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Triple Leverage: A Good Idea?
January 26, 2009
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(Editor's Note: The following is an edited excerpt from January's cover story in The Exchange-Traded Funds Report. For the full story, subscribers can go here.)
In early November 2008, Direxion Funds rolled out the first of its much-anticipated triple-exposure exchange-traded funds. Somewhat surprisingly, the Direxion ETFs as a whole have been an instant hit. The funds launched into a market with direct and established competition, from ProShares ETFs, which has provided leveraged and inverse leveraged ETFs since 2006. But investors have flocked to the Direxion funds. At the end of November, with less than a full month of trading behind them, the eight funds had accumulated a total of more than $510 million in assets, with the largest fund—the Direxion Large Cap Bull 3X Fund (NYSEArca: BGU)—racking up more than $195 million. ETFs are generally considered a success if they break the $100 million mark, and there are hundreds of more-established exchange-traded products out there that have yet to achieve even $25 million in assets. To gather that much in assets in such a short period of time is surprising. What's more interesting than assets, perhaps, are the volumes displayed by the funds. In the early weeks of December, BGU was regularly trading more than 10 million shares a day. Of the remaining seven funds, six were seeing volumes almost uniformly in the millions. To put that in perspective, the original SPDR (NYSEArca: SPY) trades hundreds of millions of shares on a daily basis, but still: A few million shares daily is well beyond respectable for your average, well-established ETF. That's what the heads of Ironwood Asset Management are using the funds for. Partners Gary Stringer and Derek Sinani had pulled back into cash by the end of 2007, well before the market chaos of 2008. After largely exiting the market, "we began looking for opportunities to put smaller amounts of capital at work and trying to leverage the opportunity of a volatile market," said Sinani.
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Looking Beyond VWO And EEM
Broad-based, cap-weighted ETFs were the way to play emerging markets over the past decade. But it’s time for investors to become more strategic and look beyond VWO and EEM.Why Class Matters More Than Ever
Equity indices are based on common shares. But there's little equitable about the way an increasing number of companies treat shareholders.-
ETF Fund Flows: GLD Drops $891 Million
May 23, 2012 4:00 am -
iShares Plans LatAm Bond ETF
May 21, 2012 10:17 am -
First Trust Plans Broad Futures ETF
May 21, 2012 8:54 am -
Barclays To Sell Stake in BlackRock
May 21, 2012 5:15 am -
Direxion Changes Strategy On 5 ETFs
May 17, 2012 2:01 pm
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JP Morgan & ETN Credit Risk
Paul & Ugo discuss the implications of J.P. Morgan's $2 billion loss, the European debt crisis and what it means for ETN investors.
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