Levered ETFs: more weapons of retail slaughter

Leveraged exchange-traded funds were devised in 2006 as a product to allow retail investors to double their exposure to stock indices, then bonds, commodities, currencies and volatility itself.  With dreams of great upside, these products attracted retail capital like bugs to a light.  Bringing in $72 billion in new cash over the past few years, their level of assets has stayed about the same because they tend to burn through money in the long term due to the daily resetting of leverage.  From gullible, weak hands, to insiders as usual… the retail carnage has been brutal.  Read:  SEC may regret the day it allowed leveraged ETFs:

The problem with leveraged ETFs is that the losses from daily rebalancing are not easy to quantify. They’re dependent on volatility: the more volatile the underlying index, the more quickly the ETF will “decay.”

…While retail investors were slow to pick up on the daily rebalancing feature, the quants were not, and what ensued was a giant transfer of wealth from retail investors to professional investors. Professional investors figured out that you could be short leveraged ETFs and actually benefit from the effects of the daily rebalancing.

Here is the key lesson take away, that individuals forget at their peril:

..the whole point of Wall Street is to have a transfer of wealth from the unsophisticated to the sophisticated. There is nothing un-American about that. But this is egregious.

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Danielle’s weekly market update

Danielle was a guest today with Jim Goddard on The Talk Digital Network, talking about recent developments in the world economy and markets.  You can listen to an audio clip of the segment here.

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A first hand report from Toronto’s real estate expo

Last week brought the Canadian Real Estate Wealth Expo – learn how to become a millionaire event in Toronto.

All of the usual ridiculous, reckless characters and ideas that were prevalent at Tech investing conferences in 1999 and 2000, as well as commodity and precious metals shows in 2007-08.  Today we have real estate investment conferences on how to become a millionaire using “other people’s money” aka lots of DEBT!

For an excellent first hand account from one sober attendee.   Read:  I attended the top of the Canadian Housing Market so you didn’t have to:

The booths outside of the presentation hall were just as troublesome.  Plenty of “high double-digit monthly yields”, retire early with real estate, “everyone needs a place to live – buy apartments” type messages.  Almost all of these pitches were second lien lending.  Most offered yields in the 8 to 10% range.  The presentations all suggested that you can borrow money, if you don’t have it, at 4% and then buy these investments at 10% – easy money.

Always the same outrageous hype near market tops, followed by devastation, loss, lawsuits and forced selling near market bottoms.  If only people could learn to do the opposite of what the sales force-led-pack is doing.  Well actually, you can, but it requires self-discipline.

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