[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 12, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 12CFR220.128]

[Page 31-33]
 
                       TITLE 12--BANKS AND BANKING
 
                   CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
 
PART 220_CREDIT BY BROKERS AND DEALERS (REGULATION T)--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 220.128  Treatment of simultaneous long and short positions in 

the same margin account when put or call options or combinations 
thereof on such stock are 
          also outstanding in the account.

    (a) The Board was recently asked whether under Regulation T, 
``Credit by Brokers and Dealers'' (12 CFR part

[[Page 32]]

220), if there are simultaneous long and short positions in the same 
security in the same margin account (often referred to as a short sale 
``against the box''), such positions may be used to supply the place of 
the deposit of margin ordinarily required in connection with the 
guarantee by a creditor of a put or call option or combination thereof 
on such stock.
    (b) The applicable provisions of regulation T are Sec. 220.3(d)(3) 
and (5) and Sec. 220.3(g)(4) and (5) which provide as follows:

    (d) * * * the adjusted debit balance of a general account * * * 
shall be calculated by taking the sum of the following items:

                                * * * * *

    (3) The current market value of any securities (other than unissued 
securities) sold short in the general account plus, for each security 
(other than an exempted security), such amount as the board shall 
prescribe from time to time in Sec. 220.8(d) (the supplement to 
regulation T) as the margin required for such short sales, except that 
such amount so prescribed in such Sec. 220.8(d) need not be included 
when there are held in the general account * * * the same securities or 
securities exchangeable or convertible within 90 calendar days, without 
restriction other than the payment of money, into such securities sold 
short;

                                * * * * *

    (5) The amount of any margin customarily required by the creditor in 
connection with his endorsement or guarantee of any put, call, or other 
option;

                                * * * * *

    (g) * * * (4) Any transaction which serves to meet the requirements 
of paragraph (e) of this section or otherwise serves to permit any 
offsetting transaction in an account shall, to that extent, be 
unavailable to permit any other transaction in such account.
    (5) For the purposes of this part (regulation T), if a security has 
maximum loan value under paragraph (c)(1) of this section in a general 
account, or under Sec. 220.4(j) in a special convertible debt security 
account, a sale of the same security (even though not the same 
certificate) in such account shall be deemed to be a long sale and shall 
not be deemed to be or treated as a short sale.

    (c) Rule 431 of the New York Stock Exchange requires that a creditor 
obtain a minimum deposit of 25 percent of the current market value of 
the optioned stock in connection with his issuance or guarantee of a 
put, and at least 30 percent in the case of a call (and that such 
position be ``marked to the market''), but permits a short position in 
the stock to serve in lieu of the required deposit in the case of a put 
and a long position to serve in the case of a call. Thus, where the 
appropriate position is held in an account, that position may serve as 
the margin required by Sec. 220.3(d)(5).
    (d) In a short sale ``against the box,'' however, the customer is 
both long and short the same security. He may have established either 
position, properly margined, prior to taking the other, or he may have 
deposited fully paid securities in his margin account on the same day he 
makes a short sale of such securities. In either case, he will have 
directed his broker to borrow securities elsewhere in order to make 
delivery on the short sale rather than using his long position for this 
purpose (see also 17 CFR 240.3b-3).
    (e) Generally speaking, a customer makes a short sale ``against the 
box'' for tax reasons. Regulation T, however, provides in Sec. 220.3(g) 
that the two positions must be ``netted out'' for the purposes of the 
calculations required by the regulation. Thus, the board concludes that 
neither position would be available to serve as the deposit of margin 
required in connection with the endorsement by the creditor of an 
option.
    (f) A similar conclusion obtains under Sec. 220.3(d)(3). That 
section provides, in essence, that the margin otherwise required in 
connection with a short sale need not be included in the account if the 
customer has in the account a long position in the same security. In 
Sec. 220.3(g) (4), however, it is provided that ``[A]ny transaction 
which * * * serves to permit any offsetting transaction in an account 
shall, to that extent, be unavailable to permit any other transaction in 
such account.'' Thus, if a customer has, for example, a long position in 
a security and that long position has been used to supply the margin 
required in connection with

[[Page 33]]

a short sale of the same security, then the long position is unavailable 
to serve as the margin required in connection with the creditor's 
endorsement of a call option on such security.
    (g) A situation was also described in which a customer has purported 
to establish simultaneous offsetting long and short positions by 
executing a ``cross'' or wash sale of the security on the same day. In 
this situation, no change in the beneficial ownership of stock has taken 
place. Since there is no actual ``contra'' party to either transaction, 
and no stock has been borrowed or delivered to accomplish the short 
sale, such fictitious positions would have no value for purposes of the 
Board's margin regulations. Indeed, the adoption of such a scheme in 
connection with an overall strategy involving the issuance, endorsement, 
or guarantee of put or call options or combinations thereof appears to 
be manipulative and may have been employed for the purpose of 
circumventing the requirements of the regulations.

[38 FR 12098, May 9, 1973]