The post Why TQQQ’s 112% Gain Masks a Structural Cost That Compounds Every Single Day appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
If you bought ProShares UltraPro QQQ (NASDAQ:TQQQ) thinking you were getting three times the Nasdaq-100 for the long haul, the fund’s own math has a different plan for your money. The product is engineered to deliver 3x the index daily, not annually, and that one word quietly siphons returns every time volatility flares.
Start with the sticker price. TQQQ’s net expense ratio is 0.82% as of March 6, 2026. On a $10,000 position, that is roughly $82 a year skimmed off the top before the fund does anything else. The unleveraged mainstream equivalent, Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ), charges 0.18%, or about $18 per $10,000. Same top holdings. Roughly $64 a year more, every year, for the leverage wrapper.
$64 sounds trivial. Compounded across a decade in a tax-deferred account, it is hundreds of dollars of pure fee drag, before the fund even buys a swap. And TQQQ rents its exposure through total-return swaps with bank counterparties, and the financing rate inside those swaps is layered on top of the published expense ratio. That cost moves with short-term interest rates and does not appear on the fact sheet line you were looking at.
Now the real hidden cost: volatility decay. Because TQQQ resets leverage every day, a choppy market mechanically grinds the share price down even when the Nasdaq-100 ends the period flat. The VIX spiked to 31.05 on March 27, 2026, and the index spikes quickly but declines slowly, the exact pattern that locks losses into leveraged products.
The cleanest illustration sits in 2022’s price action. From January 3, 2022 to December 30, 2022, TQQQ fell 79.67%, going from $40.82 to $8.30. The Nasdaq-100 itself fell roughly a third that year. The annual move came in far worse than three times the index’s loss, because every down day shrank the base the next up day was applied to. A holder who bought at the start of 2022 needed an enormous rally just to break even, which is why TQQQ’s five-year return of 194.45% trails what a naive “3x QQQ” assumption would suggest against QQQ’s five-year return of 110.87%.
There is also concentration risk hiding in plain sight. TQQQ’s economic exposure mirrors QQQ, where the top three holdings (NVDA, MSFT, AAPL) make up 26.32% of the basket. You are paying a leveraged fee to triple your bet on a handful of mega-cap tech names you likely already own elsewhere.
If the goal is Nasdaq-100 exposure, QQQ at 0.18% or its lower-cost sibling QQQM tracks the same 100 names without daily resets or swap financing. You give up the leverage. You also give up the decay, the financing cost, and most of the expense ratio. An investor who wants leverage without the daily-reset trap can use portfolio margin or longer-dated index options, where the cost is explicit and you control the reset schedule.
TQQQ has produced eye-watering numbers in trending bull runs, including a 112.28% one-year gain through June 17, 2026. The question is whether you are buying that headline or the structure underneath it. Ask yourself: in a market where VIX averaged 18.116 over the past 12 months and spiked above 30, how much of your next drawdown will be the index, and how much will be the wrapper quietly charging you for the privilege of holding it?
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The post Why TQQQ’s 112% Gain Masks a Structural Cost That Compounds Every Single Day appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


