SMCZ vs. SMCX: Betting Against or All-In on Super Micro?

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By David Beren Published

Quick Read

  • Despite being polar opposites, SMCX and SMCZ both obliterated capital, falling 87% and 82% over one year respectively, as daily resets compound losses during volatile stretches.

  • SMCI's 27% weekly plunge after a $7 billion equity raise rewarded short-side traders with a 41% SMCZ gain while crushing SMCX holders by 56%.

  • Neither fund suits buy-and-hold investors; both work only as same-day trading tools for specific AI order, dilution, or legal catalysts.

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SMCZ vs. SMCX: Betting Against or All-In on Super Micro?

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The choice between Defiance Daily Target 2X Short SMCI ETF (NASDAQ:SMCZ) and Defiance Daily Target 2X Long SMCI ETF (NASDAQ:SMCX) is the cleanest bull-versus-bear mirror trade available in the AI server complex. Both products from Defiance ETFs track the same underlying, Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI | SMCI Price Prediction), with opposing 2x daily leverage. They look like polar opposites on paper. In practice, both have destroyed capital over the past year, and the reasons explain more about leveraged single-stock ETFs than about Super Micro itself.

What each fund is actually betting on

SMCX is essentially a concentrated wager that Super Micro’s AI server demand will continue to compound. The fund uses equity swaps rather than holding the stock outright, with 23.8% of net assets tied to a March 20, 2026, SMCI swap and additional staggered exposures running through September 2028. Roughly 11.3% sits in Treasury bills and money market funds as a cash buffer, a structure that highlights how swap‑based products balance exposure mechanics with liquidity management.

SMCZ takes the opposite side. It pays off when Super Micro’s governance overhang, dilution risk, and execution challenges weigh on the stock. The bear thesis has live catalysts. Wolfe Research initiated coverage, citing “potential governance/regulatory risks stemming from a legal indictment related to illegal AI server shipments to China,” as well as margin pressure and customer concentration.

Where the difference shows up

Super Micro fell 26.85% in the week ending June 12, 2026, after a $7 billion equity and preferred offering meant to fund a $39 billion order book. SMCZ delivered: up 41.06% that week. SMCX took the symmetric hit, down 55.81%.

Stretch the window, and the mirror breaks. Over the past year, SMCI fell 29.75%. A simple negative 2x expectation would suggest SMCZ should be sharply higher. Instead, SMCZ is down 81.64% over the same period and down 82.63% year to date. SMCX is down 86.79% over the past year and 98.58% from its August 2024 high. Daily resets compound against holders whenever trading turns choppy, and Super Micro’s price action has been nothing but choppy, a textbook setup for volatility drag overwhelming leveraged intent.

The practical comparison

Metric SMCZ (2x Short) SMCX (2x Long)
Expense ratio ~1.29% 1.31%
1-week return +41.06% -55.81%
YTD return -82.63% -55.00%
1-year return -81.64% -86.79%
Structure Daily reset short swaps Daily reset long swaps

Both funds carry counterparty exposure through swap agreements. SMCX discloses a 1.31% net expense ratio in its October 2025 semi-annual report. SMCZ has experienced trading disruptions during extreme Super Micro volatility in 2026, a structural risk that does not appear on a fact sheet.

Holding period considerations

Neither product fits a buy-and-hold framework. The compounding math punishes anyone who holds across a volatile multi-week stretch, which has been Super Micro’s default regime since the Hindenburg short report and auditor resignation episodes. SMCX suits a trader with same-day conviction that Super Micro rallies on an AI order or partnership headline, such as the $2 billion Gorilla Technology deal. SMCZ suits a trader with same-day conviction on a dilution, legal, or margin headline. Holding either for weeks turns a directional call into a tax on volatility.

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About the Author David Beren →

David Beren has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2022. Writing for 24/7 Wall St. since 2023, David loves to write about topics of all shapes and sizes. As a technology expert, David focuses heavily on consumer electronics brands, automobiles, and general technology. He has previously written for LifeWire, formerly About.com. As a part-time freelance writer, David’s “day job” has been working on and leading social media for multiple Fortune 100 brands. David loves the flexibility of this field and its ability to reach customers exactly where they like to spend their time. Additionally, David previously published his own blog, TmoNews.com, which reached 3 million readers in its first year. In addition to freelance and social media work, David loves to spend time with his family and children and relive the glory days of video game consoles by playing any retro game console he can get his hands on.

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