 Dear Reader, I hesitated to even send you this. After what I heard… After who told me… On January 7th… just outside Washington, D.C… I sat across from a man whose family has been tied to global power for decades. Oil deals. Intelligence circles. Government insiders. He leaned in and told me something that changed everything I thought I knew about the Iran war. What you’re seeing on the news? It’s not the real story. Not even close. The strikes… the chaos… the escalation… It’s all part of something much bigger. A global deal worth trillions. And the only reason I know this is because of him — an anonymous contact who risked everything to pass this information along. I verified it. Cross-checked it. Dug deeper. And what I uncovered is something every American investor needs to see immediately. Click here to see the full breakdown before it’s too late. It’s a coordinated move that could reshape the global economy for decades. But you need to see it for yourself. Go here now and uncover the real reason behind the Iran war. Regards, 
Addison Wiggin Founder, Grey Swan Investment Fraternity
Additional Reading from MarketBeat.com Is the Explosion of Single-Stock ETFs an Opportunity or a Danger?By Nathan Reiff. Publication Date: 3/30/2026. 
Key Points- Single-stock ETFs have proliferated rapidly and now number in the hundreds, often providing 2x or 3x leverage on some of the most popular individual companies.
- These funds tend to have high costs and similarly high risks, including the potential for compounding decay if held for longer than a single day.
- Funds focused on NVIDIA, Tesla, and Strategy are among the most highly traded in this space.
- Special Report: URGENT: $2 Gold Stock With Major Discovery
The Magnificent 7 account for roughly a third of the S&P 500, so it's understandable that some investors might consider concentrating an outsized portion of their portfolio in one of these names or a similarly large company. At the same time, single-stock exchange-traded funds (ETFs)—which invert the usual ETF diversification by providing leveraged exposure to a single company—have proliferated quickly. There are now hundreds available to investors. The attraction of single-stock ETFs is obvious: many of the largest companies have long histories of outperformance, and these funds can offer double or even triple returns on a given day. However, the risks are sizable. Below are several single-name leveraged funds that have drawn investor interest, along with cautions for those considering this approach. A Double-Leveraged Play on NVIDIA That Helped Pave the WayThe GraniteShares 2x Long NVDA Daily ETF (NASDAQ: NVDL) provides leveraged long exposure to NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA). NVDL seeks to deliver twice the daily percentage change of NVDA. Its expense ratio is relatively high for an ETF at 1.05%, and its assets sit just under $4 billion. Trading activity is robust: the fund's one-month average daily volume is about 10.6 million shares. Investors who held NVDL during NVIDIA's recent bull run saw amplified gains. That performance helped raise interest in single-stock funds generally; NVDL picked up roughly $2 billion in cumulative inflows over a three-year span. But over the last year, NVDL shows net outflows of about $2.4 billion. That pattern suggests many retail investors who bought late have lost money or exited positions, even as NVDA shares themselves are up roughly 48% over the same 12-month period. The difference illustrates how daily rebalancing and leverage can produce outcomes materially different from simply owning the underlying stock. Leveraged Exposure to Tesla Comes With Big Wins But Bigger RiskFor leveraged exposure to Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA), a popular option is the Direxion Daily TSLA Bull 2X Shares ETF (NASDAQ: TSLL). TSLL is widely held, with about $4.8 billion in assets and a one-month average daily trading volume near 65 million. Like other 2x funds, TSLL aims to deliver twice the daily returns of the underlying stock, which magnifies both gains and losses. Tesla's volatility has been pronounced, and that translates into extreme swings for TSLL. The company also faces several company-specific risks—Elon Musk–related governance issues, intensifying competition from Chinese electric vehicle makers, uncertainty around EV incentives, and more—so TSLA is likely to remain a volatile name in the near term. TSLL's expense ratio of 0.83% is lower than some leveraged peers, but the added leverage makes the fund suitable mainly for investors with a high tolerance for short-term volatility. MSTU: A Leveraged Bitcoin Play With a Painful Track RecordT-Rex 2X Long MSTR Daily Target ETF (BATS: MSTU) focuses on MicroStrategy Incorporated (NASDAQ: MSTR), a company known for holding a large Bitcoin treasury. Even though Bitcoin has declined roughly 21% over the past year, there have been individual days when MSTR shares rose. By contrast, MSTU has fallen by more than 90% over the last 12 months, a stark example of what can happen when investors fail to account for daily leverage resets and path-dependent compounding. MSTU's assets are relatively small—just over $400 million—but its trading volume is strong, with a one-month average daily volume of about 36.4 million. Like NVDL, MSTU carries an annual fee of 1.05%. These ETFs are designed with specific, sophisticated strategies in mind: they are generally intended for very short-term trading to capture a targeted multiple of a stock's daily move. That is challenging in practice, and holding such funds beyond a single day can lead to compounding decay and significant divergence from the performance of the underlying security. Regulators have also expressed concern about single-stock ETFs because their risk profiles differ from traditional, diversified ETFs. These products can be useful in narrowly defined situations—when an investor has a strong, short-term conviction about a stock (for example, ahead of an earnings release or product launch) or as a hedge over a very brief period—but for many retail investors the risks will outweigh the potential benefits.
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