Bull and Bear ETFs
Definition: Bear ETFs short stocks to achieve their objectives. Bear ETFs show gains when the underlying stocks lose value. Bull ETFs use long positions and show gains when the underlying stocks show gains. More details: Most bull and bear ETFs are leveraged. 2x and 3x leveraged ETFs do not guarantee 200% or 300% returns on their underlying index or asset, although that is the goal. Moreover, the return is expected on the daily return, not the annual one. 3x ETFs use a variety of complex, exotic financial instruments to generate multiplicative returns, both positive and negative. To obtain these returns, these ETFs create long or short equity positions. They invest around 80% of their assets in stocks that will not generate a daily return of 3x of the target index. To achieve this, the rest of the fund’s assets are invested in futures contracts, options on securities, index and futures contracts, equity caps, collars and floors, swap agreements, forward contracts and reverse repurchase agreements.
About the Vikingen
With Vikingen’s signals, you have a good chance of finding the winners and selling in time. There are many securities. With Vikingen’s autopilots or tables, you can sort out the most interesting ETFs, stocks, options, warrants, funds, and so on. Vikingen is one of Sweden’s oldest equity research programs.
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