The Hindu - International

Nvidia’s dizzying rally spurs rush into AI-themed Exchange Traded Funds

The funds run the gamut from those offering a bouquet of the biggest AI winners to more esoteric themes such as robotics, sound generation; the universe of AIthemed ETFs traded in the U.S. has soared to $6.88 bn as of the end of Feb. from $2.55 billion

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he fervour around artificial intelligen­ce has sparked a gold rush into AIthemed ETFs, as investors seek fresh ways to play the burgeoning technology following breathtaki­ng rallies in market darlings such as Nvidia .

The funds run the gamut from those offering a bouquet of the biggest AI winners to more esoteric themes such as robotics and sound generation. All told, the universe of AIthemed ETFs traded in the United States has soared to $6.88 billion as of the end of February from $2.55 billion a year earlier, Morningsta­r data showed.

“It’s still so early in the evolution of this category ... that investors are still sorting through the possibilit­ies,” said Will Rhind, founder and CEO of GraniteSha­res.

The exuberance surroundin­g AI funds echoes previous waves of investor excitement for other technologi­es viewed as transforma­tive, from dotcom stocks to electric vehicles.

Each wave introduced major new businesses to the economy and generated astonishin­g wealth for founders like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk as well as ordinary investors. At the

Tsame time, many of the companies whose shares soared in previous market booms eventually saw their stock prices fizzle, a fate that may await some of the market’s current AI favourites.

For now, investors are responding with enthusiasm and Nvidia — whose chips are seen as the gold standard in AI — continues to grab the spotlight.

The assets of the GraniteSha­res 2x Long NVDA Daily ETF , which seeks to deliver twice the daily return of the chipmaker’s shares and is not included in Morningsta­r’s data on AIthemed funds, doubled to $2 billion earlier this month. Those flows have followed the nearly 80% climb in Nvidia’s shares so far this year, after the company’s shares tripled in the year 2023.

Speedier chip

At its developer conference on Monday, the company unveiled the Blackwell B200, an AI chip it says is up to 30 times speedier than its previous chip.

Smaller ETFs have also prospered. Assets in the Themes Generative Artificial Intelligen­ce ETF tripled to about $20 million from $7.5 million earlier this month, said Taylor Krystkowia­k, investment strategist at Themes ETFs.

Seven of the 18 diversified AIrelated ETFs that Morningsta­r tracks have launched within the last three years. An eighth was redesigned to target AI more directly.

The funds have had collective inflows of $2.68 billion in the last 12 months, according to Morningsta­r. That is almost double the inflows into global real estate ETFs, the firm said.

Fuelling bubble

Whether investor excitement about the possibilit­ies of AI is fuelling a bubble or just contributi­ng to a strong bull run in stocks is unclear.

The S&P 500 is up nearly 8% yeartodate, fuelled in part by rallies in AI beneficiaries such as Nvidia and Microsoft , following a 24% gain last year.

The AI fervour has also driven parabolic moves in the shares of other companies, including a more than 250% gain in Super Micro Computer, which joined the S&P 500 this week.

Limiting exposure

Some investors appear to be limiting their exposure to Nvidia and other stocks that have notched big moves. ETF issuer Global X found that its Global X Artificial Intelligen­ce and Technology ETF, which caps Nvidia exposure to 3%, has tripled in size over the last three months.

By comparison, its Robotics and Artificial Intelligen­ce ETF, which has more than 20% of its assets invested in the chipmaker, grew by 20%.

Others are focused on finding new areas that will benefit from AI, said Rene Reyna, head of thematic ETF strategy at Invesco and manager of the Invesco AI and Next Gen Software ETF.

‘Changing landscape’

“The conversati­ons we have with investors don’t focus on finding the next Nvidia, but more on recognisin­g that these technologi­es are changing the landscape and finding ways to get exposure to some of this growth,” he said.

Analysts at Morgan Stanley last week published a list of 480 individual stocks that may benefit from AI.

Less obvious beneficiaries included Walmart and Caterpilla­r. The bank also recommende­d exploring “less crowded subthemes” like the integratio­n of AI and smartphone­s.

ETFs are also scrambling to provide offerings for every taste.

Robo Global Robotics & Automation ETF supplement­s its Nvidia exposure with holdings in stocks some expect to benefit from AI technology, like Intuitive Surgical.

The Roundhill Generative AI & Technology ETF is focusing on companies it expects to be beneficiaries of generative AI, including Salesforce.com and Marvell Technology.

The exuberance surroundin­g AI funds echoes previous waves of investor excitement for other technologi­es viewed transforma­tive

Sees outflows

Still, at least one flavour of AIthemed ETF has failed to win fans. The WisdomTree US AI Enhanced Value ETF, which uses AI to select its portfolio, has seen outflows of $48.26 million in the last 12 months and lags the S&P 500.

One possible reason the fund and others in its category have underperfo­rmed: many of them lack a position in Nvidia and other AIrelated stocks.

 ?? REUTERS ?? In the chips: Nvidia’s Blackwell B200 AI chip is 30 times speedier than its previous chip.
REUTERS In the chips: Nvidia’s Blackwell B200 AI chip is 30 times speedier than its previous chip.
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