Quote from ptrjon:
SPX ignores dividends.
SPY, if you're long you get paid dividends.
SPY, if you're short, you pay margin interest and pay dividends.
If you look at a price chart, SPY has been just about spot on for that time- I don't know what tests you're doing.
So to get away from paying the dividends if your shorting SPY, you should instead go long the inverse etf such as SDS.
My question is:
How do the inverse S&P 500 ETF's get away with not paying dividends. I noticed that some inverse etf's such as SDS, actually paid out dividends in 2008. How is this possible, if the ETF's are supposedly shorting the stock.
Can anyone explain this to me?