rose 13%.
NSE’s complete MTF e-book, in the meantime, surged to about ₹99,000 crore on 1 October from ₹68,004 crore on 7 April, when the Nifty 50 declined 3.4% due to escalations within the international commerce warfare unleashed by US President Donald Trump. Over the previous yr, the benchmark index has declined 1.4%.
Market consultants warn towards utilizing margin loans to put money into shares which have been within the purple for lengthy. “We predict the MTF e-book publicity in direction of nonperforming shares is just not sustainable because the current section of sell-off in shares would have triggered margin calls,” mentioned Ankit Soni, affiliate vp at brokerage and monetary companies platform Mirae Asset Sharekhan.
Falling share costs set off margin calls the place merchants both shut the place or infuse additional cash. In such a state of affairs, shares purchased with borrowed cash lose worth, and the dealer calls for extra money from traders to cowl the shortfall.
Shopping for the dip
Retail traders maintain on to sliding blue chip shares anticipating an eventual reversal in fortunes, however the outcomes might not work out, based on market consultants.
Let’s illustrate with an instance. An investor buys shares value ₹1 lakh with ₹25,000 from her personal funds and ₹75,000 borrowed from brokers.
If the share value rises 10%, the worth of the investor’s holding would enhance to ₹1.1 lakh. After repaying the dealer, together with curiosity, the investor would nonetheless be left with a revenue.
But when the inventory value falls 10%, the worth of the holding turns into ₹90,000 and worth of the investor’s personal holding turns into ₹22,500. So, the investor must put in one other ₹2,500 to keep up the minimal margin (normally 25%), as her authentic funding was ₹25,000.
Shares purchased utilizing margin loans might be held indefinitely. “If merchants count on returns to be greater than the curiosity to be paid to the dealer, they contemplate it as low-cost borrowing in comparison with private loans,” Soni mentioned.
Stockbrokers usually supply margin loans at rates of interest of 10-12% each year. Traders maintain such shares for 2 to a few months, which interprets to an curiosity of two.5-3%, permitting for returns of 8-10%, mentioned Prakash Gagdani, chief government of Torus Digital, a broking agency.
Traders ought to ideally avail margin loans to purchase and maintain shares for a brief interval. In the event that they need to maintain shares for a yr or longer, margin buying and selling facility is just not supreme as the associated fee could be excessive, he added.
“If the inventory value goes down and the holding interval will increase, then the general loss on investments is approach excessive,” Gagdani mentioned.
Jio Monetary Companies was the largest draw amongst these shares. Traders availed ₹1,363 crore by way of the MTF route to purchase shares of the corporate, adopted by ₹1,358 crore for TCS, and ₹1,282 crore for Tata Motors, per NSE.
Abhinav Tiwari, analysis analyst at Bonanza Portfolio Ltd, mentioned that regardless of Jio Monetary’s unfavourable returns over the previous yr, traders are betting it has the potential to shake up conventional banking by digital lending and funds using its dad or mum Reliance Industries Ltd’s model.

