The ProShares Short S&P 500 (SH ) is an inverse exchange-traded fund designed to provide the opposite (-1x) of the daily performance of the S&P 500 Index. Launched in 2006, SH offers a straightforward way to hedge against market declines or express bearish views without short selling. Unlike leveraged inverse ETFs, SH aims for -100% daily return of the index, making it relatively less complex. However, due to daily rebalancing, long-term returns can still deviate from the exact inverse of the index. The fund is primarily used for short-term hedging and tactical trading strategies, though its single inverse exposure makes it more suitable for longer holding periods than leveraged products.
Basic Information
Parameter Value Notes Launch Date June 19, 2006 ProShares Assets Under Management ~$1-2 billion Variable with market Expense Ratio 0.89% Annual fee Inverse Factor -1x daily Reset daily Trading Symbol SH NYSE Arca Issuer ProShares Inverse ETF family Structure Investment Company 1940 Act fund Rebalance Frequency Daily Inverse reset
Inverse Implementation
Component Description Purpose Swaps Total return swaps Primary exposure Futures S&P 500 futures Inverse position Cash Collateral holdings Margin backing Treasury Bills Interest earning Yield enhancement
Trading Characteristics
Metric Value Context Average Daily Volume 5-10M shares Good liquidity Bid-Ask Spread ~$0.01-0.02 Efficient trading Volatility Similar to index Inverse movement Market Hours9:30-16:00 ET Regular sessionExtended Hours4:00-20:00 ET Pre/post market
Performance Factors
Element Description Impact Daily Reset Inverse rebalancing Compounding effects Market VolatilityPath dependency Performance variance Interest Earned Cash collateral Minor positive Costs Management fees Return reduction Tracking Index correlation Primary driver
Usage Applications
Hedging Strategies:
Portfolio protection
Sector hedging
Risk management
Downside protection
Trading Strategies:
Market timing
Tactical positioning
Bear market exposure
Risk reduction
Time Horizons:
Short-term tactical
Medium-term hedge
Market corrections
Bear markets
Risk Considerations
Risk Type Level Description Market RiskMedium Inverse exposure Volatility Risk Medium Daily reset impact Tracking Risk Low-Medium Rebalancing effect Liquidity Risk Low Active trading Counterparty Risk Low Swap exposure
Best Practices
Risk Management:
Position sizing
Regular monitoring
Correlation checking
Performance tracking
Trading Execution:
Portfolio Integration:
Hedge ratio calculation
Regular rebalancing
Correlation monitoring
Cost-benefit analysis
Technical Considerations
Aspect Impact Management Beta Tracking Performance alignment Regular monitoringVolatility Effect Compounding impact Position timing Market DirectionInverse movement Trend analysis Liquidity Profile Trading efficiency Volume checking
Function Description Impact Primary Market Creation/redemption Price efficiency Market MakersMultiple dealers Liquidity provision Arbitrage Index vs. ETF Tracking accuracy Hedging Dynamic hedging Price stability
Monitoring Requirements
Element Frequency Purpose Hedge Ratio Daily Protection level Index Movement Real-time Performance verification Correlation Daily Hedge effectiveness Cost Analysis Monthly Efficiency check
Warning Indicators
Indicator Threshold Action Tracking Error >0.3% Investigation Volume Drop -40% normal Liquidity check Correlation Change <-0.95 Hedge review Cost Increase >10% normal Strategy review
Aspect Requirement Impact Margin Rules Standard margin Position limits Trading Rules Regular wayStandard settlement Risk Disclosure Required Broker documentation Tax Treatment Complex 1099 reporting
Educational Requirements
Understanding:
Inverse mechanics
Daily rebalancing
Compounding effects
Correlation concepts
Risk Awareness:
Market direction
Volatility impact
Holding period
Cost factors
Technical Knowledge:
Trading mechanics
Order execution
Position monitoring
Performance tracking
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Strategy Errors:
Over-hedging
Timing mistakes
Cost ignorance
Poor monitoring
Implementation:
Wrong position size
Poor execution
Inadequate tracking
Misaligned timing
Management:
Neglected monitoring
Missed rebalancing
Correlation drift
Cost oversight
Note: Data and statistics are approximate as of early 2024. While less volatile than leveraged products, this fund still involves risks and requires careful management.