The post DGP vs. UGL: Which 2x Gold Play Costs You More Than the Leverage? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Investors looking for 2x daily exposure to gold typically land on two tickers: DB Gold Double Long ETN (NYSEARCA:DGP) and ProShares Ultra Gold (NYSEARCA:UGL). On a one-day basis they move almost in lockstep, both up roughly 7.4% and 7.1% respectively in today’s session. The real distinction sits beneath the ticker: one is a senior unsecured note issued by a European bank, and the other is a commodity pool that holds swaps and futures. That structural gap, more than the headline expense ratio, drives where the costs and risks actually land.
UGL is a ProShares commodity pool that targets 2x the daily performance of the Bloomberg Gold Subindex using gold futures and total return swaps. The fund must roll futures contracts, so contango or backwardation in the gold curve flows directly into returns. Holders receive a Schedule K-1 at tax time, and gains on the futures leg are taxed under the 60/40 blended rate.
DGP has a fundamentally different structure. It is an exchange-traded note issued by Deutsche Bank AG, meaning holders are senior unsecured creditors of the bank. The note tracks an index calculation rather than holding physical futures, so there is no rolling drag at the investor level. The trade-off is counterparty exposure. If Deutsche Bank’s credit deteriorates, DGP can trade below its indicative value regardless of where gold prices sit. Deutsche Bank reported FY2025 profit before tax of €9.7 billion, which keeps the issue stable today, but the credit linkage never disappears.
Gold itself, measured by GLD, is up 27.36% over the past year and 140% over five years. A clean 2x product would double those returns, but daily resetting causes both DGP and UGL to drift from that math.
| Factor | DGP | UGL |
|---|---|---|
| Structure | ETN (unsecured debt) | Commodity pool ETF |
| Issuer | Deutsche Bank AG | ProShares Trust II |
| Tax form | 1099 | Schedule K-1 |
| Tracking method | Index calculation | Futures and swaps |
| Counterparty risk | Direct to issuer | Diversified swap counterparties |
| 1-year return | 37.75% | 32.76% |
| 5-year return | 242.93% | 200.29% |
Beyond returns, liquidity matters. UGL trades with materially larger assets and tighter spreads than DGP. DGP’s smaller footprint can lead to wider bid-ask spreads during volatile sessions, and ETNs carry closure or early redemption risk that ETFs structured as commodity pools do not.
Investors who want 2x daily gold exposure without taking single‑issuer credit risk, and who don’t mind a K‑1, tend to land on UGL. DGP has delivered the higher cumulative return across multiple horizons, but that edge comes with Deutsche Bank credit exposure and thinner trading. Both products decay daily and are built for short‑term tactical use, not long‑term gold ownership. The longer the holding period, the more the path of gold prices matters relative to the start‑to‑finish move, a dynamic tied to volatility drag rather than the metal itself.
What would actually shift the calculus is straightforward. A credit event at Deutsche Bank would hit DGP holders independently of gold, while a sustained backwardation in the gold curve would tighten UGL’s tracking and shrink the historical performance gap between the two, a reminder that curve structure can matter as much as leverage mechanics.
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The post DGP vs. UGL: Which 2x Gold Play Costs You More Than the Leverage? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


