Collateral — What It Is and How It Secures Loans
Collateral is an asset pledged to secure a loan, reducing lender risk. Learn how collateral works, common types, and what happens if you default on a secured loan.
Definition
Collateral is an asset that a borrower pledges to a lender as security for a loan. If the borrower fails to repay (defaults), the lender has the legal right to seize and sell the collateral to recover the outstanding debt. By reducing the lender's risk, collateral enables borrowers to access larger loans, lower interest rates, or credit they might not otherwise qualify for.
Collateral is the backbone of secured lending — from home mortgages (where the house is collateral) to margin accounts in stock trading (where your portfolio secures borrowed funds).
How It Works
The secured lending process
- Borrower applies for a loan and offers an asset as collateral
- Lender appraises the collateral (determines its market value)
- Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio is set — lenders typically loan 50-90% of collateral value
- Lien is placed — legal claim on the asset is recorded
- Borrower repays — when the loan is fully repaid, the lien is released
- Default scenario — if the borrower defaults, the lender seizes and liquidates the collateral
Common types of collateral
| Collateral Type | Typical Loan | LTV Ratio | Liquidation Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real estate | Mortgage | 70-90% | Months (foreclosure) |
| Securities (stocks, bonds) | Margin loan | 50-70% | Instant (margin call) |
| Vehicles | Auto loan | 80-100% | Weeks |
| Cash deposits | Secured credit card | 100% | Instant |
| Inventory | Business line of credit | 50-70% | Weeks-months |
| Accounts receivable | Invoice factoring | 70-90% | Days |
| Government bonds | Repo agreement | 95-99% | Instant |
Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio
LTV = Loan Amount / Collateral Value x 100%
A mortgage of EUR 240,000 on a property worth EUR 300,000 has an LTV of 80%. The remaining 20% is the borrower's equity and provides a safety cushion for the lender. If property prices fall more than 20%, the lender faces a potential loss.
Haircuts in financial markets
In securities lending and repo markets, the collateral value is reduced by a "haircut" to account for volatility:
| Asset | Typical Haircut |
|---|---|
| US Treasuries | 1-3% |
| Investment-grade corporate bonds | 5-10% |
| Blue-chip equities | 15-25% |
| Small-cap stocks | 25-50% |
| Cryptocurrencies | 40-60% |
A 20% haircut means EUR 100,000 in stocks can secure a loan of only EUR 80,000.
Example
Margin trading — collateral in action:
Investor Sarah has EUR 50,000 in her brokerage account and wants to buy EUR 100,000 worth of a European stock ETF using margin.
- Her collateral: EUR 50,000 in existing securities
- Margin loan: EUR 50,000 from the broker (at 5% annual interest)
- Initial margin requirement: 50% (EUR 50,000 / EUR 100,000)
- Maintenance margin: 30%
Scenario A — stock rises 20%: Portfolio value: EUR 120,000. Loan: EUR 50,000. Equity: EUR 70,000. Equity ratio: 70,000 / 120,000 = 58% — well above maintenance margin. Return on her capital: 40% (2x leverage effect).
Scenario B — stock drops 25%: Portfolio value: EUR 75,000. Loan: EUR 50,000. Equity: EUR 25,000. Equity ratio: 25,000 / 75,000 = 33% — just above maintenance margin.
Scenario C — stock drops 35%: Portfolio value: EUR 65,000. Loan: EUR 50,000. Equity: EUR 15,000. Equity ratio: 15,000 / 65,000 = 23% — below maintenance margin. Margin call: Sarah must deposit additional cash/securities within 24 hours, or the broker automatically sells her holdings to repay the loan.
Mortgage example (Poland): Apartment in Warsaw worth 800,000 PLN. Bank offers mortgage at LTV 80%: loan 640,000 PLN. If property value drops 25% (to 600,000 PLN), the bank's loan exceeds the collateral value — this is called being "underwater."
Why It Matters
Lower borrowing costs
Secured loans carry significantly lower interest rates than unsecured ones. In Poland, a mortgage (secured by property) might charge 7-8%, while a consumer loan (unsecured) charges 12-20%. The collateral reduces the lender's risk, and the savings are passed to the borrower.
Access to leverage
Collateral enables leverage in investing. Without the ability to pledge securities as collateral, margin trading, short selling, and derivatives markets would not exist. These instruments, while risky, are essential for price discovery and liquidity.
Central bank operations
Central banks (ECB, NBP, Fed) lend to commercial banks through repo operations — banks pledge government bonds as collateral in exchange for short-term liquidity. This mechanism is how monetary policy is transmitted to the real economy.
Systemic importance
The 2008 financial crisis was fundamentally a collateral crisis. When US house prices fell, mortgage-backed securities (used as collateral across the financial system) lost value, triggering cascading margin calls and forced liquidations.
Risks and Pitfalls
Collateral value can decline
The asset pledged today may be worth less tomorrow. Real estate, stocks, and bonds all fluctuate. When collateral value drops below the loan balance, the borrower is "underwater" and the lender faces potential losses.
Margin calls and forced liquidation
In financial markets, brokers can liquidate your portfolio without warning if collateral falls below maintenance requirements. This typically happens during market crashes — exactly when selling is most painful and prices are lowest.
Over-collateralization trap
Banks may require collateral worth 150-200% of the loan (over-collateralization). This ties up productive assets. A business owner pledging factory equipment worth EUR 500,000 for a EUR 250,000 loan has effectively frozen EUR 250,000 in value.
Cross-collateralization
Some lenders include clauses where all borrower assets secure all loans. Defaulting on one small loan could trigger seizure of assets securing other loans. Read the fine print.
Rehypothecation risk
When you pledge securities as collateral, the broker may re-use them as collateral for their own borrowing. If the broker fails, your pledged assets may be entangled in their bankruptcy proceedings.
FAQ
What is the difference between secured and unsecured debt?
Secured debt is backed by specific collateral (mortgages, auto loans, margin loans). Unsecured debt relies solely on the borrower's creditworthiness (credit cards, personal loans, most corporate bonds). Secured debt has lower interest rates but higher consequences for default — you lose the pledged asset.
Can I use my investment portfolio as collateral for a personal loan?
Yes — many banks offer securities-backed lines of credit (SBLOCs) or Lombard loans. You pledge your portfolio and borrow 50-70% of its value at rates typically 2-4% above the base rate. The risk: a market downturn triggers a margin call, potentially forcing a sale at the worst time.
What happens to collateral in bankruptcy?
Secured creditors are paid first from the liquidation of pledged collateral. If the collateral value exceeds the debt, the surplus goes to unsecured creditors. If it falls short, the secured creditor becomes an unsecured creditor for the deficiency.
Is cryptocurrency accepted as collateral?
Increasingly, yes. DeFi platforms use crypto as collateral for loans (over-collateralized, typically 150%+ LTV). Some traditional lenders (in Switzerland and Singapore) accept BTC/ETH. However, extreme volatility means haircuts are large (40-60%), and liquidation risk is high.
Related Articles
- Cost Basis — understanding the purchase price of pledged assets
- Options Trading — margin requirements for derivatives
- Treasury Bond — the gold standard of collateral
- See the full financial dictionary for more terms
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