
How are turbos constructed?
By investing with a turbo you can use leverage to increase your profit. This Turbo always needs an underlying value in the form of shares, currencies, bonds, commodities or investment funds. The Turbo ensures that the profit can be a lot bigger, but it also ensures that the risks increase. So you have to look carefully at whether and when the turbo is used.
What can I do with turbos?
A turbo is a product that belongs to a share (this can also be a bond, currency or a commodity, for ease of reading this blog will be referred to as a share). This turbo applies leverage to the underlying value. A turbo is used to respond to a rising or falling trend. It is indicated that the value of a share is expected to rise, in technical terms going long. Or it is expected that the value will fall, in technical terms going short. A turbo can be purchased on a limited number of products.
With a turbo you do not buy the actual share but a product based on it. This means you only have to pay a fraction of the price. The turbo works as a lever , which means the profit is a multiple of the increase in value of the share, but the loss is also a multiple of the decrease in value of the share. For example, if the value of the share increases by 1%, the value of the turbo increases by 5%. But the same applies to a decrease, if the share decreases by 1%, the turbo also decreases by 5%. This ensures large profits, but also large losses. A turbo is therefore a product with a high risk .
A comparison
To explain a turbo, buying a house can be used as a calculation example. Suppose you buy a house for €250,000. For this, you take out a mortgage of €200,000 and invest €50,000 of your own money. In this comparison, the mortgage is the underlying asset (the share) and your own money is the turbo. A change in the value of your house acts as a lever on your own money. If the value of the house rises to 300,000, your mortgage remains the same, but your own money doubles from €50,000 to €100,000. If the value of your house falls, the mortgage remains the same, but your own money falls. Suppose the value of your house falls to 200,000. The mortgage remains, but you no longer have any of your own money. A turbo on a share works in a similar way.

An example
If we translate this to the stock market, we get a similar picture. Suppose you buy a turbo on a share of a car manufacturer. This share has a value of 200 euros at the time you buy the turbo. You then buy a turbo long with a stop loss at 180 and pay 20 euros (200-180) for the turbo. The 180 euros are financed by the bank where you buy the turbo. If the share then rises to 220 euros, the turbo rises to €40 (220 – 180 for the bank). In this example, the price rises by 10% from €200 to €220, but the turbo rises by 100% from €20 to €40. The leverage in this example is therefore times 10. This works the same way if the price falls. With a fall of 10% from €200 to €180, the turbo loses its value because the 180 goes entirely to the bank. Shorting a turbo works in the same way with leverage, except that the bet is on a decrease in value
Curious about investing in turbos? Check out the brokers that offer turbos!
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