Actually Hawkins that might not be true. They reset daily.
Your link is broken.
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/121515/why-3…
I agree with much of the article but it is unnecessarily fear mongering on some points, to wit:
Triple-leveraged (3x) exchange traded funds (ETFs) come with considerable risk and are not appropriate for long-term investing.
Says who? I think bitcoin and gold are terrible investments but there a lot of people that have made a lot of money on such investments. You won’t find me speculating in such but I don’t fear “betting” on a an index of companies that make stuff increasing in value over time.
Since they maintain a fixed level of leverage, 3x ETFs eventually face complete collapse if the underlying index declines more than 33% on a single day.
Has the S&P 500 or the NASDAQ EVER lost that much on a single day (the answer is no)? Should I really be so afraid of such a situation that I entirely avoid an investment opportunity?
Even if none of these potential disasters occur, 3x ETFs have high fees that add up to significant losses in the long run
While they do indeed have fees, that does not necessarily mean that it will be losses, much less significant losses, in the long run. They make that claim under a false assumption that the index never goes up. Again, I am sitting on gains, net of fees, far in excess of the NASDAQ. I’ve been in and out of QLD for at least a decade (all my QLD posts):
https://www.fool.com/search/solr.aspx?q=hawkwin+qld&sort…
And my first QLD post:
https://discussion.fool.com/options-market-making-a-prediction-3…
I occasionally sell some covered calls on my various positions. One positions, QLD (2x the NASDAQ), is one of my favorites.
This morning, it is trading around 58.49. The July 66 is selling for $126.
That means that if I sell a call, QLD would have to sell for 66 or over between now and expiration for me to not to have my option expire out of the money. It would have to sell for over 67.26 for me to actually not maximize return over the same period.
What that says to me is that the professional traders are making a decent bet that QLD will go up by about 15% in just a little over four months - which means they think the NASDAQ will go up just under half as much over the same time period. That seems to be a bit surprising to me - and a good call to sell. If the professional traders are right, I lock in at least a 15% gain in a little over four months plus the $126.
If I am right and the traders are wrong, I still yield 2% from the call over the same period.
Are the professional traders suggesting a strong and atypical summer? I am by no means an option expert - which is why I only dabble in covered calls and not the more exotic option strategies - but somebody is spending a lot of money at prices both below and above 66 buying up these calls so somebody with a lot more money than I seems to think so.
As much as I like being right, I am actually hopeful that the professional traders are more right than I am on this one.
BTW, QLD was up 21% from 3/6/13 to 7/23/13. My call was exercised. I only made 17% instead of 21. shrug
Anyway, back to the original link.
I really like this next one:
Volatility in a leveraged fund can quickly lead to losses for an investor. Those looking for real-world examples of this phenomenon need look no further than the performance of the S&P 500 and associated 3x ETFs during the first half of 2020.
OK… So… what happened during the last half of 2020? Oh ya, that is right, 3x etfs crushed the market. TQQQ was up 109% in 2020. Made me wish I had owned it instead of my measly 2x etf.
I don’t want volatile stocks; actually, I don’t any MORE volatile stocks. I have enough of those. With leveraged ETFs, I want to bet that the market is going to go up in the future (generally a safe “long term” bet) and I am willing to pay a fee to get 2x or 3x of what an established index fund would do when I think the future looks bright. When it doesn’t, I get out and move back into non-leveraged indexes, until things again change.
Hawkwin
Long term (whatever that means) investor in leveraged etfs.