Silver bulls finally got their moonshot. ProShares Ultra Silver, the 2x daily leveraged silver futures ETF, returned roughly 184% over the past year as a COMEX physical-delivery squeeze reshaped the futures curve. Yet the same fund is down about 28% year to date, a reminder that this product was engineered for a single trading day, not for the kind of multi-month thesis silver investors typically hold.
That tension between the fund’s mechanical design and how investors actually use it is the entire story of ProShares Ultra Silver (NYSEARCA:AGQ).
What AGQ Is Built To Do
AGQ is a derivatives-based fund that targets twice the daily return of a silver futures benchmark using a stack of futures contracts, swaps, and other derivatives. The intended portfolio role is tactical: short-term, directional speculation on silver price moves over hours or days. It is built for trading, not for the buy-and-hold inflation-hedge role silver itself often plays.
The return engine has three moving parts. First, the fund holds front-month silver futures, which means returns track the futures price rather than spot silver. Second, leverage is reset daily, so the 2x relationship only holds over a single session. Third, when futures roll forward each month, the cost of that roll either adds to or subtracts from returns depending on whether the curve is in contango or backwardation.
That third lever is where the current setup gets interesting. Open interest in silver futures has dwindled toward 100,000 contracts as physical demand pulls metal off COMEX, pushing the curve into backwardation. Backwardation is unusual for silver and, in theory, can produce a positive roll yield for AGQ. It also raises the tail risk of a delivery default, an event that could whipsaw silver futures violently in either direction.
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Promise Versus Reality
The 12-month return looks like vindication for AGQ holders, but the longer arc is brutal. Over five years, AGQ returned about 145%, and over 10 years, just 167%, despite silver itself going through multiple major rallies. One Reddit poster on r/investing summarized the experience after buying near a prior peak: “Getting back to break even on AGQ after 15 years.” That is the volatility decay tax in plain English.
The math behind it is simple. Daily resetting compounds losses faster than gains in choppy markets. A 10% drop followed by a 10% rebound leaves silver roughly flat; the same path leaves a 2x daily fund down meaningfully. The VIX spike to about 31 in late March, followed by a snap back to nearly 17 is exactly the kind of round-trip that erodes leveraged ETFs even when their underlying ends near where it started.
Source: finance.yahoo.com
