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    Home»ETFs»Leveraged ETFs Are Not Long-Term Holdings. Here’s Why.
    ETFs

    Leveraged ETFs Are Not Long-Term Holdings. Here’s Why.

    February 18, 2026


    Key Points

    • Even when the market fully recovers from a downturn, a leveraged ETF often doesn’t.

    • The S&P 500 returned to its late-2021 levels by the end of 2023, but the leveraged ProShares Ultra S&P 500 fund was still 11.7% underwater.

    • These ETFs are designed for short-term trading, not long-term investing.

    Imagine you’re at a casino, and someone offers you a deal: every time the roulette wheel lands on black, you win double. Sounds amazing, right? But there’s a catch. Every time the ball lands on red, you lose double too.

    That’s basically a leveraged exchange-traded fund (ETF) in a nutshell.

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    The math problem nobody warns you about

    Leveraged ETFs tend to be volatile assets, and their prices reset daily. This cycle creates a mathematical effect called “volatility decay,” which sounds boring but is actually a silent killer of your returns.

    Here’s a simple example:

    • Day 1: The S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) drops 10%. Your 2x leveraged ETF, perhaps the ProShares Ultra S&P 500 (NYSEMKT: SSO), drops 20%. Ouch, but OK.

    • Day 2: The S&P 500 gains 11.1% (back to even). Your 2x ETF gains 22.2%. Sweet!

    A person chews on their pen while frowning at a computer screen.

    A person chews on their pen while frowning at a computer screen.

    Image source: Getty Images.

    You’d think you’re back to even too, right? Nope. Your 2x ETF is still down about 2.2%. The market recovered; you didn’t. Now multiply that by months and years of normal market zigzags.

    For example, the S&P 500 fell 19.5% in the inflation-stricken year of 2022, while the ProShares Ultra fund dropped 39.3%. The market posted a 46.4% return the following year, landing almost exactly where it was two years earlier. The leveraged fund only saw a 24.3% recovery, leaving a big gap to the prices seen at the end of 2021:

    SPY Chart

    SPY Chart

    SPY data by YCharts

    The good years aren’t good enough

    In a smooth bull run, leveraged ETFs look like genius plays. But markets don’t move in straight lines. They hiccup, correct, panic over tweets, and occasionally have full-blown tantrums. Every uncomfortable wiggle chips away at your leveraged position.

    Leveraged ETFs are designed for day traders and short-term tactical moves. Think hours or days, not years. The fund companies literally tell you this in the fine print. They’re specialized trader tools, not solid long-term investments.

    Boring old index funds may not make you feel like a Wall Street genius, but they also won’t make you cry into your coffee after a choppy quarter.

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    Anders Bylund has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.



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