Article 1 Disclosure of Risks of Margin Trading
Tiger Brokers (NZ) Limited (“TBNZ”) is providing this document to you to provide some basic facts about purchasing Financial Products (including stocks, options and futures) (“Financial Products”) on margin (credit terms), and to alert you to the risks involved in trading with a margin account and of granting security to TBNZ over your Financial Products.
“Margin trading” means where you undertake transactions in which :
• you purchase Financial Products partially through a loan (“margin loan”) provided to you by TBNZ(also known as a “Long Sale”), or
• you sell Financial Products partially through a securities loan provided to you by TBNZ or a third party introduced by TBNZ (also known as a “Short Sale”).
To secure your obligations to TBNZ under margin loans (including your obligation to pay TBNZ interest and to repay the principal), you grant TBNZ security over your Financial Products and other personal property held by or through TBNZ.
Under TBNZ terms and conditions, that security also secures obligations of TBNZ to third parties. That means your Financial Products (and other assets) could, in some circumstances, be sold to allow TBNZ to meet its obligations to third parties (and also to meet your obligations to TBNZ). Where sold to meet TBNZ’s obligations to third parties you would still have the right to claim the equivalent value from TBNZ but you would be an unsecured creditor of TBNZ for such amounts.
In addition, TBNZ can provide (directly or indirectly) your Financial Products to other parties in a practice known as “stock lending”. In that case you are exposed to counterparty risk that the other borrower may fail to retransfer or deliver the Financial Products (or their equivalent) to TBNZ or a relevant third party (e.g. if they become insolvent).
Accordingly you assume very significant risk to your Financial Products and other personal property under these arrangements and you could suffer significant or complete loss of your Financial Products and other personal property (with a real risk that TBNZ may not be able to pay you the equivalent value). That’s the even if you comply with all of your obligations to TBNZ and even if your Financial Products maintain or increase their market value. |
Before trading Financial Products using a margin loan, you should carefully review the provisions for margin trading in TBNZ’s Client Service Agreement (“Margin provisions”) provided by TBNZ and you should seek professional advice as required. TBNZ can answers any questions you may have about margin accounts but that is not professional advice.
If you choose to borrow funds from TBNZ, you will open a margin account with us. The Financial Products purchased (and any other Financial Products, and other personal property, you, TBNZ or a third party hold through use of TBNZ services) are TBNZ’s security for the loan to you. If the Financial Products in your account decline in value, so does the value of the security supporting your loan, and, as a result, TBNZ can take actions, such as selling Financial Products or other assets in any of your accounts held with TBNZ or issue a margin call (an obligation on you to pay funds to TBNZ), in order to maintain required equity (value) in the account.
When you sell Financial Products, you may borrow some Financial Products for sale. If you choose to borrow Financial Products from TBNZ or the third party through TBNZ, you must also have a margin account with us and abide by the rules of margin trading.
You should understand that, pursuant to the TBNZ Margin provisions, TBNZ generally will not issue margin calls, and that TBNZ will not credit your account to meet intraday margin deficiencies. In most circumstances TBNZ will liquidate Financial Products in your account in order to satisfy margin requirements without prior notice to you and without an opportunity for you to choose the Financial Products to be liquidated or the timing or order of liquidation.
In addition, it is important that you fully understand the risks involved in trading Financial Products on margin. These risks include but not limited to the following:
1.1. You could lose more funds than the value in the margin account (that is the value of Financial Products and other personal property TBNZ holds for you). A decline in the value of Financial Products that are purchased on margin may require you to provide additional funds to TBNZ or you must put up margin (deposit more funds) to avoid the forced sale of those Financial Products or other assets in your account(s).
1.2. TBNZ can force the sale of Financial Products or other assets in your account(s). If the equity (total value) in your account falls below the minimum margin requirements we set (directly or via relevant markets) TBNZ can sell the Financial Products or other assets in any of your accounts held with us to cover the margin deficiency. You also will be responsible for any shortfall in the account after such a sale.
1.3. TBNZ can sell your Financial Products or other assets without contacting you. Some investors mistakenly believe that a firm must contact them for a margin call to be valid, and that the firm cannot liquidate Financial Products or other assets in their accounts to meet the call unless the firm has contacted them first. This is not the case. As noted above, TBNZ generally will not issue margin calls and TBNZ reserves the right, but is not obliged, to immediately sell your Financial Products without notice to you in the event that your account has insufficient margin.
1.4. You are not entitled to choose which Financial Products or other assets in your account(s) that are liquidated or sold to meet a margin call. TBNZ has the right to decide which Financial Products to sell in order to protect its interests.
1.5. TBNZ can increase the minimum margin requirements at any time and is not required to provide you with advance written notice. These changes often take effect immediately. Your failure to maintain adequate margin in the event of an increased margin rate generally will cause TBNZ to liquidate or sell Financial Products in your account(s).
1.6. If TBNZ chooses to issue a margin call rather than immediately liquidating under-margined Financial Products, you are not entitled to an extension of time on the margin call. As a holder of a margin account at TBNZ, you shall have sufficient equity in your margin account to satisfy the margin required by the relevant exchange and regulators.
1.7. The Margin Facility is a non-standard margin lending facility because you must transfer to TBNZ (or a third party we select) all your rights, title, and interest in your Financial Products Securities as security for your obligations (and also as security for TBNZ’s obligations to third parties). When you transfer Financial Products to us or a third party, those Financial Products will be held in either our name or the name of third party together with other financial products held in relation to the Margin Facility provided to other clients.
1.8. TBNZ is authorised to transfer those Financial Products to any person in the ordinary course of and for the purposes of our business under an arrangement commonly known as a ‘stock lending’ arrangement which requires that person to undertake to retransfer or deliver the Financial Products (or their equivalent) to us. If TBNZ (or third parties) enters into such stock lending arrangements, you are exposed to counterparty risk that the borrower may fail to retransfer or deliver the Financial Products (or their equivalent) to us or a relevant third party (e.g. if they become insolvent).
1.9. Also, we may not be able to fulfil a request to deliver the Financial Products (or their equivalent) to you if the market for the Financial Products becomes illiquid resulting in it being impossible to obtain equivalent securities to transfer to you.
1.10. In the event of TBNZ’s insolvency, you will be an unsecured creditor. Accordingly, there is the risk that TBNZ may not be able to retransfer the Financial Products or equivalent securities back to you as contemplated above. This might arise, for example, if we have not discharged our obligations under the stock lending arrangements, or if the Financial Products are used to secure the indebtedness of TBNZ.
Article 2 Disclosure of Risks for Short Sales
There are some special close-out risks for the Short Sale in margin accounts.
2.1. Clients holding short positions in Financial Products are at risk of having these Financial Products bought-in or closed out with little or no advance notice. This is a risk inherent to short sales and is generally outside of your control. It is also subject to rules which dictate the timeframes by which we must act. While similar in their effect, the term “buy-in” refers to an action taken by a third party with a “close-out” being one taken by TBNZ. These actions typically result from one of the following three events:
(i) The securities required to be delivered when a short sale settles cannot be borrowed. When a security is sold short, the broker must arrange for that security to be borrowed at settlement, which in the case of U.S. Financial Products is the first business day following the date of the trade (T+1). Prior to executing the short sale, TBNZ must make a good faith determination that such securities will likely to be available for borrowing when needed and this is accomplished by verifying their availability at that point in time. Note that in the absence of an established securities-lending arrangement, there is no assurance that securities available to be borrowed on the date of trade will still be available to be borrowed thereafter and the short sale positions may be subject to forced close-out if they are not. The processing timeline for determining a close-out is as follows for the US market (ET hereafter):
A. T+1
14:30 – If TBNZ is unable to borrow securities to meet settlement and anticipates a substantial likelihood that it will not be able to borrow securities to meet their settlements, a communication could be sent, on a best-efforts basis, to notify you of potential close-outs. You will have until the end of extended hours trading that day to close out these short positions on your own accord to avoid forced close-outs. If at any time these securities become available to be borrowed, an attempt will be made by TBNZ to communicate that information to you.
15:15 – A communication could be sent, on a best-efforts basis, in the event you have not closed out the short position(s) and TBNZ is still not able to borrow those securities. You will still have until the end of extended hour trading that day to close out the short position(s) to avoid forced close-outs.
16:50 – If TBNZ is still not able to borrow securities to meet settlements, you will be sent, on a best-efforts basis, a communication informing you that TBNZ has not been able to borrow securities at that close of business on T+1 and a final attempt will be made until T+2 09:00.
B. T+2
09:00 – If TBNZ is still unable to borrow the securities required to be delivered up to this point in time, close-out will commence when the market opens at 09:30. The close-out will be reflected within the 老虎国际 (also known as Laohu Guoji or Tiger Trade) APP trades window at an indicative price.
09:30 – TBNZ initiates close-out using a volume weighted average price order (VWAP) scheduled to run over the entire trading day. The indicative price reflected within the 老虎国际 (also known as Laohu Guoji or Tiger Trade) APP trades window will be updated with the actual price upon completion of the close-out.
The shares which were borrowed and delivered at settlement are later recalled. Once a short sale has been settled (i.e., stock has been borrowed and used to deliver the sales sold short to the buyer), the lender (which might be TBNZ or the third party) of the shares reserves the right to request their return at any time. Should a recall occur, TBNZ will attempt to replace the previously borrowed shares with those from another lender. If shares cannot be borrowed, the lender reserves the right to issue a formal recall which allows for a buy-in in your name to take place in the event TBNZ doesn’t return the recalled stock. Given the volume of formal recalls which we receive but are not later acted upon, TBNZ does not provide you with advance warning of these recall notices.
A failure to deliver with the clearinghouse occurs. A failure to deliver occurs when a broker has a net short settlement obligation with the clearinghouse and does not have the shares available within its own inventory or cannot borrow them from another broker in order to meet the delivery obligation. TBNZ will close-out your holding short positions to satisfy the delivery obligation.
(ii) You should note that on any day on which you have been closed out, you are required to end the day as a net purchaser in aggregate across all of your account(s) with TBNZ of at least the number of shares you were closed out on (in the security you were closed out on). For the remainder of the trading day on which you were closed out, you will not be permitted to (i) short sell the stock you were closed out in, (ii) write in-the-money call options on the stock you were closed out in, or (iii) exercise put options on the stock you were closed out in (the "Trading Restrictions"). If you nevertheless do not end the day as a net purchaser of the required number of shares for the stock you have been closed out in (for example, as the result of being assigned on call options previously written)—in aggregate across all of your accounts with TBNZ, TBNZ will perform another close-out in the account on the next trading day for the number of shares that, when added to your aggregate net trading activity in such stock on the close-out date, would make you a net purchaser of the required number of shares of such stock that day, and you will again be required to remain a net purchaser across all of your accounts of that many shares and again subject to the Trading Restrictions for the remainder of that day.
(iii) You should be aware that based on the manner in which TBNZ is required to execute a close-out and a third party is allowed to execute a buy-in, significant differences between the price at which the transaction was executed and the prior day's close may happen. These differences may be especially pronounced in the case of illiquid Financial Products. You should be aware of these risks and manage your portfolio accordingly.
Article 3 Introduction of the Margin System
An automated electronic system (“Margin System”) by TBNZ is designed to set, renew and enforce margin requirements, and operate with respect to margin transactions in your account.
TBNZ’s Margin System provides pre- and post-execution controls by:
3.1. testing your orders to ensure that your account holds enough equity to support the execution of the order, rejecting the order if equity is insufficient or directing the order to an execution destination if equity is sufficient; and
3.2. continuously updating your account’s equity and margin requirements and, if your account’s equity falls below its minimum margin requirements, issuing liquidating orders in a sequence generally intended to minimize the impact on account equity.
3.3. Protections in the TBNZ Margin System prevent you from withdrawing an intraday amount which would cause your account equity to fall below the applicable margin requirements for any position in Financial Products in the account or the minimum available equity level set by TBNZ, any exchange or other regulator.
Recognizing that you are an experienced investor, TBNZ expects you to manage your positions proactively. TBNZ provides credit manager software in the 老虎国际 (also known as Laohu Guoji or Tiger Trade) Terminals of TBNZ for you to monitor your account equity on a real-time or near real-time basis through your trading screens, and you are obligated to monitor your account equity and manage your trading risks.
This Disclosure shall be written in English and Chinese languages. If there is any difference or inconsistency between the Chinese and English version, the English version shall prevail.
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I HAVE READ AND ACKNOWLEDGED THE RISKS OF MARGIN TRADING AND OF SECURITY GRANTED TO TBNZ, AND I AGREE TO BEAR ALL THE RISKS, LOSSES AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF MARGIN TRADING AND THE RELATED GRANTING OF SECURITY.
I ACKNOWLEDGE THAT MY ELECTRONIC SIGNATURE BELOW FOR RECEIPT OF THIS DISCLOSURE IS THE EQUIVALENT OF MY HAND-WRITTEN SIGNATURE.