TQQQ's 14.28% single-day crash turned a $10,000 position into $8,570 as the 3x leveraged wrapper amplified QQQ's 4.8% decline.
TQQQ's 14.28% single-day crash turned a $10,000 position into $8,570 as the 3x leveraged wrapper amplified QQQ's 4.8% decline.

The Nasdaq-100 fell 4.8% on Friday, its worst session since April 2025, after Broadcom's light AI guidance and a hot payrolls print hit the tech sector.
"2026 capex is largely in the bag because the tech giants have signaled they will keep growing," sell-side analysts said on the AI Investor podcast, according to the report.
The Nasdaq-100 closed with 35 advancers against 65 decliners, while the S&P 500 split 257 to 244. The VIX sat at 15.40 on June 4, in the lower quartile of the trailing 12 months, before the selloff pushed it higher. The 2-year Treasury yield closed the week at 4.05% after touching 4.13% on May 22, the highest level in 16 months and a 96th percentile reading against the trailing year. The 10-year yield ended at 4.47%, in the 93rd percentile of the last 12 months.
The May CPI release on June 11 is the next event for TQQQ holders. A soft reading could retrace much of Friday's damage, while a hot number risks turning the rate-hike conversation from a fringe view into a base case. JP Morgan's 2026 outlook has the market pricing roughly 80 basis points of cuts through 2026, with the firm guiding to a 10-year yield range of 4.00% to 4.50%.
The Arithmetic of a 3x Daily Wrapper
TQQQ is built to deliver three times the daily return of the Nasdaq-100, before fees, with a 0.82% expense ratio. On a session where QQQ closes down roughly 5%, the math on the leveraged sleeve lands in the neighborhood of a 14% to 15% loss. The week-over-week numbers show TQQQ down 13.61% against QQQ's 4.5% weekly decline. The leveraged fund is still up 38.79% year-to-date and 103.9% over the past year, while QQQ sits at 14.77% YTD and 34.35% over 12 months. A $10,000 stake in TQQQ from June 2016 would be worth roughly $353,789 based on the 3,437.89% 10-year return.
The daily reset mechanism cuts both ways. In a sustained uptrend with low volatility, the daily reset compounds in the holder's favor, which is how a 3x fund delivers a 194.5% five-year return against QQQ's 110.09% over the same window. In a choppy or downward tape, that same daily reset creates volatility drag. A 5% down day followed by a 5% up day leaves QQQ slightly below where it started. The same sequence in TQQQ, levered 3x each day, leaves the holder further behind.
What Has to Hold for the Bounce
The bull case for TQQQ rests on three conditions. First, AI capex has to keep expanding. Vanguard's 2026 baseline puts capital expenditure growth at 7.0%, well above the 3.8% pace of 2023 to 2024. Broadcom's light guide is the first counter-data point in that thesis, not a thesis-killer, but it is the kind of crack that gets re-tested on every print. If Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet, and Amazon hold their AI capex guides, Broadcom looks like a single-name issue. If any one of them blinks, the AI capex pause becomes the story.
Second, the Fed path matters more than the Fed funds rate itself. Goldman Sachs sees two further cuts in 2026 in its base case. One hot payrolls print does not unwind that, but two would. The May CPI release on June 11 is the single most important calendar item for anyone holding TQQQ into next week. Third, breadth has to stop deteriorating. Only 25% of S&P 500 names outperformed in May, down from 59% in January, the kind of leadership narrowing that historically precedes either a reset or a final melt-up.
The honest read on TQQQ at $73.05 is that holders are carrying a leveraged bet on a thesis — AI capex keeps growing, the Fed cuts at least once or twice in 2026, breadth does not collapse — at the precise moment all three legs are getting tested in the same week. The fund did its job on Friday. Whether the underlying conditions hold is the question, and the answer arrives in pieces over the next four trading days.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.