PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Ilan Guedj AU - Guohua Li AU - Craig McCann TI - Leveraged and Inverse ETFs, Holding Periods, and<br/>Investment Shortfalls AID - 10.3905/jii.2010.1.3.045 DP - 2010 Nov 30 TA - The Journal of Index Investing PG - 45--57 VI - 1 IP - 3 4099 - https://pm-research.com/content/1/3/45.short 4100 - https://pm-research.com/content/1/3/45.full AB - Leveraged and Inverse ETFs replicate the leveraged or the inverse of the daily returns of an index. Several studies have established that investors who hold these investments for periods longer than a day expose themselves to substantial risk as the holding period returns will deviate from the returns to a leveraged or inverse investment in the index. It is possible for an investor in a leveraged ETF to experience negative returns even when the underlying index has positive returns. In this article, the authors estimate distributions of holding periods for investors in leveraged and inverse ETFs.Using standard models, they show that a substantial percentage of investors may hold these shortterm investments for periods longer than one or two days or even longer than a quarter.They estimate the investment shortfall incurred by investing in leveraged and inverse ETFs compared to investing in a simple margin account to generate the same leveraged or short-selling investment strategy. The authors find that investors in leveraged and inverse ETFs can lose 3% of their investment in less than 3 weeks, an annualized cost of 50%. They also discuss the viability of leveraged and inverse leveraged ETFs that rebalance less often than daily and calculate their costs to investors.TOPICS: Exchange-traded funds and applications, portfolio construction, risk management