SPXL sells a simple promise: three times the daily move of the S&P 500. What its factsheet does not sell is the quiet gap that opens between that promise and reality every time markets zigzag. That gap is the hidden cost, and it lives in your account whether you notice it or not.
Start with the math that Direxion never puts on the marketing page. Over the past five years through June 30, 2026, the S&P 500 (proxied by SPY) returned 73.49%. A clean three-times multiplier would land near 220%. Direxion Daily S&P 500 Bull 3X Shares (NYSEARCA:SPXL) actually delivered 159.54%. That shortfall is volatility decay, the built-in cost of resetting leverage every single trading day.
What You’re Actually Paying
Look closer at shorter windows and the pattern repeats. Year-to-date through June 30, 2026, SPY is up 9.51%. Triple that is roughly 28.5%. SPXL returned 23.23%. Over one year, SPY gained 20.87% while SPXL delivered 57%, again well short of a triple. Each of those missing points is a fee you paid in performance rather than in a line item.
Layered on top sits the fund’s management fee, which for daily leveraged products is materially higher than a plain S&P 500 index fund. Even a fee near the industry norm for 3X products quietly charges a holder of $10,000 roughly $95 a year, versus about $3 a year for the cheapest S&P 500 ETFs. Compounded over 10 to 20 years, that alone hands the issuer a chunk of your compounding.
The Part the Factsheet Doesn’t Highlight
Volatility is the accelerant. When the VIX spiked to 31.05 on March 27, 2026, the daily whipsaws that followed did exactly what daily-reset leverage punishes: buy high, sell low, then repeat. Over the trailing 12 months the VIX averaged 18.09, with peaks in October 2025, November 2025, and March 2026. Each of those episodes eats into the theoretical 3x return.
Concentration adds another layer. Despite the S&P 500 label, SPXL’s swap exposures track a top-heavy index. The top five holdings, MSFT, AAPL, AMZN, AVGO, and Alphabet, represent roughly 15.3% of net assets. Buyers thinking they own “the market” actually own a mega-cap tech bet amplified three times, and the tax bill can follow: leveraged funds using swaps and daily rebalancing tend to generate high turnover, which historically translates into elevated short-term distributions.
The Cheaper Mirror
For unleveraged S&P 500 exposure, SPY, VOO, and IVV carry expense ratios a fraction of a leveraged product’s, no daily reset, and no volatility decay. The trade-off is obvious: no 3x amplification on green days. But the ten-year record shows why compounding beats leverage in most environments. SPY returned 255.74% over ten years, and SPXL returned 1,249.92%, well below a naive triple of the index and achieved through drawdowns that punished any buyer who arrived at the wrong VIX regime.
What This Means for You
SPXL is a daily trading instrument that has been widely misused as a long-term holding, including by retail traders on forums like wallstreetbets where the ticker regularly draws bullish chatter. Before you hold it past the closing bell, ask a simple question: are you being paid enough in upside to cover the fee, the decay, and the concentration risk, or is the fund quietly keeping the difference?
Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.