Nvidia has been one of the most traded stocks in the world, and the leveraged ETFs that track it have become some of the most active names in daily ETF flows. NVDL, the GraniteShares 2x Long NVDA Daily ETF, is at the center of this trade — and it deserves a clear-eyed explanation before you buy in.
What Is NVDL?
NVDL is a single-stock leveraged ETF that seeks to deliver 2x the daily return of Nvidia (NVDA). If Nvidia goes up 3% in a day, NVDL aims to rise roughly 6%. If Nvidia falls 3%, NVDL falls roughly 6%.
It does this using total return swaps — derivative contracts with a counterparty that provide leveraged exposure without the fund actually owning 2x the Nvidia shares. The fund is managed by GraniteShares and trades under the ticker NVDL on the Nasdaq.
NVDL vs NVDU: Two Leveraged Nvidia ETFs
There are two main competitors in the leveraged Nvidia space:
Feature
NVDL
NVDU
Issuer
GraniteShares
Direxion
Leverage
2x daily
2x daily
Full Name
GraniteShares 2x Long NVDA Daily ETF
Direxion Daily NVDA Bull 2X Shares
Expense Ratio
1.05%
0.92%
AUM
Larger (more established)
Smaller
Options Activity
Higher volume
Lower volume
Both ETFs do the same thing and track each other closely day-to-day. NVDL has been around longer and has more trading volume, making it the more liquid choice. NVDU has a slight cost advantage on paper. For most investors, NVDL is the default due to liquidity.
How 2x Leverage Actually Works
The key word in NVDL’s name is daily. The fund resets its leverage each trading day, which has an important consequence: the leverage compounds daily, not over the long term.
After two days, Nvidia is down 1% ($100 → $99). But NVDL is down 4% ($100 → $96). The asymmetry gets worse the more volatile the underlying stock is. This effect is called volatility decay (or “beta decay”) and it’s the primary reason leveraged ETFs underperform over time, even when the underlying stock ends up in the same place.
Volatility Decay: The Hidden Cost of Leverage
Volatility decay isn’t a fee or a mistake — it’s a mathematical reality of daily-rebalancing leverage. The more a stock swings up and down without trending, the more value a 2x ETF bleeds.
For Nvidia specifically, this is a big deal. NVDA regularly moves 3–8% in a single session around earnings, analyst calls, or macro events. That kind of volatility accelerates decay dramatically.
In a strong, sustained uptrend — like Nvidia’s 2023 AI-driven surge — NVDL can dramatically outperform. In a choppy, sideways market, it loses money even if the underlying stock is flat. In a sharp drawdown, the losses compound faster than most investors expect.
The Real Performance Numbers
When Nvidia is on a tear, NVDL looks extraordinary. When Nvidia corrects or consolidates, NVDL’s losses can be brutal and don’t automatically recover when NVDA bounces back to its prior high — because the leveraged fund needs a bigger recovery percentage than the stock itself to get back to even.
For example: if NVDL falls 50%, it needs a 100% gain just to break even. If Nvidia itself fell 25% (causing NVDL to drop ~50%), Nvidia only needs a ~33% recovery to get back to its high — but NVDL needs twice that, in perfectly trending conditions, with no additional volatility drag.
Who NVDL Is For
NVDL is a legitimate trading tool — but it’s built for specific use cases, and most retail investors aren’t in those use cases.
NVDL makes sense if you are:
A short-term trader holding for hours to days, not weeks or months
Using it as a hedge against a short position in Nvidia
An options trader using it as a liquid underlying for expressing near-term directional views
Comfortable monitoring and sizing the position carefully as part of a broader active trading strategy
A long-term investor who wants Nvidia exposure in a buy-and-hold portfolio
Dollar-cost averaging into a position over months
Investing money you can’t afford to lose a significant percentage of quickly
Trying to “catch up” after missing Nvidia’s run — the math punishes late entries in volatile markets
NVDL vs Buying Nvidia Directly
For most investors, this comparison isn’t close: buying Nvidia stock directly is almost always the better long-term choice.
Here’s why:
No volatility decay. NVDA stock doesn’t have the daily-reset problem. It compounds normally over time.
No expense ratio drag. NVDL charges 1.05%/year; NVDA costs nothing to hold (beyond trading commissions).
No counterparty risk. NVDL’s returns depend on swap contracts with financial counterparties. NVDA is direct ownership of the company.
Cleaner tax treatment. Leveraged ETFs can generate more short-term capital gains due to daily rebalancing activity inside the fund.
If your conviction is “I want to own Nvidia for the long run,” owning more Nvidia shares is cleaner, cheaper, and more reliable than owning NVDL.
The case for NVDL over direct NVDA is essentially: you want amplified short-term gains and you’re actively managing the position. That’s a trading argument, not an investing one.
Position Sizing and Risk Management
If you do trade NVDL, position sizing is critical. Because of leverage decay, large allocations can devastate a portfolio during a Nvidia downturn. Most experienced traders who use leveraged single-stock ETFs keep them to a small percentage of total portfolio value — often under 5% — and treat them as a tactical trade with a defined exit, not a core holding.
A stop-loss order and a clear thesis (“I’m holding this through earnings, then exiting”) are essential. “I’ll hold until it recovers” is not a strategy for a daily-reset leveraged product — it can take far longer and require far higher prices to recover than intuition suggests.
The Bottom Line
NVDL is one of the most actively traded ETFs in the market right now for a reason — Nvidia’s AI dominance has made it the most watched stock in the world, and leveraged versions amplify every move. But amplification cuts both ways, and the daily-reset mechanism means NVDL is a wasting asset in anything other than a straight-line uptrend.
For traders with a defined short-term view on Nvidia: NVDL or NVDU are useful tools. For long-term investors who simply want Nvidia exposure: own the stock directly. The fees, the decay, and the complexity of leveraged ETFs work against you over any horizon longer than a few days.
This article was generated with the assistance of artificial intelligence and reviewed by ETF.com staff.
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