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Common Mistakes

Common Mistake #5: Overleveraging With Margin (Borrowing to Invest)

By
Alexander Harmsen
Alexander Harmsen is the Co-founder and CEO of PortfolioPilot. With a track record of building AI-driven products that have scaled globally, he brings deep expertise in finance, technology, and strategy to create content that is both data-driven and actionable.
Reviewed by
PortfolioPilot Compliance Team
The PortfolioPilot Compliance Team reviews all content for factual accuracy and adherence to SEC marketing rules, ensuring every piece meets the highest standards of transparency and compliance.

Leverage magnifies outcomes. According to FINRA, margin investing can amplify gains - but it also magnifies losses and introduces risks that don't exist in fully funded portfolios. Despite this, many investors view margin as a temporary boost rather than a structural exposure.

This article explains why overleveraging through margin is a common but underestimated mistake, how it changes the rules of investing under stress, and why borrowing to invest often fails for reasons unrelated to market direction.

Key takeaways

  • Margin amplifies losses faster than it amplifies gains.
  • Leverage introduces forced selling risk during volatility.
  • Interest costs quietly raise the performance bar.
  • Margin risk compounds with behavioral pressure, not just price movement.
  • Borrowing to invest changes when decisions are made - not just outcomes.

Why borrowing to invest can feel efficient

On paper, margin investing looks rational. Borrowing allows an investor to increase exposure without committing additional cash. If markets rise, returns appear enhanced. The math feels straightforward.

This logic is reinforced during calm markets. Volatility is low. Account balances rise. Interest costs feel manageable. Leverage appears controlled.

Up to this point, nothing looks reckless.

That's exactly why margin risk is often underestimated.

Here's the constraint most investors don't factor in

Margin doesn't just magnify returns. It removes flexibility.

Unlike fully funded investments, leveraged positions operate under external rules: maintenance requirements, margin calls, and liquidation thresholds. When markets fall, these rules activate regardless of the investor's long-term view.

So what? Losses don't need to be permanent to cause permanent damage.

This is the critical distinction many investors miss: margin introduces timing risk, not just market risk.

This is where leverage quietly breaks long-term plans

Hypothetical example: Imagine an investor using margin during a strong market to boost returns. A sudden downturn pushes account equity below required levels. The broker issues a margin call.

The investor faces a choice:

  • Add cash immediately, or
  • Sell assets - often during the downturn

If cash isn't available, positions are reduced at depressed prices. The investor may agree with the long-term thesis, but the decision is no longer optional.

This is where leverage stops being a strategy and becomes a trigger.

Why interest rates change the equation more than expected

Margin borrowing is not free. Interest accrues continuously, raising the hurdle rate required just to break even.

When borrowing costs approach or exceed mid-single digits, the margin between expected returns and guaranteed costs narrows sharply. Even modest volatility can overwhelm the intended benefit of leverage.

The issue isn't whether markets can outperform borrowing costs. It's that returns are uncertain while interest is not.

This asymmetry makes margin risk far more structural than it first appears.

Borrowing to invest is not a static decision. The cost of leverage changes over time, often in ways that materially alter the risk-reward equation.

[The Federal Funds Effective Rate has increased sharply since 2022, raising the baseline cost of borrowing. Margin rates track this trend with an added spread, increasing the hurdle rate required for leveraged investing. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis]

When borrowing costs rise, the margin for error narrows. Market returns remain uncertain, but interest expenses are guaranteed, making leverage far more fragile during volatile periods.

Why overleveraging persists despite the risks

Margin rarely fails immediately. Early success reinforces confidence. Gains feel earned. Risk feels managed.

But leverage behaves differently under stress. Volatility spikes. Correlations rise. Liquidity tightens. The same structure that boosted returns now accelerates losses.

Behavioral finance research shows that forced decisions under stress lead to worse outcomes than voluntary ones. Margin introduces exactly that dynamic.

The danger isn't optimism. It's fragility.

The one boundary that limits leverage damage

Investors who avoid overleveraging often adopt a clear boundary:

Borrowing should never create forced decisions during volatility.

This doesn't prohibit leverage. It defines its limits.

Supporting considerations - such as stress - testing positions for sharp drawdowns, evaluating borrowing costs relative to expected long-term returns, and maintaining ample liquidity-exist to reinforce this boundary, not eliminate risk entirely.

The goal isn't leverage avoidance. It's survivability.

When leverage is used - and when it becomes excessive

Leverage is not inherently reckless. It is used in professional contexts with strict risk controls, diversified income sources, and predefined exit rules. Problems arise when leverage is:

  • Used opportunistically rather than structurally
  • Paired with limited liquidity
  • Dependent on continued market calm

Overleveraging isn't about borrowing; it's about borrowing without room for error.

Margin Investing, Leverage, and Risk — FAQs

Does margin investing always increase risk?
Margin increases both potential gains and losses, but it also introduces risks—such as forced selling—that don’t exist without leverage.
Why are margin calls so damaging?
Margin calls can force asset sales during downturns, converting temporary losses into permanent ones.
How do interest rates affect margin strategies?
Higher borrowing costs raise the required return just to break even, narrowing the margin for error.
Is margin risk mainly about market direction?
No. Margin risk is heavily influenced by volatility, timing, and liquidity—not just whether prices rise or fall.
Why do investors underestimate leverage risk?
Because leverage often appears safe during calm markets and fails only under stress—when flexibility matters most.
Why can small drawdowns trigger outsized damage in leveraged accounts?
Even modest price declines can breach maintenance requirements, triggering margin calls or forced liquidations.
What is meant by margin introducing “external rules” into investing?
Leveraged accounts are governed by broker-imposed requirements that can override an investor’s personal time horizon or conviction.
Why does overleveraging often go unnoticed early on?
Early gains reinforce confidence, while costs and risks accumulate quietly until volatility exposes the structure.
How does liquidity affect the survivability of margin strategies?
Limited liquidity reduces the ability to meet margin calls, increasing the likelihood of forced selling during downturns.
Why does leverage change when decisions are made, not just outcomes?
Margin can force decisions during stress rather than allowing investors to choose timing based on strategy.

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1: As of November 14, 2025