Embracing Market Volatility With Leveraged ETFs

Since Liberation Day, the market has made many moves in both directions. While many investors have focused on hedging volatility, a handful of investors have used this is as opportunity to take advantage of any directional movement — whether up or down — by using leveraged ETFs. In fact, over the past month, some of the most popular ETFs have been leveraged ETFs (particularly those in the already volatile disruptive technology space). While often see as higher risk investments, these ETFs have the potential to enhance portfolio return when used correctly.

Leveraged ETF launches by year

Leveraged ETFs are attractive during market volatility

According to Bloomberg data, 379 out of 4,189 funds (9%) are leveraged funds (including inverse funds). Leveraged ETFs have evolved from simple inverse ETFs on broad equities to targeting specific sector, commodities, and fixed income. And recently, these have evolved even further to play on the volatility of risk assets. Many new launches in the space now target cryptocurrencies and single stocks. Over the past few years, these strategies (both old and new) have continued to attract interest from both traders and retail investors.

Leveraged ETFs typically track the daily price movement of a target investment using derivatives. If that investment is up, leveraged products could provide amplified returns—for example, 2x or 3x that. Certain types of leveraged ETFs—inverse ETFs—can profit off a downward movement (and also amplify it). This becomes an attractive strategy in a volatile market where wild price swings in both directions are common. This means that they are used to express short-term views. These are portfolio enhancers and generally not a part of a core strategy.

These are specific (hypothetical) examples of how traders and investors can use leveraged ETFs:

  • The market is down "today" due to some market news. Tomorrow, you expect prices to bounce back up. You buy a 3x leveraged ETF on the S&P 500.
  • Apple’s earnings report is coming out "tomorrow." You think the market will respond positively to its fiscal year outlook. You buy a 3x ETF to profit on its earnings bump.
  • The semiconductors industry has been down and you expect it to continue to decline tomorrow due to new tariff policies. You buy an inverse ETF to potentially profit off the downward price movement.

Top ETFs by 1M Net Inflows