One-Day-Only Funds Are Jack Bogle’s Nightmare Brought to Life

The late Jack Bogle — father of the first index fund — famously loathed their exchange-traded offspring, warning that it only incentivize speculative trading among “fruitcakes, nut cases and lunatic fringe.” Fast forward to 2024, and critics warn a new generation of ETFs are designed to do exactly that.

Enter the high-octane arena of leveraged single-stock funds, which use derivatives to amplify returns on an individual company.

Naysayers argue that the funds encourage day trading at the risk of fierce underperformance if held for longer than just a couple days. It takes under three days for the $4.8 billion GraniteShares 2x Long NVDA Daily ETF (ticker NVDL) — the largest single-stock fund — to see its entire portfolio turn over, Bloomberg Intelligence data show.

Advocates say these ETFs are meeting a demand in the investment world among a community of highly engaged retail traders. US-listed single-stock funds now command about $13.4 billion after the first set sail two years ago, according to Bloomberg Intelligence data.

The debate highlights a cultural shift unfolding in the nearly $10 trillion US ETF arena. The structure was born in 1993 as a passive, index-tracking vehicle — a reputation that still endures today, even as record sums of cash are funneled into active managed ETFs. Yet, the reality is that the industry is increasingly pumping out products geared to satisfy the most speculative fantasies of retail and institutional traders alike.

“For people stuck in the 1990’s and the 2000’s, when ETFs were all about tracking an index fund, this stuff bums them out, but it’s an evolution of the technology,” said Eric Balchunas, Bloomberg Intelligence’s senior ETF analyst and the author of The Bogle Effect. “Bogle didn’t like that ETFs tempted you to trade and he didn’t like the mutations and marketing. A leveraged, single-stock ETF has both of those in spades.”

The funds offer amped-up exposure only to a stock’s one-day return, given that the daily rebalance of the options book erodes returns over time. The Europe-listed $11 million GraniteShares 3x Long MicroStrategy Daily ETP (LMI3) is the ultimate example. While MicroStrategy itself is higher by more than 100% this year, LMI3 has dropped nearly 82% — despite offering leveraged long exposure to the stock. That dynamic holds on a one-, three- and six-month basis as well.

leveraged long ETP

Napkin math suggests that traders are following instructions. For example, the $1.5 billion Direxion Daily TSLA Bull 2X Shares fund (TSLL) has an average trading volume of nearly $303 million. Dividing that sum by the fund’s average market capitalization of about $1.1 billion produces a turnover rate of 28.2%, meaning it takes about 3.5 days to completely flip its portfolio. That compares to about 185 days for the $503 billion Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO), which is popular among buy-and-hold investors.