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The Magnificent Seven question facing investors in 2026 is how to own these names. Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (NYSEARCA:MAGS) answers with one ticker holding all seven mega caps at equal weight, rebalanced quarterly so no single name dominates. MAGS gathered roughly $4.7 billion in assets because retail investors wanted the basket without picking which AI... MAGS Bundles the Magnificent Seven Into One Ticker, And That Concentration Cuts Both Ways

Roundhill Magnificent Seven Covered Call ETF (MAGY) is a covered call ETF that primarily holds MAGS while writing short-term call options on the underlying ETF. The fund distributes payouts weekly. MAGY underperformed its core holding MAGS over the past year, with fund's option-writing book generating net losses during FY25, while investors additionally incurring additional expense drags. A large portion of FY25 distributions came through return of capital, raising concerns regarding NAV sustainability and distribution quality, while also undermining income predictability.

The tech stock rally may have taken a breather this week, but analysts expect that break means Big Tech has more room to run.

Concentrated bets on a handful of mega-cap technology names drove most of the S&P 500's returns over the past three years, and Roundhill built MAGS to deliver that exposure in one ticker without forcing investors to guess which name will lead next.

The market has been bullish on tech stocks recently, and buying into the rally could add significant risk to your portfolio.

Rick Ducat wraps up a busy earnings week with a look at the Roundhill Magnificent 7 ETF (MAGS). Breaking down the technical patterns on the chart, he highlights the V shaped recovery taking place in April.

Stocks are aloft—and on the climb.

The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF has delivered average annual returns of 34.27% for the past three years. This technology stock ETF lets you own the entire Magnificent Seven -- a who's who of prominent tech companies, including Nvidia and Alphabet.

Oil shock and Iran war reshaped Q1, sending some leveraged energy ETFs soaring.

Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (NYSEARCA:MAGS) is down nearly 16% year-to-date, a sharper pullback than the Nasdaq 100's 8% decline over the same period.

The technology sector has been leading the market higher for several years. Investors have a bad habit of pushing investment themes to extremes.

Tech earnings strength and rising estimates signal resilience, making tech ETFs attractive despite weak sentiment and geopolitical concerns.

The S&P 500 is down nearly 3% year-to-date, yet three widely held tech ETFs are quietly telling a different story.

RoundHill Magnificent Seven ETF is expensive, highly concentrated, and has a worrying investment approach. Vanguard Information and Technology ETF is cheap, diversified, and purposefully boring.

Slowing U.S. growth, rising oil prices and war risks are shaking markets. Here are key long-term ETF ideas to navigate volatility and build resilient portfolios.

Most investors who own the Magnificent Seven already own them, scattered across index funds, QQQ, and individual positions.

The Mag Seven ETF is lagging behind small-caps and equal-weight tech. It would be a mistake, though, to count out tech's heavyweights.

The Magnificent Seven stocks have returned 876% over the past 10 years. In comparison, the S&P 500 has only returned 235% over that same stretch.
