How to calculate leverage when trading futures

I have seen quite a few times people calculating the leverage using notional value of the index, when it is rather irrelevant to the correct calculation. It is your account size and the number of contract that affects the leverage mostly. Bigly, if I might say so. Leverage tells you how much your account moves compared to 1 unit movement of the index. In plain, if the index drops 1% and your account loss is 12%, then your leverage was 1:12...

Since I won the Nobel prize last year in Math, I feel authorized without further much ado, to reveal the formula, free of charge:

Lev=(Ctr # x Index value x Point value)/Account size

Ctr#: number of contracts used
Index value: the current value of the index (ES would be 2473)
Point value: the value of 1 point (ES is $50)
Acc Size: Your account in dollars

Let's see an example. A trader with a 10K account using 2 ES contracts has a leverage of:

(2 x 2473 x $50)/ $10000= 24.7

Extra credit: Just because you are trading futures, you still can under leverage your account, meaning that your account movement can be LESS than the movement of the traded future.
 
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Since I won the Nobel prize last year in Math, I feel authorized without further much ado, to reveal the formula, free of charge:


Call me pedantic (which probably you already do), but there isn't one in Math - the nearest equivalent (arguably better than a Nobel, actually) is the Fields Medal. But thanks for a very good post which will doubtless be really helpful to many readers. :cool:
 
Is there anything wrong with using margin to calculate leverage?

Yes. The margin only tells you what your maximum size can be compared to your account size.

Max. number of contracts = account size / margin

Here is a simple way to see it easily: 2 traders trade at 2 different brokerages. Everything is the same, but broker A's margin is $2000 and broker B's is $500. Yet the leverage of the 2 traders are the same, because margin has nothing to do with it...
 
Somebody could have pointed out that:

Notional value = Point Value x Futures value

Thus the notional value is in the formula, but it moves very little, almost a constant compared to the 2 other factors, account size and number of used contracts...
 
I have seen quite a few times people calculating the leverage using notional value of the index, when it is rather irrelevant to the correct calculation.

Since I won the Nobel prize last year in Math, I feel authorized without further much ado, to reveal the formula, free of charge:

Lev=(Ctr # x Index value x Point value)/Account size

In your formula, the quantity (Index value x Point value) is the notional value of the contract. Your formula for calculating leverage is correct, but you get no Nobel prize.
 
Yes. The margin only tells you what your maximum size can be compared to your account size.

Max. number of contracts = account size / margin

Here is a simple way to see it easily: 2 traders trade at 2 different brokerages. Everything is the same, but broker A's margin is $2000 and broker B's is $500. Yet the leverage of the 2 traders are the same, because margin has nothing to do with it...
No, I mean the actual margin that the exchange actually computes for a given position... Is there anything wrong with using that as a measure of leverage?

Maybe I am just confused abt what you're trying to achieve here...
 
No, I mean the actual margin that the exchange actually computes for a given position... Is there anything wrong with using that as a measure of leverage?

Maybe I am just confused abt what you're trying to achieve here...

The margin tells you the maximum leverage you can take. The actual leverage can be less, depending on your exposure (i.e. the number of open contracts).
 
The margin tells you the maximum leverage you can take. The actual leverage can be less, depending on your exposure (i.e. the number of open contracts).
No, sorry, hold on...

If I have an open position of X contracts, the exchange will compute total margin for this position as some F(X) (as long as we're being all mathematical and stuff). This number is solely a function of the size and nature of the trade or portfolio.
 
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