You're right, I engaged in some hyperbole. It only would have gone down 99.9% and you'd still be down significantly today.
It's important to understand that these 3X funds return 3X the PERCENTAGE DAILY RETURN of the index. That means that you can't just take the QQQ level on one day and compare it to the level on any other day except the next day, multiply it by 3, and that's what TQQQ would have returned. Doesn't work that way...at all. Am I the only one who thinks it's important to actually have at least a basic grasp of the fundamental aspect of how a financial instrument works before trading it?
I feel like I'm in some alternate word definition universe when the above represents "safe"!
That's interesting. You take a lien on the land then, or the construction, or both? I suppose the worst risk is that there's a downturn and you're the proud owner of a half-built house and a lot?Contractors who typically secure the land with their funds and then look for some additional cash for construction
It's hard not to be condescending against this so please know I'm trying so very hard not to be. TQQQ is simply 3X the daily percentage return of QQQ. It's trivial to determine how TQQQ would have performed in any time period that QQQ traded with a simple excel spreadsheet that calculates 3X the daily percentage return of QQQ, takes about 2 minutes to download the QQQ returns and 5 minutes to build the spreadsheet. If anything TQQQ sometimes has tracking errors on the down side, so that is a conservative recreation of what TQQQ would have returned. If you believe something specific my methodology is in error, I'm happy to have an intelligent discussion about that. If you want to just say "you're wrong about how TQQQ would have performed back in 2000 because look at how it performed in the last 10 years and it didn't exist then"....well then we just can't have an intelligent adult conversation. At the beginning of this thread, you didn't even realize that 3x funds returned 3X the percentage daily return, which is a fundamental aspect of how the fund works. It's hard to believe you would still be telling someone who clearly knows at least a tiny tiny bit more than you about this product that they're wrong, basically because you say so.Can God make a rock so big he can't lift it? You're chart was fun and must of taken a bit of time making it, but not anywhere near accurate to reality, since the product didn't exist at the time. Do yourself a favor and actually go to stocksplithistory.com and TQQQ stats and see it has enjoyed a 60% yearly return for ten years, while QQQ has had a modest 22% gain each year.
What is safe now and has a track record over the last decade?
Intel = 13%
Msft = 30%
Aapl = 29%
BA = 15%
BRK.B = 15%
BAC = 20%
VYM = 13%
TQQQ = 60%
Last word of advice, = Trade what is real, not what you think. When the tides change, don't trade it.
Now, make a new chart!!
That's interesting. You take a lien on the land then, or the construction, or both? I suppose the worst risk is that there's a downturn and you're the proud owner of a half-built house and a lot?
That's interesting. You take a lien on the land then, or the construction, or both? I suppose the worst risk is that there's a downturn and you're the proud owner of a half-built house and a lot?
Curiously, on the left side of the graph, TQQQ seems to decline at about three times the rate of QQQ; however, on the right side, it doesn't converge towards QQQ at all. I would think that it should rise at three times the rate QQQ is rising, and close the distance to QQQ during the rise. It appears to be rising at a factor of less than one, with respect to QQQ.It's hard not to be condescending against this so please know I'm trying so very hard not to be. TQQQ is simply 3X the daily percentage return of QQQ. It's trivial to determine how TQQQ would have performed in any time period that QQQ traded with a simple excel spreadsheet that calculates 3X the daily percentage return of QQQ, takes about 2 minutes to download the QQQ returns and 5 minutes to build the spreadsheet. If anything TQQQ sometimes has tracking errors on the down side, so that is a conservative recreation of what TQQQ would have returned. If you believe something specific my methodology is in error, I'm happy to have an intelligent discussion about that. If you want to just say "you're wrong about how TQQQ would have performed back in 2000 because look at how it performed in the last 10 years and it didn't exist then"....well then we just can't have an intelligent adult conversation. At the beginning of this thread, you didn't even realize that 3x funds returned 3X the percentage daily return, which is a fundamental aspect of how the fund works. It's hard to believe you would still be telling someone who clearly knows at least a tiny tiny bit more than you about this product that they're wrong, basically because you say so.
It's hard not to be condescending against this so please know I'm trying so very hard not to be. TQQQ is simply 3X the daily percentage return of QQQ. It's trivial to determine how TQQQ would have performed in any time period that QQQ traded with a simple excel spreadsheet that calculates 3X the daily percentage return of QQQ, takes about 2 minutes to download the QQQ returns and 5 minutes to build the spreadsheet. If anything TQQQ sometimes has tracking errors on the down side, so that is a conservative recreation of what TQQQ would have returned. If you believe something specific my methodology is in error, I'm happy to have an intelligent discussion about that. If you want to just say "you're wrong about how TQQQ would have performed back in 2000 because look at how it performed in the last 10 years and it didn't exist then"....well then we just can't have an intelligent adult conversation. At the beginning of this thread, you didn't even realize that 3x funds returned 3X the percentage daily return, which is a fundamental aspect of how the fund works. It's hard to believe you would still be telling someone who clearly knows at least a tiny tiny bit more than you about this product that they're wrong, basically because you say so.
His chart math is not accurate. Look at a real chart of both products and see how they correlate.Curiously, on the left side of the graph, TQQQ seems to decline at about three times the rate of QQQ; however, on the right side, it doesn't converge towards QQQ at all. I would think that it should rise at three times the rate QQQ is rising, and close the distance to QQQ during the rise. It appears to be rising at a factor of less than one, with respect to QQQ.
How do you explain this?
I did before I posted. But TQQQ began trading after the initial QQQ decline, so can't really compare his chart with the real chart.His chart math is not accurate. Look at a real chart of both products and see how they correlate.
Once again, TQQQ returns 3X the daily percentage return of QQQ. That's a very different thing than returning 3X QQQ. Here's a little demonstration, assume we start out with QQQ at 100 and we have the following changes over 3 trading days.Curiously, on the left side of the graph, TQQQ seems to decline at about three times the rate of QQQ; however, on the right side, it doesn't converge towards QQQ at all. I would think that it should rise at three times the rate QQQ is rising, and close the distance to QQQ during the rise. It appears to be rising at a factor of less than one, with respect to QQQ.
How do you explain this?