Statement of Financial Condition slide image

Statement of Financial Condition

UBS Securities LLC Notes to the Statement of Financial Condition (continued) (In Thousands) 2. Significant Accounting Policies (continued) Receivables and Payables - Customers (continued) In the event a customer or broker fails to satisfy its obligations, the Company may be required to purchase or sell financial instruments at prevailing market prices in order to fulfill the customer's or broker's obligations. The Company seeks to control the risk associated with these activities by requiring customers or brokers to maintain margin collateral in compliance with various regulatory and internal guidelines. The Company monitors required margin levels daily and, pursuant to such guidelines, requires customers or brokers to deposit additional collateral or reduce positions, when necessary. Financial Instruments Owned and Securities Sold, not yet Purchased, at Fair Value Financial instruments owned and securities sold, not yet purchased are stated at fair value and recorded on a trade date basis. Fair value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. Derivative contracts are financial instruments, such as forwards or option contracts that derive their value from underlying assets, indices, reference rates, or a combination of these factors. See Note 6 for further information regarding Financial instruments owned and Financial instruments sold, not yet purchased, at fair value. Financial Assets and Liabilities Designated at Fair Value Brokerage receivables and payables are assets and liabilities which represent callable, on demand balances, including long cash credits, short cash debits, margin debit balances and short sale proceeds, whereby the fair value is determined based on the balance due. See Note 6 for further information. Derivatives Derivatives are financial instruments whose value is based upon an underlying asset, index or reference rate. A derivative contract may be traded as a standardized contract on an exchange or an individually negotiated contract in an over-the-counter market. The Company's derivative transactions are primarily in the form of options, futures, and forwards. The Company enters into transactions in options, futures, and forward contracts with off-balance sheet risk in order to meet the financing and hedging needs of its customers, to reduce its own exposure to market and interest rate risk and in connection with its normal proprietary trading activities. Options are included in securities owned, at fair value and securities sold, not yet purchased, at fair value on the statement of financial condition. 6
View entire presentation