DOG
ProShares Short Dow30
Simple -1x inverse Dow Jones ETF. Moves opposite to the DJIA daily. Completes the inverse suite alongside SH (S&P 500) and PSQ (NASDAQ-100).
EquityTER 0.95%Acc.
TER
0.95%
AUM
$0.4B
Holdings
~1
Data Range
— → —
Key Facts
ISIN
US74347X8728
Issuer
ProShares
Benchmark
-1x Dow Jones Industrial Average Daily
Total Expense Ratio (TER)
0.95%
Assets Under Management
$0.4B approx.
Inception Date
2006-06-19
Domicile
United States
Legal Structure
Open-End Fund
Dividend Policy
Accumulating (auto-reinvests)
Replication Method
Synthetic (Swap-Based)
UCITS Status
✗ Not UCITS
Fund Currency
USD
Primary Exchange
NYSE Arca
Number of Holdings
~1
Who Is This ETF For?
✓Investors preferring automatic dividend reinvestment (no tax event on distributions in many jurisdictions).
Key Risks to Consider
• Market risk: equity values can drop 30-50% in severe bear markets.
• Non-UCITS: may have unfavorable tax treatment for non-US investors (US estate tax, withholding tax).
Similar ETFs
Continue Your Analysis
Data & Methodology
Metadata sourced from official issuer documentation. Price data from Yahoo Finance (monthly adjusted close, includes reinvested dividends and splits). AUM figures are approximate and updated quarterly.
Data source: Yahoo Finance (adjusted close), ProShares (metadata)Last verified: 2026-05-09
Related Guides from FinClaro Chile
Related ETFs
Similar ETFs
💬 Frequently Asked Questions
Simple -1x inverse Dow Jones ETF. Moves opposite to the DJIA daily. Completes the inverse suite alongside SH (S&P 500) and PSQ (NASDAQ-100).
DOG has a total expense ratio (TER) of 0.95%, which means you pay $95 per year for every $10,000 invested.
DOG is an accumulating ETF — dividends are automatically reinvested into the fund rather than paid out, which can be more tax-efficient in many jurisdictions.
DOG is a US-domiciled ETF (not UCITS). Non-US investors should consider the US estate tax implications (40% on US assets above $60,000) and the 30% dividend withholding tax (reduced by treaty in some countries).
DOG uses synthetic replication via swap contracts, which can reduce tracking error but introduces counterparty risk.