Leveraged and inverse ETFs are meant to provide an opportunity for
investors to profit on the daily movements of the indexes they track,
either by seeking to double the daily return or to duplicate or double
the opposite of the daily return. Traditional ETFs, on the other hand,
simply track stock and bond market indexes in an effort to match their
returns. The difference is in the objective.
Despite the
risky nature of leveraged ETF strategies, some investors have been
lured by strong short-term returns. Unfortunately, these high returns
can turn south quickly. In fact, some leveraged ETFs have lost 50
percent to 90 percent of their value in less than six months’ time
because the volatile nature of their underlying investments leads to
unpredictable returns. A number of brokerage firms, including Fidelity,
Ameriprise Financial, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney and UBS Wealth
Management Americas, have warned investors about the dangers of these
funds, restricted their use or prohibited brokers from soliciting
purchases of them.
“Leveraged and inverse ETFs typically
are designed to achieve their stated performance objective on a daily
basis,” notes the SEC in its release “Leveraged and Inverse ETFs:
Specialized Products With Extra Risks for Buy-and-Hold Investors.”
“Some investors might invest in these ETFs with the expectation that
the ETFs may meet their stated daily performance objectives over the
long term as well. Investors should be aware that performance of these
ETFs over a period longer than one day can differ significantly from
their stated daily performance objectives.”
The ABCs of Leveraged ETFsAlthough
leveraged and inverse ETFs have certain characteristics in common,
they’re also very different. Leveraged ETFs seek to double or triple
the return of a particular index daily. Inverse ETFs essentially bet
that the relevant indexes will fall instead of rise or rise instead of
fall by providing a return that’s exactly opposite or double or triple
the opposite return daily.
Because of compounding and
leverage, these types of ETFs aren’t meant to deliver long-term
returns. This is where individual investors are getting in trouble and
why the SEC and FINRA, an independent organization that regulates the
brokerage industry, issued their warning.
Companies that
sponsor leveraged and inverse ETFs are quite upfront about the funds’
objectives. For example, ProFunds, an ETF sponsor that offers a range
of short and inverse ETFs, describes its lineup of inverse ETFs as
vehicles that “hedge against downturns, or seek profits when markets
decline with the first ETFs designed to go up when indexes go down or
down when indexes go up.” In a similar fashion, the company touts its
Ultra ProShares lineup — leveraged ETFs — as being a way to “get more
exposure for your investment dollars with the first ETFs designed to
double the daily performance of popular market indexes (before fees and
expenses).”
ProShares, as with other companies that sponsor
leveraged and inverse ETFs, warns that “due to the compounding of daily
returns, ProShares returns over periods other than one day will likely
differ in amount and possible direction from the target return for the
same period.” In other words, simple math doesn’t work when it comes to
these instruments; if an index has gone down 20 percent during the past
six months, an inverse ETF won’t go up 40 percent over the same period.
It might have gone up by more or less — and in some cases, much more or
much less — but there’s no way to know in advance because returns are
so unpredictable.
Differences From Regular ETFs
Traditional
ETFs are pretty simple investments. They seek to mirror the returns of
a specific market index at a low cost. ETFs track virtually every nook
and cranny of the market, from broad indexes such as the Standard &
Poor’s 500, which is designed to track the 500 largest publicly traded
companies in America, to regional and sector indexes. ETFs have been
around for more than 15 years, but they didn’t catch on with retail
investors until earlier this decade, when their sponsors touted them as
low-cost alternatives to index mutual funds.
ETFs have
several advantages over traditional mutual funds. Because ETFs buy the
same stocks that are in an index, they don’t need a staff of managers
and analysts to decide what stocks, bonds and other securities to have
in a portfolio. This is also true of index mutual funds. Unlike mutual
funds, which you can buy or sell shares in only at the end of a trading
day (when the value of the fund’s holdings, or net asset value, is
computed), ETFs can be acquired or sold whenever the market’s open
because they trade like stocks. But you have to pay a brokerage
commission to buy or sell ETFs, which you don’t have to do with a
traditional mutual fund.
Both traditional ETF and index
mutual funds track their selected indexes pretty closely. Generally,
they’ll underperform their selected index by their expense ratios,
which is the percentage of investable assets you pay for fund or ETF
management and administrative expenses.
Because they trade
during the day, ETFs will have some tracking error against the index.
This is because investor demand may push the price of an ETF slightly
higher or lower than the actual value of the underlying index. These
differences can persist once the market is closed for the day; the
amount of the differences depends on the ETF and its underlying index.
So
with a traditional ETF, what you see is what you get — performance
fairly close to the underlying index. This definitely isn’t true when
it comes to leveraged or inverse ETFs, which follow their investment
objective daily but don’t promise to — and in fact don’t — on any basis
longer than a day, as the table on this page illustrates.
Another
difference between traditional ETFs and leveraged and inverse ETFs is
cost. Broadly based ETFs carry very low costs, in most cases below 0.25
percent of the assets you hold in the ETF. Traditional ETFs that are
more narrowly focused generally have higher costs, on average about 0.5
percent of the assets you hold in an ETF.
Meanwhile,
inverse and leveraged ETFs carry much higher costs. Pro-Shares Short
and UltraShort ETFs in most cases have an expense ratio of 0.95
percent. The expense ratios or other leveraged and inverse ETF
providers range from 0.70 percent to 0.99 percent.
Suitable for SomeLeveraged
and inverse ETFs are suitable for a very narrow universe of individual
investors — those who trade on a daily basis. If you are a long-term
investor who buys and holds ETFs, mutual funds and other investments,
think very seriously before investing in these volatile instruments.
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