2X and 3X ETFs Are Not the Best Long-Term Hedges [View article]
You can look at SH and SDS. SH is the inverse S&P 500; SDS is the double-down S&P. Year to date the SH is up 39.21%. Now one might expect the SDS to be up 78%, right? Nope--YTD, SDS is up 61%. I noticed this last year--I use a lot of inverse ETF's in my portfolio management, and noticed that the levered emerging market was actually underperforming the LONG ETF, even though the long ETF was down over 40% at the time. That's when I wised up and saw them for what they were--very good trading and hedging vehicles for the short-term, but terrible for a long-term holding.
On Mar 08 09:40 PM Douglas wrote:
> Can you give an example of an ETF where this value destruction occurs? > I've tracked multiple indexes versus both ultra and ultrshorts and > while yes, they do not track exactly on par with the index, the share > price value increases over a long holding period? What am I missing? > > Thanks
Taking Advantage of Leveraged ETFs with a Risky Arbitrage Strategy [View article]
2X and 3X ETFs Are Not the Best Long-Term Hedges [View article]
I noticed this last year--I use a lot of inverse ETF's in my portfolio management, and noticed that the levered emerging market was actually underperforming the LONG ETF, even though the long ETF was down over 40% at the time. That's when I wised up and saw them for what they were--very good trading and hedging vehicles for the short-term, but terrible for a long-term holding.
On Mar 08 09:40 PM Douglas wrote:
> Can you give an example of an ETF where this value destruction occurs?
> I've tracked multiple indexes versus both ultra and ultrshorts and
> while yes, they do not track exactly on par with the index, the share
> price value increases over a long holding period? What am I missing?
>
> Thanks