Are single stock ETFs a good idea?

They’ve only been on Wall Street since July, but a debate is raging over single stock exchange-traded funds. 

The product offers inverse positions on single securities to traders, despite the worry of SEC Commissioner Caroline Crenshaw.

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“While I have expressed concern about leveraged and inverse ETFs before, I worry that these single-stock ETFs pose yet another, perhaps greater, risk for investors and the markets” due to the increased stock exposure and daily rebalance,” she said in a July 11, SEC statement.

“In other words, investors’ returns over a longer period of time might be significantly lower than they would expect based on the performance of the underlying stock,” she added. 

As inflationary pressures push the U.S. Federal Reserve into another year of interest rate hikes and the major Wall Street benchmarks struggle to reverse their downward positions, single stock ETFs can provide day traders with complex exposure to one stock rather than to a diverse portfolio.

In an interview with FOX Business, John Duffy, CEO of Trending Stocks, said despite unique views of single shares, “Single stock ETFs are a bigger gamble method for speculators.”

“The good news is you are in and out, so long-term losses don’t come into play, and you will have your money, either a loss or gain within 24 hours,” he added. “Also, with a single stock ETF for a company like Apple, you can only participate in a fraction of the stock’s cost, reducing total spend and investment.”

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“Market history is filled with innovators seeking an edge or a way to attract the gambler and speculator, and the single stock ETF is there to attract the speculator,” he finished.

Dave Mazza, Direxion’s managing director and head of product, told FOX Business single stock ETFs magnify tactical views on single stocks with daily 1.5X leverage and 1X inverse exposure, while offering bullish and bearish positions on five of the world’s largest and most liquid individual stocks. 

“Single-stock ETFs can be used to address the diverse needs of traders seeking a long or short position in a particular stock, while inverse single stock ETFs can be used to express a bearish view on stocks,” he said. “In other words, traders can go long to go short.”

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However, “Leveraged ETFs seek daily investment results and should be considered primarily for short-term trading purposes,” he cautioned. 

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