ProShares UltraShort and UltraLong ETFs 5 comments
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Market participants know that the ProShares Short and UltraShort ETFs have become wildly popular. These ETFs allow investors with long-only accounts to easily bet against the market or hedge their bets. The ProShares Ultra ETFs provide either double or double the inverse of the daily returns of the asset classes they track. In the current market environment, the UltraShort ETFs have been huge winners.
For those interested, below we highlight all of the ETFs currently offered by ProShares. We also include the year-to-date performance of each one, along with its current percentage from its 50-day moving average (to measure overbought/oversold levels). As shown, the Ultrashort Financial ETF (SKF) is up a whopping 67% year to date, as financial firms have fallen across the board. SKF is trailed by the Ultrashort Semiconductors (SSG), Ultrashort Russell 1,000 Value (SJF), and Ultrashort Dow30 (DXD) as far as year-to-date performance is concerned.
Because the ETFs attempt to track the daily performance of the underlying indices, the longer-term performances can get out of whack. Not taking dividends into account, the Ultrashort Oil&Gas ETF (DUG) is down 12.45% year to date, but the Ultra (long) Oil&Gas ETF (DIG) is down 7.29%.
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This article has 5 comments:
I think the Proshares ETF are not reliable.
Let's take the example of FXP. They are not double short but only 1.7 short.
The prices are very inconsistent.
For example:
I bought FXP on March 6th at 99. That day, FXI closed 135.66.
On March 24th, FXP was at 106.92 and FXI 128.35 (same as today).
Today FXP closed at 87.98 and FXI closed at 128.66