Quote from increasenow:
MB...what do you mean by "double-short"...in relation to the fact that SPY or QQQQ would not be "double long"...what am I not understanding?..thanks!
If MB wouldn't mind me chiming in, the SDS, QID, and DXD are another way of leveraging a short position by being long an ETF. Its a way of getting around IRA "long-only" rules. SDS = S&P, QID = NASDAQ, DXD = DOW... If the S&P goes down 1% for the day, your SDS position goes up 2%. You could compare it to the SSO (SPY X2) except it moves inversely.
What I've always wondered with these inverse ETF's is what happens when if over time the underlying security goes up in value by a large amount. IE extreme example - If the spy doubles, does the SSO go to zero? After that, then what? Seems like the relationship is even more screwed up for the ultra-shorts.

