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.
Ah, you're saying that because a lot of funds sell OTM calls no matter the price, you'd expect the returns to be positive.
I think the explanation is just that there's an even larger group of people who buy OTM calls due to lottery-ticket biases, and this effect wins.
Hmm, maybe. Do you know who does this? Is this retail investors?