
News and disclosures filtered by period, publisher, and event group.
Select a headline to open the full news page in the app.
On the surface, the artificial intelligence corner of the stock market appears robust right now, with the benchmark S&P Kensho Global Artificial Intelligence Enablers Index up 49.9% for the year to date, as of the first week of June.

The top-performing non-leveraged ETFs of 2026 span a distinct blend of digital assets, next-generation semiconductor technology, and localized international equity plays. For advisors assessing portfolio allocations heading into the second half of the year, these performance figures highlight a sustained risk-on appetite among investors.

Tracking generative AI as a daily beat means watching dozens of funds slap the “AI” label on portfolios that look suspiciously like a Nasdaq-100 mirror.

AI software spending is surging, lifting prospects for ETFs like IGV as firms monetize cloud, security and enterprise AI tools.

Most capital chasing the generative AI theme has flowed into chips. Semiconductor funds have absorbed the bulk of inflows, and the price action shows it: the iShares Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ:SOXX | SOXX Price Prediction) is up 87% year to date.

Micron's trillion-dollar milestone is boosting tech ETFs as AI-driven memory demand fuels gains across semiconductor funds.

Sometimes it feels like it's Nvidia's world, and we are all just living in it. As we brace for the firm's latest earnings report coming Wednesday, we could say that Nvidia (NVDA) earnings — and more importantly, its forward guidance — have become much more than a par-for-the-course quarterly disclosure.

Some exchange-traded funds offer the safety of diversification at the expense of eye-popping returns. This year, returns are the story, especially at funds that hold big slugs of red-hot chip shares.

Looking for broad exposure to the Technology - Software segment of the equity market? You should consider the Invesco AI and Next Gen Software ETF (IGPT), a passively managed exchange traded fund launched on June 23, 2005.

Invesco AI and Next Gen Software ETF (IGPT) is rated Buy, positioned to benefit from accelerating AI adoption and next-gen software development. IGPT is heavily weighted toward platforms and technologies enabling AI, with major holdings like Alphabet, Broadcom, Intel, and Micron poised for growth. Significant capital deployments—$700B in 2026 and $820B in 2027—are expected to drive robust growth in semiconductors, data centers, and supporting infrastructure.

Quantum computing is no longer a physics experiment. Google's Willow chip, IBM's quantum roadmap expansion, and IonQ's commercial contracts have pushed the technology from research labs toward real enterprise applications.

Quantum computing ETFs were the hottest names in town for months, but this is no longer the case.

Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF (NYSEARCA:AIQ) tracks the Indxx Artificial Intelligence & Big Data Index, which targets companies positioned to benefit from AI development and implementation, including hardware providers.

IGV and other software ETFs could rally as easing US-Iran tensions lift supply chains, revive spending, and position tech for a rebound in April.

Three AI-focused ETFs are sitting in very different positions heading into spring 2026.

Invesco AI and Next Gen Software ETF (NYSEARCA:IGPT - Get Free Report) was the target of a significant increase in short interest in the month of February. As of February 27th, there was short interest totaling 24,932 shares, an increase of 137.1% from the February 12th total of 10,516 shares. Based on an average trading
