A single company goes public, and within the span of one listings batch it acquires its own cinematic universe of leveraged wrappers.
T-REX offers a 2X Long SpaceX (SPAX), for the optimist who finds the raw shares a touch sedate. Leverage Shares goes one better with a 3X Long SpaceX (LEELON), because two times would imply a failure of nerve. Defiance takes the other side entirely with a 2X Short SpaceX (SPCQ), daily-rebalanced inverse exposure to the most hyped listing in living memory. And Harvest, bless it, simply holds the thing: a plain spot SpaceX fund (SPXE) sitting among the leverage like the designated driver at a very loud party.
Here is the part I keep returning to. Until very recently this underlying was a private company, valued through secondary transactions and special purpose vehicles, the kind of asset you needed an introduction and a lawyer to touch. It has been a publicly traded stock for about as long as it takes the ink to dry, and it already supports a full suite of geared products in both directions. The industry did not wait to see how the shares behaved. It pre-committed to the chaos.
Cerebras builds wafer-scale AI chips, which is to say processors the size of a dinner plate rather than a postage stamp, and it arrived on the public markets via one of the loudest debuts the AI era has produced. The stock roughly doubled on its first day of trading. A company founded barely a decade ago is now worth tens of billions of dollars and is openly positioning itself against the largest chipmaker on earth.
This is, by any reasonable measure, already a volatile instrument. The shares can move further before lunch than most equities manage in a quarter. So, Leverage Shares has helpfully tripled it. If the underlying can take your money with the brisk efficiency of a freshly listed AI hardware name, the 3X version simply removes the speed limit. I admire the conviction. I would not want to be the one explaining the tracking error.
The memory desk has hedged its bets, in the most literal sense
Somewhere in this batch is a 3X Long Memory DRAM ETP. A few rows away, listed in the very same wave, is a 3X Short Memory DRAM ETP. Long DRAM and short DRAM, triple-geared, arriving together like a pair of arguing twins.
There is a genuine story underneath the comedy. Memory is in the middle of a ferocious upcycle, with contract prices rising at a pace the industry has not seen in decades and high-bandwidth memory effectively sold out as the AI buildout devours supply. So, Leverage Shares has covered the field. It will sell you triple exposure to the boom continuing, and triple exposure to it ending, and it is admirably neutral about which one you choose. For the truly committed it has also listed 3X long products on both Samsung and SK Hynix, the two firms that between them control the overwhelming majority of the world's high-bandwidth memory. You can now express a leveraged opinion on the memory supercycle through the index, through the long side, through the short side, and through the individual champions, all from the same listings batch.
The ETP industry is not confused about risk. It understands risk perfectly. It has simply decided that risk is the product rather than the warning label.
What strikes me about this particular wave is the speed. There was a time when leveraged single-stock products waited politely for an underlying to establish a trading history, a borrow market, some sense of how it behaved under stress. That courtesy has evaporated. A company can be private one moment and the anchor of a four-product leveraged ecosystem the next, and a chipmaker can finish its first week as a public entity already wearing a 3X jacket.
I am not sure whether this is a triumph of financial engineering or a very elaborate dare. I suspect the people who build these things stopped distinguishing between the two some time ago.