Smart leverage? Rethinking the role of Leveraged Exchange Traded Funds in constructing portfolios to beat a benchmark
Pieter van Staden, Peter Forsyth, Yuying Li

TL;DR
This paper explores how including leveraged ETFs in dynamic investment strategies can enhance long-term portfolio performance and outperform benchmarks, challenging common criticisms of LETFs.
Contribution
It introduces IR-optimal strategies incorporating LETFs, using both analytical and neural network methods, demonstrating their potential for superior performance.
Findings
LETF-based strategies outperform VETF-based ones in simulations
LETF strategies achieve partial stochastic dominance over benchmarks
Inclusion of LETFs enhances downside protection and leverage efficiency
Abstract
Leveraged Exchange Traded Funds (LETFs), while extremely controversial in the literature, remain stubbornly popular with both institutional and retail investors in practice. While the criticisms of LETFs are certainly valid, we argue that their potential has been underestimated in the literature due to the use of very simple investment strategies involving LETFs. In this paper, we systematically investigate the potential of including a broad stock market index LETF in long-term, dynamically-optimal investment strategies designed to maximize the outperformance over standard investment benchmarks in the sense of the information ratio (IR). Our results exploit the observation that positions in a LETF deliver call-like payoffs, so that the addition of a LETF to a portfolio can be a convenient way to add inexpensive leverage while providing downside protection. Under stylized assumptions, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrivate Equity and Venture Capital
