Trade Bigger.
Without Paying
the Full Amount.

Your Buying Power ₹25,000
MTF Concept

How the money flows

Trader
Your funds — ₹25,000 margin
Provides margin →
Broker
Funds the rest — ₹75,000 loan
Combined buying power →
Trading Power
₹1,00,000 total — buy 4× more stock
Cost — interest paid to the broker
Risk — losses are amplified too
Scroll to explore

One trade.
Two people's money.

Rohan
Rohan has ₹25,000 in his account.
₹25,000
His plan
He wants to buy ₹1,00,000 worth of Infosys.
₹1,00,000
Broker says
"I'll fund ₹75,000."
₹75,000
Result
Rohan now owns a ₹1,00,000 position — and pays interest only on the ₹75,000 he borrowed.
₹1,00,000

Is MTF right for you?

  • You're okay holding the stock for a few days or weeks — MTF is meant for that, not quick same-day trades.
  • You're fine paying daily interest — it adds up every single day, whether the stock goes up or down.
  • You can arrange extra money fast — if the stock falls too much, the broker will ask you to add funds or sell your shares.
  • You've checked with your broker first — not every stock qualifies for MTF, and how much they lend changes stock to stock.

Buying power — drag the slider below

Without MTF · your cash only₹25,000
With MTF · total position size₹1,00,000

Assumes a typical ~25% margin requirement — your own cash funds a quarter, the broker funds the rest.

What would the interest actually cost?

Interest owed ₹862

Illustrative only — actual broker rates, slabs, and compounding vary. This is not investment or tax advice.

How MTF actually works