Altruists who don't care too much about risk (and young people in general) should plausibly use leveraged investing. What's the best way to get leverage?
- Margin borrowing seems like the default solution. I might try it if there's nothing better.
- Theoretically options could be used, but I'm unsure whether they work in practice.
- Supposedly futures offer massive leverage, but I haven't explored the details, and they seem hard to trade yourself. I'd like something I can just buy and hold for a long time.
- Something else?
Ideally, there should be a fund that you just buy into to get leverage, with someone else handling the details. But leveraged ETFs don't work because they're optimized for day trading and as a result lose money for buy-and-hold investors.
Thanks for elaborating. :)
If you sell $5 of the ETF, it seems like the sold $5 would get rid of half equity and half debt, leaving $5 in your pocket and $115 in the ETF, of which $57.5 is debt.
Various articles seem to suggest a difference in performance characteristics between daily rebalancing vs. buy-and-hold. For example, Figure 3 on p. 10 of this paper.
After that day, the ETF is worth $60. If you sell $5 of it, you hold $55 of 2x exposure and $5 of cash, which is equivalent to what you would have if you had done no trading; on net you are long $110 of stocks and short $50 cash.
I think the mistake in your reasoning is saying that you 'get rid of half equity and half debt'. You actually reduce your equity by 2x, your debt by 1x, and then receive 1x cash also.
Note that the paper you link to says several things that basically echo Paul:
"The above suggests that a leveraged ETF with a positive expected r... (read more)