How a turbo works
A turbo is an investment product. It gives investors the opportunity to invest in underlying values, such as shares, stock indices, currencies, bonds and commodities. What makes turbos unique is the leverage . This ensures that you can earn a lot with a relatively small investment.
When determining the value of the turbo, an underlying value is considered. An underlying value can be a share, commodity, bond, indices or currency. Based on this, investors respond to rising or falling movements in the price. Professionals generally use the terms ‘going long’ and ‘going short’ for this.
How a turbo works
When purchasing a turbo, the bank or broker (where you buy the turbo) finances the underlying value. As an investor, you only pay a small part of the value. When the value of a share increases, the value of the turbo will increase faster in percentage terms than the value of the share. This is due to the leverage effect. The reverse also applies: when there is a decrease, the value of the turbo will decrease faster in percentage terms than the value of the share.
Turbo calculation examples
How a turbo works exactly can be explained well by means of examples. Below you will find two examples: the first is a comparison of buying a turbo and buying the house; the second example is an example of investing in a share by means of a turbo.
Suppose the house is worth €250,000. To get to this amount, you take out a mortgage of €200,000 and take €50,000 of your own money with you. When the value of the house increases, this will only affect your own money (the €50,000).
Suppose the value of the house increases to €300,000. The mortgage remains €200,000, while your own money increases to €100,000. The reverse is also true. If the value of the house decreases to €200,000, the mortgage remains the same, but the investor loses his own money.
In the calculation example, the mortgage (€200,000) is the amount that the bank finances and the equity (€50,000) is the amount that the investor puts in for the turbo.

Another example: you buy a share of Hanny’s Bakkerij with a value of €200. Buying a turbo long with a ‘stop loss’ at €180 means that you pay €20 for it yourself. The remaining €180 finances the bank or broker that issues the turbo to you. If the value of a share of Hanny’s Bakkerij then rises to €220, the value of the purchased turbo rises from €20 to €40. This is an increase of 100%, while the value of the share has risen by ‘only’ 10%. This clearly shows how leverage works. It also shows how you can earn a lot with relatively little money. The same applies the other way around. If the price of the share drops from €200 to €180, the value of the turbo drops by 100%, while the share value only drops by 10%. In this case, you have lost the entire value of your investment.
One to remember: with a turbo long you profit from a rise; with a turbo short you profit from a fall.
Read more about the 2 types of turbos: the turbo long and the turbo short .
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