======Leveraged ETFs====== Leveraged [[Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF)]]s (also known as 'geared ETFs') are a wild breed of financial product designed for traders with a taste for high stakes. Imagine a regular ETF that tracks an index like the [[S&P 500]]. Now, strap a rocket to it. A leveraged ETF aims to deliver a multiple—typically 2x or 3x—of the //daily// return of that [[underlying index]]. So, if the S&P 500 goes up 1% on a given day, a 2x leveraged S&P 500 ETF is designed to go up 2%. Sounds great, right? But this rocket works in reverse, too. If the index drops 1%, the ETF is designed to plummet by 2%. These funds use financial [[derivatives]] and [[debt]] to achieve this amplification, making them complex and risky instruments. They are built for short-term speculation, not long-term investment, and understanding the **daily** part of their objective is absolutely critical to avoid financial heartbreak. ===== How Do Leveraged ETFs Work? ===== ==== The Magic (and Misery) of Daily Resetting ==== The secret, and the biggest trap, of a leveraged ETF is its **daily reset** mechanism. The fund's leverage is reset at the end of every single trading day. This means its performance over any period longer than one day is //not// simply the index's return multiplied by the leverage factor. This compounding effect, known as [[beta slippage]] or path dependency, can chew up your returns, especially in a volatile or sideways market. Let's look at a simple, two-day example with a 2x leveraged ETF tracking an index that starts at 100. * **Day 1:** The index rises 10% to 110. Your 2x ETF performs as expected, rising 20% (10% x 2) to 120. So far, so good. * **Day 2:** The index falls back to where it started, dropping 9.09% to 100. The index is flat over two days. But your ETF doesn't just go back to 100. It drops by 18.18% (9.09% x 2) from its 120 high. Your new value is 98.18. The index is back to even, but you've lost nearly 2% of your capital. This decay is why leveraged ETFs are a terrible choice for a long-term, buy-and-hold strategy. ==== The Tools of Amplification ==== To create this daily leverage, fund managers don't just buy more stock. They enter into complex financial contracts. These typically include: * **[[Swap Agreements]]:** Contracts with financial institutions (like investment banks) to exchange cash flows. The ETF manager might agree to pay a small fee in exchange for receiving twice the daily return of a specific index. * **[[Futures Contracts]]:** Agreements to buy or sell an asset at a predetermined price at a specified time in the future, allowing the fund to gain leveraged exposure to market movements. These instruments add layers of complexity and counterparty risk that are absent in a simple, vanilla ETF. ===== The Dangers Lurking Within ===== While the potential for amplified gains is alluring, leveraged ETFs are riddled with dangers for the unwary investor. * **Volatility Decay:** As our example showed, the daily reset erodes value in choppy markets. The more the market swings up and down, the more your investment is likely to decay over time, even if the underlying index ends up higher. * **High Costs:** Managing these complex instruments isn't cheap. Leveraged ETFs typically have a much higher [[expense ratio]] than standard passive ETFs. These fees are a constant drag on performance, further eating into any potential returns. * **Not for the Long Haul:** These are explicitly designed as short-term trading tools, meant to be held for a day or, at most, a few days. The fund's own prospectus will often state this clearly. Using them as a long-term investment is like using a drag racer for your daily commute—it's the wrong tool for the job and will likely end in disaster. ===== A Value Investor's Perspective ===== For followers of [[value investing]], leveraged ETFs represent the polar opposite of a sound investment strategy. The philosophy, as laid down by figures like [[Benjamin Graham]], distinguishes sharply between investment and speculation. Graham famously wrote, //"An investment operation is one which, upon thorough analysis, promises safety of principal and an adequate return. Operations not meeting these requirements are speculative."// Leveraged ETFs fail this test on multiple fronts: * **No Safety of Principal:** Their inherent volatility and decay mechanism put your principal at significant risk. * **No 'Thorough Analysis':** Their performance is tied to short-term market gambles and complex derivatives, not the underlying [[intrinsic value]] of businesses. * **No [[Margin of Safety]]:** They are designed to amplify risk, not minimize it. A value investor seeks to buy wonderful companies at fair prices, patiently holding them for the long term. Leveraged ETFs encourage the opposite: short-term bets on market direction. They are a tool for traders, not investors, and have no place in a portfolio built on the enduring principles of value.