Inverse Bond ETFs: 2014’s Definition of Insanity

Much to the chagrin of market participants that previously clamored about 10-year Treasury yields rising above 3% this year, those yields have tumbled. Factor in Thursday’s loss of nearly 2% at this writing and 10-year yields are lower by almost 17% in 2014.

That has not been enough to keep some traders from continually betting against Treasuries and they are doing so with leveraged instruments such as futures contracts and exchange traded funds.

The ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (NYSEArca: TBT), which seeks to deliver twice the daily inverse performance of the Barclays Capital US Treasury 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index, is off almost 23% year-to-date when accounting for Thursday’s loss. Investors have rewarded TBT with $525.3 million worth of year-to-date inflows, reports Lisa Abramowicz for Bloomberg.

Additionally, “investors have boosted short wagers on Treasuries using futures contracts trading on the Chicago Board of Trade to 56 percent more than their five-year average. A few weeks ago, there were the most since March 2008,” reports Abramowicz.

TBT is not the only inverse bond ETF that has taken in capital even as the bond market has clearly told investors to be long or be wrong. [Alternative Treasury ETFs]

TBT’s triple-leveraged cousin, the Direxion Daily 20-Year Treasury Bear 3X ETF (NYSEArca: TMV) has gained almost $87 million in new asset this year.