What are leveraged ETFs and how are they driving the AI rally?
SMH•How leveraged ETFs work
Leveraged ETFs use futures or swaps to replicate a bet using borrowed money to multiply the daily return of their target by typically two, three or even five times — amplifying gains on the way up and losses on the way down.
Single-stock leveraged ETFs launched in May in South Korea, though two-times leveraged ETFs tracking Samsung 7747.HK and SK Hynix 7709.HK listed in Hong Kong in 2025 and have seen their assets under management balloon. Assets in the latter fund tracking SK Hynix have surged 20 times since the start of the year.
When investors buy a unit in these products, the funds need to buy shares in the underlying stocks as well as derivatives to leverage the performance. If the stock moves up, the ETF needs to buy more and if it falls it must sell.
Those daily rebalancing trades generate a feedback loop, exacerbating moves in either direction and ramping up volatility.




