If you thought Wall Street's appetite for leverage was insatiable, the SEC just proved otherwise. This week, the regulator drew a hard line in the sand, telling major ETF issuers that their dreams of 3x and 5x daily leveraged products might be a bridge too far.
The Warning Shot Heard Across Wall Street
On Tuesday, Direxion, ProShares, Tidal, and Volatility Shares all received nearly identical warning letters from the SEC. The message was blunt: your proposed 3x and 5x leveraged funds may violate federal limits on how much risk an ETF can pile on relative to its assets.
What made this particularly notable was the speed of disclosure. The SEC posted these letters publicly on the same day they were issued, an unusually fast move that sent a clear signal to the entire industry. Issuers were given a straightforward choice: revise your strategies or pull your applications.
ProShares Blinks First
The impact was swift. By Wednesday, ProShares had withdrawn applications for several 3x ETFs, including crypto-linked products designed to triple the daily moves of Bitcoin and Ether.
These weren't just incremental products either. Some of the filings that caught regulatory heat sought to deliver five times the daily return of assets like Tesla Inc. and Nvidia Corp., along with major cryptocurrencies. That's a level of leverage never before permitted in U.S. single-stock ETFs, and apparently, the SEC decided it wasn't about to start now.
The core issue comes down to how these issuers measure volatility. According to the SEC, some proposals used reference assets that didn't accurately capture the true risk of the underlying securities, effectively understating how badly things could go wrong for investors.
When a Hot Market Meets a Cold Regulator
Leveraged ETFs have become wildly popular since the pandemic, with assets swelling to roughly $162 billion as traders hunt for fast profits, according to Bloomberg. But these products carry a darker history of spectacular blowups that tend to catch inexperienced investors off guard.
Against that backdrop, the SEC's sudden intervention looks like more than just regulatory housekeeping. It suggests the agency is rethinking how much rope to give issuers in this space. The SEC itself declined to comment on the filings, and most issuers have stayed quiet, though an attorney for Volatility Shares confirmed ongoing discussions with regulators.
Whether this crackdown becomes a permanent ceiling or just a temporary speedbump will depend on two things: how aggressively issuers continue pushing for higher leverage, and how firmly the SEC holds this newly established line. For now, though, Wall Street's race to build ever-bigger daily swings into ETF wrappers has hit a regulatory wall.