Playing With Fire: How Long Can You Safely Hold A 3X Leveraged ETF?

Sep. 18, 2017 10:37 AM ETGDXJ, GLD, JNUG, SPXL, SPY, UGAZF, UGLDF, UNG, USO, UWT, EDC, ERX, FAS, NUGT, SOXL, TECL, TNA, TQQQ, USLVF, YINN28 Comments
Force Majeure profile picture
Force Majeure
3.03K Followers

Summary

  • 3X ETFs are a great boon for day- and swing-traders due to large day-to-day moves. However, this volatility contributes to the phenomenon of Leverage-Induced Decay which can dramatically curtail gains.
  • Leveraged ETFs that underperform the most are those that trade laterally with frequent spikes and pullbacks and those with a consistently large day-to-day volatility.
  • A equation is derived to predict the magnitude of underperformance for any 3x ETF based on a target threshold as well as a second equation based on duration of hold.

On November 5, 2008--the height of the financial crisis--Direxion introduced the first 3x leveraged ETFs, revolutionizing investing and garnering a fair share of criticism in the process. While ETFs date all the way back to SPY in 1993 followed by 2x and inverse ETFs in 2006, it was the arrival of the triple-leveraged product that truly brought the ETF market to the forefront. These products were the ultimate hot potato. One day, a 3x ETF could rally 20% and then fall by 30% the next day, a feat that few, if any, stocks can replicate. Obviously, such volatility was a day traders' paradise. Additionally, over time, 3x ETFs could boast staggering returns, with the Direxion Daily Junior Gold Minor 3x ETF (JNUG) climbing from $9 to $120--a 1200% return--in just 5 months between January and June 2016.

However, investors who trade these products regularly have likely noticed that, more often than not, gains fall short or that losses are magnified compared to those predicted by the ETF's 1x counterpart, particularly over a period of time. This concept of "leverage-induced decay" is a well-established phenomenon. To take a recent example, the popular US Natural Gas Fund (UNG) rallied 15% between April 2016 and April 2017, but its 3x counterpart, the VelocityShares ETF UGAZ, despite a predicted 45% return, actually fell 12% during the same time, a massive underperformance that can be chalked up to leverage-induced decay. This underperformance is shown below in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Performance of UGAZ versus UNG over the 1-year period between April 2016 and April 2017 showing a significant underperformance, highlighting leverage-induced decay. [Source: YahooFinance Historical Data]

Unfortunately, many investors in pursuit of outsized gains are ignorant of the risks of a buy-and-hold strategy for 3x leveraged ETFs and their portfolio suffers. For every JNUG circa 2016, there are

This article was written by

Force Majeure profile picture
3.03K Followers
My investment focus is on the energy sector, particularly natural gas futures, where I take advantage of my degree in meteorology to analyze supply & demand to predict price movements.

Disclosure: I am/we are short UGAZ. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Recommended For You

Comments (28)

To ensure this doesn’t happen in the future, please enable Javascript and cookies in your browser.
Is this happening to you frequently? Please report it on our feedback forum.
If you have an ad-blocker enabled you may be blocked from proceeding. Please disable your ad-blocker and refresh.