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.
You care about your leverage debt ratio, not the leverage : debt ratio of a fund in which you have invested some of your money.
If you sell $5 of the leveraged ETF in your scenario, then you have exactly the same position as the margin investor, just it’s $55 in a 2x leveraged ETF instead of $110 of the equity. You have $5 in your pocket and $55 of debt from the ETF, rather than $0 in your pocket and $50 of debt. Of course, if you liquidated the whole position, you would just end up with $60 either way. If there is any difference, I don’t see it.
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.