Leverage Expansion

While much attention is given to volatility decay, the same mathematical principles can work in your favor during trending markets. This effect, known as leverage expansion, can lead to returns that exceed the leveraged multiple of the underlying index.

In this guide, we'll explain how leverage expansion works and why it's an important consideration for long-term leveraged ETF investors.

The Basic Principle

Let's look at a simple example with consistent 5% daily gains:

Scenario: Five consecutive +5% days

Underlying Index:

Day 1: $100.00 → $105.00 (+5%)

Day 2: $105.00 → $110.25 (+5%)

Day 3: $110.25 → $115.76 (+5%)

Day 4: $115.76 → $121.55 (+5%)

Day 5: $121.55 → $127.63 (+5%)

Total Return: +27.63%

2x Leveraged ETF:

Day 1: $100.00 → $110.00 (+10%)

Day 2: $110.00 → $121.00 (+10%)

Day 3: $121.00 → $133.10 (+10%)

Day 4: $133.10 → $146.41 (+10%)

Day 5: $146.41 → $161.05 (+10%)

Total Return: +61.05%

Noticed how the leveraged ETF returns more than double the underlying return? That is leverage expansion in action.

Interactive Example

Experiment with different parameters to see how leverage expansion works in trending markets.

Performance Comparison

Day 2Day 6Day 10Day 14Day 18Day 22Day 26Day 30Day 34Day 38Day 42Day 46Day 50Day 54Day 58Day 62Day 66Day 70Day 74Day 78Day 82Day 86Day 90Day 94Day 100-100.0%349900.0%699900.0%1049900.0%1399900.0%
  • 2x Leveraged ETF
  • Underlying Index

Underlying Return

13050.13%($13150.13)

Leveraged Return

1377961.23%($1378061.23)

Key Takeaways

When Expansion Occurs

  • During trending markets
  • When volatility is low
  • Over longer time periods
  • With higher leverage ratios

Important Considerations

  • Works in both bull and bear markets
  • More pronounced with higher leverage
  • Requires consistent trend direction
  • Can exceed the leverage multiple

Next Steps

Now that you understand leverage expansion, you might want to: