Methodology
Our initial list of leveraged ETF candidates comes from the ETF.com Inverse ETF channel. There are 102 funds in total on this list, which we winnowed down to 48 names by screening out narrow sector funds and those with negative 3-month returns at the time of compiling.
Next, we eliminated ETFs with expense ratios above 1.00%. With the exception of two funds, the AXS Short Innovation Daily ETF and the ProShares UltraShort Real Estate ETF, we kept the best inverse ETF list to those that tracked broad stock and bond indexes. Due to the expense ratio constraint, most of the best inverse ETFs are from the ProShares fund family.
All of the funds returned 15.00% or greater during the three-month period that ended on October 31, 2023. These inverse funds are designed to be held for no more than one day. The leverage on the funds, spans the 100% to 300% or 1x to 3x inverse returns.
Our final list includes a combination of stock, U.S. Treasury bond, real estate and innovative technology inverse ETFs.
What Are Inverse ETFs?
Inverse ETFs are exchange-traded funds that use derivative contracts to deliver positive returns from a decline in the value of an underlying asset or market index. Inverse ETFs may also be referred to as short ETFs or bear ETFs, thanks to a focus on profiting from negative returns.
Contrarian investors use inverse ETFs to profit from the decline in value of a given index or asset class, such as an index. Professional traders may use them to hedge against declines in their other positions. If one specific position sees losses, the hope would be that owning an inverse ETF that invests the same asset type would help offset the loss.
You should think twice about holding an inverse ETF for longer than one day, as compounding effects may rapidly begin to distort your returns. The funds on the list above are suitable for sophisticated investors who recognize the challenging dynamics of this unusual asset class.