Two weeks ago we described a simple way to achieve roughly double investing returns on some asset class like an S&P 500 stock basket, or on some commodity like gold or oil, by buying shares in an exchange-traded fund (ETF) whose price moves up or down each day two times as much as the price of the underlying stocks or commodities. For instance, if the S&P 500 stocks go up (or down) by 2% on a given day, the price of the SSO ETF will move up (or down) by 4%. And last week we noted that buying deep in the money call options can also result in an investment which can move up or down by twice the percentage of the underlying stock. These call options side-step the volatility drag implicit in the 2X funds, but require some housekeeping on the investors part to roll them over once or twice a year.
Today we present a third approach for multiplying the return on your investment dollars. This is to buy shares of a fund which holds two different asset classes, in a leveraged form. As an example: if you buy $100 worth of the fund PSLDX, you are buying the equivalent of $100 worth of S&P 500 stocks PLUS about $100 worth of long-dated US Treasury bonds. (PSLDX happens to be an old-fashioned mutual fund, not an ETF, but no matter). It works like this: The fund takes your $100 and buys a bucket of bonds. It then uses those bonds as collateral, and uses futures to get around $100 worth of exposure to the price movements of the S&P 500 stocks. There is not quite a free lunch here, since there is a “carry” cost on the futures, which is about equal to the LIBOR/SOFR short term interest rates (currently ~ 5%).
PSLDX does not promise exactly 100/100 stock/bond exposure, but it comes out pretty close much of the time. A similar product is NTSX which is leveraged x1.5. It gives 90/60 stocks/mixed-term bonds. NTSX has outperformed PLSDX in recent years, since the price of long-term (10-20 year) bonds has been crushed due to the rise in interest rates. RSSB is a recent entry into this space, offering 100/100 exposure to global stocks/laddered Treasuries.
Another reason these leveraged stock/bond products have done relatively poorly in the past two years is that the cost of leverage is actually higher than the bond coupons, due to the inverted yield curve. This problem will go away if the Fed lowers short-term rates back down to near zero, as they were prior to 2022, but lingering inflation makes that prospect unlikely.
That said, if I have $200 to invest and want $100 stock and $100 bond coverage, I can put $100 into one of these 100/100 funds, and still have $100 left to collect interest on or to invest in some other, hopefully higher-yielding venue. So, these stock/bond funds have their place.
Where this so-called asset stacking shines even more is combining stocks or bonds with something like managed futures. Managed futures are an excellent diversifier for equities (see here). Moreover, since managed futures are typically held in both long and short positions, there will be less financing (carry) cost associated with them. When both stocks and bonds cratered in 2022, managed futures went up. Thus, funds like BLNDX (50 global stocks/100 managed futures) and MAFIX (stocks plus managed futures) went up in 2022, and then continued to rise as stocks recovered. Thus, the returns for these two funds have been steadier and higher than plain stocks (SP 500) over the past three years:

Total returns for past three years, for BLNDX (50 stocks/100 managed futures), SP500 stocks, BND broad US bonds, and MAFIX stacked multi-asset.
BLNDX and its sister fund REMIX are readily available at most brokerages (I hold some), while MAFIX may have daunting minimum investment requirements. RSST is a recent 100/100 stock/managed futures ETF that is easily invested in, and seems to be performing well.
Disclaimer: As usual, nothing here should be considered advice to buy or sell any investment.
(missing link on ‘link here’, fwiw)
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