Leverage It or Leave It? Making Sense of Turbo-Charged ETFs

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Investors can now choose from about $100 billion in ETFs that provide leveraged long or short exposure to a broad range of popular stock indexes and individual companies. These ETFs are designed to deliver a daily return that is a multiple of the daily return of the underlying index or stock on which the ETF is based, less fees, frictions and the cost of leverage. For these leveraged ETFs, 2x and 3x are the most common multiples.

It is well known – and stated in the prospectus and fact sheets – that beyond one day their return, even adjusted for fees and costs, will not be equal to the leverage multiple times the return of the underlying asset. The cause of this difference in longer-term returns is the daily rebalancing trades that the ETF needs to execute to keep its leverage constant through time. In general, the more volatile the underlying asset, the higher the leverage ratio, and the more time that goes by, the bigger the difference will be between the ETF’s return and the “multiplied” return of the underlying asset.

We have written about leveraged ETFs and this phenomenon twice before, featuring the hapless character of George Costanza, here and here. As a reminder of what’s going on, let’s take a look at today’s largest leveraged ETF, the $25 billion Proshares UltraPro QQQ (TQQQ). It aims to deliver 3x the daily return of the Nasdaq 100 index (QQQ). Over the five years to September 30, 2024, the compound return on the underlying Nasdaq 100 index was 21.9%.

If an investor expected to get a return close to 3x that 21.9%, he’d have been pretty disappointed. TQQQ generated a return of only 37.2%, not even two times the return of the underlying asset. Some of this shortfall is due to the cost of leverage and the 0.84% annual fees. But most of the shortfall is due to the daily rebalancing trades that must be executed to keep its leverage at the 3x target – buying the underlying QQQ every day it goes up and selling it every day it goes down.