Special Memorandum Account - SMA

  

Categories: Trading, Banking

Trading on margin involves borrowing cash from your broker to make additional trades. The special memorandum account gets filled if those margin-bought investments start to go up in value. That extra, unrealized value gets accounted for in the SMA as a line of credit.

Probably best to explain this one with an example:

You deposit $10,000 into a trading account. Then you borrow an additional $10,000 on margin. You use the $20,000 to buy 1,000 shares of Flappy Jacks Inc., a maker of premium pancake oil extract. The shares are trading at $20 when you buy them. Within a few weeks, they're up to $25. The value of your stake is up to $25,000...a total unrealized gain of $5,000 (unrealized because it only becomes a real gain if you sell the shares and lock in the profit). Of the $5,000 in paper profits, $2,500 stays in the main account. This amount represents the gain posted using the your original $10,000 cash deposit. The other $2,500, the amount of gain related to your $10,000 margin loan, exists in the SMA.

The SMA largely exists as an accounting tool. The money is treated differently because it was earned on the margin loan, not on the cash you deposited. Once you sell the stock, and square up the margin loan, you can pay back the $10,000 (plus any interest) and transfer that $2,500 SMA amount into actual cash.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What Does it Mean to Churn an A...14 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop What does it mean to churn an

00:05

account All right Well back in colonial times before america

00:10

was the good old u s a You know what

00:12

That i po and seventeen seventy six colonists would churn

00:16

cream into butter back then churning involved moving a plunger

00:20

in a wood bucket over and over and over again

00:23

Really good for the traps and lattes there Not exciting

00:26

but well that's What happens when there's No better technology

00:29

today churning is something illegal that stock brokers dio and

00:34

remember normally brokers pay their own rent by getting paid

00:38

a commission off of each trade they do for customers

00:41

So churning in the financial sense here means that stockbrokers

00:45

are making tons of trades they really don't need to

00:48

be making in a client's account in order to generate

00:52

mohr commission for themselves they're churning the account to generate

00:56

dough for themselves Illegal very bad And sometimes it can

01:01

be difficult to detect or stop You know think about

01:04

little old ladies not really paying attention to our account

01:06

or ah cardiologists who really has no idea how wall

01:10

street works They have no idea of the brokers churning

01:12

Or not Well if you fall prey to a broker

01:14

who's involved in churning you'll end up overpaying them in

01:17

commissions And you might even have to pay extra taxes

01:20

because they realized gains from all those trades they didn't

01:23

need to make But if that brokered does get caught 00:01:26.979 --> [endTime] yeah he's toast

Up Next

Finance: What is a Wrap Account?
31 Views

A wrap account is an account that wraps into one annual fee all of the services you'd normally pay for a la carte at a given brokerage.

Finance: What is an offshore account, and how do you open one?
11 Views

What is an offshore account, and how do you open one? An offshore account is a bank account in a foreign country, often a tax haven or a safe and s...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)