Brothers, put these three codes together and look—this is clearly a “Leverage ETF hell difficulty clearance map.” #SQQQ shorts the Nasdaq, #TQQQ goes long the Nasdaq, and #MVLL is a 2x long on Marvell. They’re all high-volatility gambling contraptions—none of them is an “asset” you can hold with your eyes closed for the long term.
$SQQQ gets hit by reverse + volatility slaughter, and after ten years it loses 99.97%
$TQQQ makes a fortune with one-way upside, but in a choppy market it gets eroded and devoured by grind
MVLL is a single-trade leveraged product; with just a shake in the news, day-to-day ±20% is normal
$MVLL is a 2x long Marvell (MRVL, Ample Electronic) ETF—an archetypal AI semiconductor sentiment amplifier.
The single shared weakness of the three products is one word: volatility decay. Leveraged ETFs reset every day. In a sideways market, the “up 5% then down 5%” loop—QQQ almost doesn’t lose, TQQQ can lose 7%, and SQQQ is even harsher: over ten years it evaporates 99.97%. It’s not that tech stocks always go up forever; it’s that reverse leverage plus reset losses mathematically equals slow zeroing-out.
The crypto crowd should be extra wary of another layer too: Binance has just announced that on June 29 it will list USDT perpetual contracts for these three, with up to 20x leverage and 24/7 trading. The ETF itself already carries 2–3x leverage; add 20x leverage perpetuals on top, and it’s like lighting fireworks on a powder keg—if you can’t hold the direction, one second in the wrong direction and you get liquidated.
One sentence operational bottom line: leveraged ETFs are only for 1–3 day tactical positions in one-way trends. Never hold long-term, never average down, and never “play dead and wait to break even.” Use SQQQ as an occasional hedge and discard it when you’re done; use TQQQ only for brief trades when the Nasdaq breaks into its acceleration phase; use MVLL only to bet on the #MRVL event catalyst—leave when news hits. Whoever treats them as “long-term assets” is effectively volunteering to pay the issuer’s volatility tax as fuel.