SVOL - Breaking down this 16% Yielding ETF with Eric McArdle from Simplify ETFs

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  • Опубликовано: 17 янв 2025

Комментарии • 174

  • @armchairincomechannel
    @armchairincomechannel 3 месяца назад +23

    Excellent interview! The breakdown of how they prepared for, and navigated through, the VIX spike was very informative. Also good to know about the effect of rate cuts on the TBill income, makes sense.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +5

      Thanks! They has altered the components of this over the last 3 years. It will be interesting to see if they make changes if interest rates continue to come down.

    • @alphaGambit
      @alphaGambit 3 месяца назад

      hasn’t Larry Kim apparently said something different to you (interview ~7months ago) than Eric did regarding RoC/distributions? If I misunderstood I would appreciate some clarification 😊 thanks

  • @RaadYacu
    @RaadYacu 3 месяца назад +14

    This is the reason why I buy this ETF, Eric humbles everyone with his VIX Futures Curve

  • @michaelstephens6775
    @michaelstephens6775 3 месяца назад +4

    I have owned SVOL for about a year maybe more. Good interview. Thanks. I consider it part of my equity income allocation

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      Thanks. Same here. Small portion of my alternatives.

  • @AnesthesiaDan
    @AnesthesiaDan 3 месяца назад +3

    An excellent and informative interview… SVOL is a brilliant product (which I own). Innovative ETFs which firms such as Simplify, NEOS, Alpha Architects, and Calamos have brought to the market provide turnkey accessibility to novel strategies for the retail investor. Bravo!

  • @sdrs95a
    @sdrs95a 3 месяца назад +5

    Great questions! SVOL one of my largest holdings. Manager also had great answers!

  • @ClintonSiegel
    @ClintonSiegel 3 месяца назад +2

    Super helpful. Thank you very much. I am an owner and now have an even greater understanding of the risks, opportunities and mechanics of the fund. The Airplane clip was hilarious.

  • @whipless9668
    @whipless9668 3 месяца назад +2

    I love the movie references: Rex Won Do, Airplane, etc. Good stuff!

  • @michaelhaidee
    @michaelhaidee 3 месяца назад +3

    Owner of SVOL. Great product.

  • @Moguiman
    @Moguiman 3 месяца назад +1

    Great interview. I didn't even notice the event you discussed! Glad it corrected so quickly.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      That is awesome! 😂 And it really is how we should be investing. Looking at our accounts every day usually leads to bad decisions.

    • @finwest
      @finwest 3 месяца назад

      @@wealthadventures Oh my gosh, NO! My best decisions are made when I'm tuned into the markets, which is everyday. Using Aug 5 as an example, the VIX spike was a huge gift; I was able to dump my UVXY that day before it retraced quite rapidly. I also made 15 buy trades from my dividend portfolio's watch-list, capturing some great securities that were on sale. I always tell newbies if you're not passionate about finance and the marketplace, then don't expect it to yield awesome results.

  • @cwilson6880
    @cwilson6880 2 месяца назад +1

    That was a great breakdown, easy to follow and in plain language. Very informative and reinforces my belief in the fund. On top of the fact that now is a pretty good entry point for more accumulation 🤝

  • @g.a.7527
    @g.a.7527 3 месяца назад +6

    I have SVOL as 1.8% of my portfolio currently. I keep it as a fixed $ amount, and the distributions minus what is needed to offset any nav drop are used to buy SCHD.

    • @Mark-Rain
      @Mark-Rain 3 месяца назад

      Take a math class.

  • @peterholmes2089
    @peterholmes2089 3 месяца назад +9

    Thanks for asking him about what would happen if the VIX would stay high for a longer period. Unfortunately, it was not clear to me from his response what the outcome would be for the fund NAV in such a scenario. This is still my biggest concern with this fund.

    • @alphaGambit
      @alphaGambit 3 месяца назад +3

      I think quite clear they cannot "shield" the fund entirely from extended VIX volatility periods (like 2022, it will likely go down...question is how much, as in principle now they are somewhat also a "bond fund"....)

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +3

      It would hit the fund for sure but they should be able to see some gains as the VIX reverts as well. It could be a rocky road! But might offer some interesting entry points.

  • @PALANTIR_3030
    @PALANTIR_3030 3 месяца назад +6

    Great 👍🏻 interview, thank you 😊

  • @ttcc5273
    @ttcc5273 3 месяца назад +8

    Cotango mentioned: ✅
    Backwardation explained: ✅
    Ted Striker reference: ✅

  • @brendanquinn6894
    @brendanquinn6894 3 месяца назад +4

    Good ole Eric. He does a wonderful job doesn't he ? Which episode of Airplane was he in ?

  • @SummitMan165
    @SummitMan165 3 месяца назад +4

    Very good interview ! I liked the explanations around the VIX spike and it made me confident SVOL is a good fund for long term all conditions income. I have a small position too in it, confident to add more on low prices

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      Thanks!

    • @joinjen3854
      @joinjen3854 3 месяца назад

      What is a " low price" to you?

    • @SummitMan165
      @SummitMan165 3 месяца назад

      @@joinjen3854 don’t really know but when it catch a dip, can be good to buy some ?

  • @Steverino70
    @Steverino70 3 месяца назад +5

    great interview!

  • @mrallan8063
    @mrallan8063 3 месяца назад +5

    Nice interview. 😀

  • @chipnorris2504
    @chipnorris2504 3 месяца назад +1

    Great stuff as always Dave.

  • @MrSimonious
    @MrSimonious 3 месяца назад +3

    I own this but am concerned by the drop in NAV and drop in dividend over time. Keep up the good work Dave, youve developed a great channel!

  • @BuceGar
    @BuceGar Месяц назад +1

    ZIVB is bleeding principal, starting from 1/22, which is when it first started paying it's regular dividend, it was a roughly $23.00 a share. Now approximately one year later, the median share price is around $20.00 a share. You still come out ahead based on the dividend, but if you want a long term investment, you don't want one that's hemorrhaging principal at that rate.
    I would pick up ZIVB on a big VIX spike because it is more volatile than SVOL and you would get a better return on it's price drop, but SVOL is a better buy and hold investment.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  Месяц назад

      Yes. I think SVOL is a one you can buy and ignore for the most part.

  • @likeicare300
    @likeicare300 3 месяца назад +1

    Great deeo dive, looking forward to BUCK interview also

  • @mikelalor424
    @mikelalor424 3 месяца назад +7

    I own it and it represents about 9% of my portfolio.

    • @Mark-Rain
      @Mark-Rain 3 месяца назад

      Major dumb.

    • @rickbold9337
      @rickbold9337 21 день назад

      Too bad for you. Sorry to hear that

    • @mikelalor424
      @mikelalor424 21 день назад +1

      Yield offsets risk. It’s fine. York’s curve is back on track. I’m not trading, I’m holding

  • @saustinredsox
    @saustinredsox 3 месяца назад +2

    Hey Dave, LOVE the video and one of my favorite movies of all time! Nice to have Eric on ..... but Shailesh Gupta is the SVOL founder who grew it to 1Billion in a few years. Is he still there? Wondering as the focus and structure of the fund has changed recently. Also, Shalesh came out with this fund when interest rates were VERY low and dividends were higher. Any ideas? Best regards.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      Shailesh is still the portfolio manager for SVOL and some of the other products used in SVOL (like AGGH).

    • @saustinredsox
      @saustinredsox 3 месяца назад

      @wealthadventures Thanks, Dave, it's not what their website says anymore as another name is on the svol page. Either way, it's depressing to have 4 other simplify products added to this fund perform so poorly on Friday when the market was going through the roof. Need to learn from your wisdom and reduce my SVOL position.

  • @canrightc
    @canrightc Месяц назад

    Excellent video excellent interview thank you

    • @canrightc
      @canrightc Месяц назад

      I also have SVOL in my portfolio and I’ve had for over a year. It’s been a fantastic acquisition.

  • @Prachka1
    @Prachka1 28 дней назад +1

    I look at it as a “quick” buck that pays nicely. I actually bought in during this VIX spike and sold it later - about 10% gain relatively quick, so not recall if I held long enough to receive a dividend from svol.. Now that VIX is close to 30, I am back in and have funds on the sidelines waiting to see how low, or how high VIX, this will go. Be nice if svol had a nice active option chain… 😊 curious to see how svol will do with the current market and upcoming “crash/correction”. As looking through historic charts - SVOL hasn’t recovered from pre ‘22 correction - that lasted about 12 months .

  • @davidngai6264
    @davidngai6264 3 месяца назад +2

    Thank you for the timely interview, I was recently introduced to your channel through your interview with Armchair investor and your interviews with the fund managers are invaluable. You asked about taxes but Simplify website contradicts. Starting Sept 2023 under SVOL distribution history on their website most of their distributions are classified as ROC (return of capital), how can any of this be classified as 'ordinary income"? They should clarify their position and make sure their supporting documents align. I see the same distribution classification for BUCK where most of their distributions are classified as ROC, is this is also incorrrect. Tax consequences is an important consideration, can they clarify their stand?

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      Hi. Those posted numbers are not official and I often find them incorrect. It is not just Simplify either. I find these to typically be incorrect versus what finally gets reported at the end of the year. I'm checking my 2023 tax docs... It looks like the majority is ordinary income but there were 2 in late 2023 that I'm still trying to find how they were reported.

    • @davidngai6264
      @davidngai6264 3 месяца назад

      @@wealthadventures Appreciate the reply would be very interested in what more you find. Since you're also looking at BUCK look at the historical distributions it's mostly ROC surprising for a T bill fund. Btw Sept shows its mostly income as of his writing but in my experience they will update later to include ROC.

  • @jimm4260
    @jimm4260 17 дней назад +1

    Now that you can look back on 2024, SVOL hasn't kept pace with the S&P as it has in past years. So in a good market year, it probably won't keep because of the lower volatility, or at least it seemed that way this year? Thoughts...and are you still holding this? Thanks

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  14 дней назад +1

      I still own it. Small position and it is an alternative. I would expect the S&P to outperform in a good market year. I could see SVOL doing well in a sideways market or market this is on a decline. A crash could be a toss up but I would rather be in the S&P.

  • @nancymarie7733
    @nancymarie7733 3 месяца назад +2

    So can we expect a drop in the dividend with each rate decrease from the Fed?

    • @nancymarie7733
      @nancymarie7733 3 месяца назад +1

      @GregF-k7w agreed

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      A large portion of the fund is held in T-bills. When we have interest rate cuts, that will directly impact the income of the fund. Out of the 15-16% distributed, I would guess 3-4% comes from T-bills.

    • @cwilson6880
      @cwilson6880 2 месяца назад +1

      @@wealthadventureseven considering a 1-2% distribution decrease over the next year or two, I’d be more than pleased with a 12%+ yield.

  • @lilong10
    @lilong10 Месяц назад +1

    good questions, I like the review! 👍 However, I still havent heard a clear answer on the extended volatility period. Eric seemed to choose not to face that question and explained something else instead 😢 I think Im going to sell my shares for that reason

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  Месяц назад

      My view is that it could damage the fund but you could also have a period where they were selling higher VOL and the spot was declining giving some of that income back to you.

    • @lilong10
      @lilong10 Месяц назад

      @@wealthadventuresmy concern is permanent loss of capital

    • @lilong10
      @lilong10 Месяц назад

      @@wealthadventuresmy concern is permanent loss of capital

  • @DividendDork
    @DividendDork 3 месяца назад +2

    Great video Dave, and very timely! I’m glad you clarified the tax treatment. I thought I had seen some distributions declared as ROC with SVOL and just assumed it was all that way. My bad. Not thrilled about the dividend cut, it’s the second one in the last 15 months. I’m thinking about selling frankly.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      It still has a nice total return since inception. I think it is best in a tax deferred account because of that tax treatment.

  • @jmcole56
    @jmcole56 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks again Dave! I have owned this for the CONSITANT income of the dividend. It sounds like if interest rates keep dropping as everyone is expecting over the next couple of years, this fund will keep dropping the dividend. Did you have a chance to bring this up with him?

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +3

      I did not ask him that directly. I could see an impact to the overall yield if interest rates continue to fall but I would not expect it to be dramatic.

  • @finwest
    @finwest 3 месяца назад +6

    My confidence in the management of SVOL dropped dramatically after Eric's comments! He said the product is hedged with "calls there for that reason." There was a "catastrophic event," as he stated, with the VIX up 190%, but none of the calls were closed?? The market gave the SVOL hedge a gift! Half of the calls should have been closed that day, and seeing it was a one-time event, the other half closed the next day. This is a rookie trader mistake-to ride your position profitably only to give it all back. We all know the VIX is a mean-reverting index, so of course that spike was short-lived. He also stated the fund is always hedged; well, if not even a portion of the calls were closed this time, it seems doubtful they'll be closed the next time. As a shareholder, can I vote for a change in management??

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +3

      It is mean reverting but I look at the calls as insurance. If the VIX remains elevated, or goes higher for a longer period, and starts to impact the futures curve, they will want those calls in place. It sounds like they were close to monetizing some of them. I have bought puts that have become nicely profitable but I did not execute for a similar reason - The whole "what if" scenario.

    • @finwest
      @finwest 3 месяца назад +3

      @@wealthadventures I completely agree that the calls act as insurance, and it's good to have insurance. However, I'll compare SVOL management's use of that insurance to health insurance: there was a 'catastrophic event' (in Eric's words), but they didn't file a claim? That's what insurance is for. The August 5 spike easily warranted a claim. If not then, with VIX up 190%, is management waiting for 250% or 300%? Looking at past history, it's clear that VIX spikes-though rare-are indeed just spikes, and VIX doesn't stay elevated. I still hold the view that their management plan failed and needs some improvement. Thanks for reading!

    • @MartinD9999
      @MartinD9999 2 месяца назад

      Very interesting points 🤔

  • @jeancarloferreira9770
    @jeancarloferreira9770 3 месяца назад +9

    I dont understand how svol was paying .32 cents before the fed even started raising interest rates. So how come when rates started going up the distributions didnt go up?
    They have only been reducing from .32 to now .28
    And the fed is going to continue reducing rates so svol is going to keep paying less pretty soon here.

    • @TonyCox1351
      @TonyCox1351 3 месяца назад +3

      The fed is going to drop another 1% or maybe 2% at the absolute most, so yes it’s possible that SVOL drops to 14% or 13%. I don’t think that’s such a crazy bad yield.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +1

      It is driven by volatility and interest rates. When the futures curve is flat it is also hard to harvest volatility. It would be interesting to look at the futures curve from 2022 vs 2024.

    • @MartinD9999
      @MartinD9999 3 месяца назад +2

      @jeancarloferreira9770
      Reminds me of gas prices: When turmoil in the Middle East are coming, prices rise.
      When turmoil is no longer an issue, gas prices remain high until “they make their way down to the consumer” 🤨

  • @gmv0553
    @gmv0553 3 месяца назад +6

    As a long term SVOL investor I am disappointed with their distribution cut! That has been the second one since I invested in the fund. I will evaluate it and possibly move my money elsewhere.

    • @alphaGambit
      @alphaGambit 3 месяца назад +3

      there is no complete free lunch in investing. SVOL does not manage to generate all the income from trading VIX futures with only the 25% VIX exposure they claim. That is also part of the reason it manages to keep the price relatively stable (avoiding major NAV erosion during VIX spikes like other funds). To complement the income they count also on bond-related assets (as large part of their holdings show). It is quite clear as rates will go down, the bond-related income will also have to go down, which means SVOL distrbution will likely go down still more. In the end it is a trade off about the volatility of the principal and the level of the distribution, even in "good" times when the market in general goes up....

    • @Nicogambino2
      @Nicogambino2 3 месяца назад

      ​@@alphaGambitNVDY and cony is free lunch .already got my ROI back

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +1

      With the cut it still sits around 15%. Pretty darn good.

  • @TheComedyChannel-oo5lk
    @TheComedyChannel-oo5lk 3 месяца назад +2

    It scares me, the thought of how much SVOL will drop if there is a market crash, which sooner or later will happen. It dropped by 10% in august, while the S&P dropped by 5%. If the S&P drops by 30% (which is very possible) will SVOL drop by 60%? If so, it will wipe out all the dividends of the last 5 years!

    • @TonyCox1351
      @TonyCox1351 3 месяца назад +3

      SVOL did not drop in August. On Aug 1 it was at 21.97 and on Aug 30 it was at 22.41 so it actually went up in August, unless you panic sold in the middle of the month.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +3

      A market crash will hurt the fund but performance is driven by the VIX. As they roll the futures they can also get the benefit of the VIX being elevated. It could play out in many ways with this fund. For example, I could see a SPX correction where SPX does not recover but as the VIX declines you get recovery within SVOL. Just my opinion!

    • @RAri-rc3to
      @RAri-rc3to 3 месяца назад +1

      @TonyCox1351 It did go down to $19.41. If you were asleep you probably didn’t catch that. It did recover mostly by the end of the month. But what if you had a stop loss in place?

    • @joinjen3854
      @joinjen3854 3 месяца назад

      ​@@RAri-rc3tothen you sold and could buy back in.

  • @alphaGambit
    @alphaGambit 3 месяца назад +2

    regarding distributions/taxes: it has NOT been true that most distributions are ordinary income, the table shown was for 2023, but for the past year a large chunk of distributions has been RoC…. and the statement that most VIX trading income fall under ordinary income is weird to me (if that’s the case, does that mean most recently returned RoC is an actual return of principal, therefore destructive to NAV?) other funds state there are accounting advantages on classifying future trading income as RoC and that is their explanation why high levels of RoC exist…. so someone is lying to us investors… which one is it??

    • @RAri-rc3to
      @RAri-rc3to 3 месяца назад

      You haven’t received your 1099 form for this year. You need to wait for the form before accusing people of lying.

    • @alphaGambit
      @alphaGambit 3 месяца назад

      @@RAri-rc3to sensitive you are..... it was not a particular accusation to a particular person. But the investment fund community must clarify once and for all issues related to the reporting of RoC... it just damages the industry credibility the way everyone says something different about it....

    • @RAri-rc3to
      @RAri-rc3to 3 месяца назад

      In my experience you only know until you receive year end forms. And even then you might get an amended form afterward.

    • @alphaGambit
      @alphaGambit 3 месяца назад

      ​@@RAri-rc3to only thing I will try to say is, recently Larry Kim (also from Simplify) gave an interview at another channel about RoC classification in SVOL which seems to contradict what Eric says here...

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      I owned SVOL in 2023 for the last 1/2 of the year. Fidelity has the majority of the distributions labeled as ordinary non-qualified dividends (84%) and I'm still digging for the classification of the other 16%. I would assume ROC but still looking... I often find the 19A-1 notifications to be inaccurate for most funds so you really need to check tax statements after the year closes.

  • @tritosac
    @tritosac 3 месяца назад +2

    The breakdown in the video & good management of Simplify is giving me more confidence to increase my position in SVOL. But I am curious about another ETF. This may be a bit off topic but I recently stumbled upon OVL. It tracks the S&P 500 & has very small difference in price return from VOO or SPY but offers more than double the roughly 1.30% yield with a yield of 2.86%. The strategy OVL uses is buying & selling put options to generate additional income. It's total return outperforms the S&P by 9%. Do you have any thoughts on this one? Thanks for your great videos.

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +1

      Thanks! I will check out OVL. New one for me!

  • @striperkid
    @striperkid 3 месяца назад +1

    I have a small position in my portfolio, definitely not enough to make a big impact either way.

  • @harsharao3555
    @harsharao3555 3 месяца назад

    What will happen TO SVOL when market tanks?

    • @gmv0553
      @gmv0553 3 месяца назад +3

      Look at their results for 2022. It was a bear market.

    • @guidogonsman3423
      @guidogonsman3423 3 месяца назад

      @@gmv0553 But they have changed their portfolio. For example they have now a VIX 50 Call, 2022 it was a VIX 60 Call

    • @TonyCox1351
      @TonyCox1351 3 месяца назад +3

      Literally this interview you just listened to is attempting answering that question

    • @MartinD9999
      @MartinD9999 3 месяца назад

      @harsharao3555
      Did you watch the video?

  • @huiliu888
    @huiliu888 3 месяца назад

    It seems to me that SVOL is the opposite of UVXY.

    • @finwest
      @finwest 3 месяца назад +1

      That VIX spike was a gift! I dumped all my UVXY that day. $$$

  • @JohnDAlmonte
    @JohnDAlmonte 3 месяца назад +2

    I’m holding onto SVOL for now, but if there’s another drop in the distribution next year, I’m just gonna assume it’s a pattern, and I’m out. I’d really like to see it go back to .30 cents or even .32. I was planning to keep SVOL as a core holding for life, but not if it lowers it’s distribution by 6.5%-ish every year.

    • @DividendDork
      @DividendDork 3 месяца назад +2

      Excellent points. SVOL has now cut the dividend twice in 15 mos. Seeking Alpha has them at -5.81 CAGR in the dividends year over year. And I’m not convinced that the .66 raise in the Expense Ratio is a nonissue. I’m strongly considering divesting my 1,700 shares this week.

  • @rich8304
    @rich8304 3 месяца назад +1

    So why does the div keep going down. 32 to 28 cents ?

  • @dangcjr
    @dangcjr 3 месяца назад +1

    Hi Dave, I Like the video, but there is one issue that I wish you would have asked about. In 2022, SVOL fell roughly 20% from the 2021 high, but it never recovered, in fact it pretty much has been flat ever since. This certainly is concerning as it indicates that during every bear market SVOL will go down and not recover therefore simply draw down overtime.

    • @Wazupu
      @Wazupu 3 месяца назад +1

      I was under the impression they have since adjusted the strategy?

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +2

      I think it is important with any product to look at total return. SVOL is up about 36% over the last 3 years which includes that period back in 2021/2022.

    • @dangcjr
      @dangcjr 3 месяца назад

      I agree that total return is important and of course I look at that but I think any income based investment I look at other factors as well. Like price drawdown and return drawdown as the price and distributions have declined without recovery with the rest of the market. While of course most traditional covered call etfs will take on 100% of the downside of the underlying asset, it will recover with the market. Yes that recovery is much slower as the upside is capped but still goes up. I guess I would as a current SVOL owner would like to hear from the fund manager if we can expect the same behavior in future market declines or as rubyoro0 suggests have they learned from that and adjusted for it to minimize that in the future.

  • @davidrogers5343
    @davidrogers5343 Месяц назад +1

    Bonds go down in the middle of month😅

  • @torchy187
    @torchy187 3 месяца назад +2

    It’s hard to find an index not destroying SVOL in 2024

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      It is still performing well but hard to keep up in a bull market with some indexes.

  • @rickbold9337
    @rickbold9337 21 день назад +1

    SVOL is proving to be very volatile in a downward market. Not liking how it has preformed

  • @fallenangel2123
    @fallenangel2123 3 месяца назад +1

    ZIVB is much better

    • @TheComedyChannel-oo5lk
      @TheComedyChannel-oo5lk 3 месяца назад +1

      ZIVB is much more volatile. It's down almost 20% over the last 2 months! I would rather have SVOL. I sleep better at night.

    • @fallenangel2123
      @fallenangel2123 3 месяца назад

      @@TheComedyChannel-oo5lk
      When you wake up SVOL would be still doing nothing but ZIVB will be making new highs. Mark my words

    • @TonyCox1351
      @TonyCox1351 3 месяца назад

      @@TheComedyChannel-oo5lkagreed, I’d much prefer steady returns. If I want volatility I’ll take MSTY or something

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад +2

      I prefer SVOL.

    • @ivantsanov3650
      @ivantsanov3650 3 месяца назад

      ​@wealthadventures
      The risk/reward ratios are the same. The more popular svol gets, the more 'crowded' this particular segment of the futures curve will get and more difficult for them to sell futures - potential risk to run out of buyers (liquidity problem). VIXM and VXZ are buyers of the futures ZIVB is selling (ZIVB doesn't have this problem) .

  • @ivantsanov3650
    @ivantsanov3650 3 месяца назад +1

    You leaked his ass

  • @Asstronauts93
    @Asstronauts93 3 месяца назад

    that's the least irish pronunciation of that name that i've ever heard

  • @JGerman68
    @JGerman68 3 месяца назад +2

    12.3% NAV erosion since it's inception.

  • @multimedialearning44
    @multimedialearning44 3 месяца назад +1

    Lame explanation for large fees

  • @Mark-Rain
    @Mark-Rain 3 месяца назад +2

    SVOL is one sorry ass ETF these last 2 weeks. QQQ up 17%YTD. SVOL down 4%, FAIL....contango!

    • @wealthadventures
      @wealthadventures  3 месяца назад

      The VIX has climbed a bit the last few weeks. That will have an impact.

    • @Mark-Rain
      @Mark-Rain 3 месяца назад +1

      @@wealthadventures The other reason failure is the dividend was cut, cause the fund invests in short term treasures.