Prime Brokerage Anatomy™
There is no industry standard prime brokerage agreement, so this is not so much an anatomy as a collection of resources about an amorphous subject.
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Margin excess, or excess margin, is any amount standing to a customer’s account with a prime broker over the minimum margin that the prime broker requires the customer to hold against its liabilities. This may be in the form of unrealised profit from live transactions, variation margin on swap positions credited to the customer’s account, or excess assets the customer has paid for but holds with the prime broker as custodian.

Excess margin, while the PB holds it, is subject to all the usual security arrangements; the only difference is that the customer does not have to let the PB hold it; but customers habitually do because it is convenient — they have to hold it somewhere, so why not with the good old prime broker? — and because it tends to make their prime brokers feel better about things, even if perhaps they shouldn’t.[1]

The reality about just when a customer may ask for its excess margin back — whenever it likes, in the normal run of things — can startle a complacent risk officer, but what a startled risk officer can then do if it doesn’t terribly like the idea of giving the margin excess back — reclassifying it as required margin by means of a margin adjustment — tends to make the risk officer feel a bit better, even though she might not quite believe it.

As long as you have a margin excess, you shouldn’t need to make a margin call — a margin adjustment will do.

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