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  • Why Leveraged ETFs Are Bound to Deteriorate  [View article]
    Widestrides said:
    "But wouldn't ANY volatile stock be subject to the same "decay?" If a biotech stock goes up 10% one day and down 10% the next, it also is not back to even. It has decayed 1%"

    Only if you sold it.

    A stock doesn't decay. The price of the stock is always the price of the stock. Your return is whatever you sell it at minus whatever you bought it for, regardless of any volatility in the price.

    The problem with these ETFs is that they don't hold their positions. Every day they reset. In other words, they are directly exposed to the daily volatility of their underlying assets. That's where the decay happens. The more volatility in day to day price, the worse the decay gets.

    Normal index tracking ETFs don't suffer these issues much since most of them don't rebalance that often. But any ETF, or more to the point, any investment strategy that moves in and out of the market "quickly" will end up suffering from decay if they aren't exceptionally careful. And since these ETFs operate "blindly" (no active management) then they will undoubtedly bleed dry over time, especially in markets like we've been having lately.

    ~X~


    On Jul 13 12:40 PM widestrides wrote:

    > But wouldn't ANY volatile stock be subject to the same "decay?" If
    > a biotech stock goes up 10% one day and down 10% the next, it also
    > is not back to even. It has decayed 1%.
    >
    > So it is the volatility that creates the danger, and true these leveraged
    > ETFs are leveraged by design, but they aren't necessarily volatile.
    > True, they have been this past year, but this has been a volatile
    > year and a "perfect" storm to decay these ETFs. But if they trend
    > your way or if you "rebalance" them yourself, you can take the decay
    > out of them.
    >
    > GL
    Jul 13 14:57 pm |Rating: +2 0 |Link to Comment
  • Market Not Risky Enough for You? Try These Two New Triple-Levered ETFs [View article]
    These and other levered products do not return 300% of the index. They return 300% of the daily percentage increase or decrease. In a volatile market, you better be sure you know the difference, as your returns may not be anything close to what you expect.

    Read the prospectus and then do the math on a couple of scenarios. You're return degrades over time in a volatile market. These are really better to hold in a trending market, unles you're going to day or swing trade.

    ~X~
    Nov 09 20:23 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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