equities  |  november 20, 2024

Discover the possibilities of an active technology ETF

An active approach to technology exchange-traded funds offers flexibility and broadened exposure.

 

Key Insights

  • Artificial intelligence, e-commerce, and digital payments are areas of increased opportunity within the global technology sector.

  • Passive technology exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are limited by market concentration within the sector, while active and thematic funds offer greater flexibility.

  • The T. Rowe Price Technology ETF (TTEQ) provides strategic exposure to technology‑enabled companies with an active approach designed to outperform its benchmark index.

Christopher Murphy, CIMA®

Head of ETF Specialists

Jennifer O’Hara Martin

Global Equity Portfolio Specialist

Dominic Rizzo, CFA®

Portfolio Manager

Artifical intelligence (AI) has the potential to become the most significant productivity enhancer for the global economy since electricity. It is estimated that electricity contributed a 30.6% increase in labor productivity for global gross domestic product over 32 years1 compared with a hypothetical baseline where this technological advancement never happened.2 AI can potentially surpass that.

Historically, productivity-enhancing technologies are often associated with speculative stock market bubbles. Investors must navigate any potential speculative bubbles responsibly by capturing the upside and mitigating the downside. Active management can make a big difference in these situations.

It’s tempting to compare this infrastructure cycle with the telecom bubble of the late 1990s, but there are many meaningful distinctions. Most notably, this current cycle is funded by the most profitable companies in history—the hyperscalers. These companies operate as natural monopolies, and only at their scale has it even been possible to invent, develop, and finance the significant changes driven by AI. The paradox is that while AI was only possible due to the hyperscalers’ enormous power and scale, AI also initiates the very technology transition that could potentially disrupt the existing businesses of these natural monopolies. This implies that the infrastructure investments are both offensive and defensive and could continue longer than the market expects.

So far, the majority of economics associated with this infrastructure boom have accrued to the digital semiconductor industry. However, there has also been a noticeable boost in revenue growth for digital advertising and software companies due to this spending. As time progresses, AI applications will likely continue to evolve and revolutionize various domains within the expansive field of technology.

We are at the “end of the beginning” of the current AI investment cycle, and we have entered the period of deceleration, as year‑over‑year growth in capital expenditures from the hyperscalers has likely peaked. This does not mean these companies aren’t growing rapidly from here; rather, they’re just growing at a slower pace than the incredible rate they were a few quarters ago.

Additional growth areas include e-commerce and digital payments

While past the phase of fastest growth for the industry, there are still many years ahead for this AI megatrend; we are at the “end of the beginning” and not yet at the “beginning of the end.” The AI chip market is growing from USD 45 billion in 2023 to USD 400 billion in 2027 and USD 500 billion in 2028.3 With a strong investment framework and research process, T. Rowe Price can adapt to this evolving AI landscape and take advantage of returns throughout all phases of the investment cycle. This is where active management matters.

Additional areas of opportunity include:

  • Global e-commerce
    This industry is growing as online retail gains more market share from offline retail. This trend is global, and T. Rowe Price’s extensive equity research team helps identify linchpin companies worldwide that will benefit from it.

  • Digital payments
    These companies bring a software approach to financial services, resulting in lower costs and higher profitability and opening parts of the global payments industry that were previously inaccessible due to high costs.

There are technology-enabled companies all around the globe that benefit from these two megatrends, including Amazon, Visa, Adyen, Shopify, Alibaba, Sea, PDD Holdings, Mercado Libre, Coinbase, and NU Holdings.

Shifts in the passive ETF landscape bring more opportunity for active investors

The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) underwent several changes in 2018, including renaming the telecommunications services sector to communication services. This shift reclassified companies such as Meta and Alphabet from the information technology (IT) sector into this new category. This had several implications:

  • Confusion among investors who want to allocate to “technology stocks.”

  • Concentration issues in the IT sector, as nearly half of the index is now dominated by just three companies: Apple, Microsoft, and NVIDIA. Pure IT exchange-traded funds (ETFs)—such as the Technology Select Sector SPDR® Fund, the Vanguard Information Technology Index Fund, and the iShares Global Tech ETF, must now face this incredible concentration problem. (Figure 1)

  • Active and thematic ETFs do not follow traditional GICS sector classifications.

  • While most technology-oriented ETF assets are still in the IT sector, new categories such as thematic disruptive tech and thematic multi-sector capture a broader technology landscape and include many active ETFs. (Figure 2)

  • These newer ETF categories give investors greater flexibility to choose investments that better suit their views on “technology” stocks.

Passive tech ETFs face extreme market concentration

(Fig. 1) Within the IT sector, leading portfolios are dominated by three companies

Bar chart to illustrate concentration within the information technology sector by three stocks.

As of September 30, 2024.
VGT is the Vanguard Information Technology Index Fund. IXN is the iShares Global Tech ETF by BlackRock. XLK is the Technology Select Sector SPDR® Fund by State Street Global Advisors. The three funds listed are the largest passive technology portfolios traded in the United States, by assets under management, tagged by VettaFi’s ETF Database. Please refer to the Additional Disclosure for more information. Due to rounding, percentages may not add up precisely to the totals provided.
Source: FactSet. Percentages reflect percent of equity.

The majority of technology ETF assets and products are in the IT sector category

(Fig. 2) Newer categories encompass a wider landscape of ETFs but have fewer assets

Column and scatter chart to display that most exchange-traded fund (ETF) assets are in sector funds, but there is also activity in smaller categories.

As of September 30, 2024.
Source: ETF Action.
A sector ETF invests specifically in the stocks within a particular industry; a Sector Technology ETF may track tech stocks. Thematic ETFs focus on specific themes. Within this category, a disruptive technology fund can invest in securities that cover trends and innovations, namely those with the potential to change an existing industry or service, or to create a new one. Thematic multi-sector funds invest in a mix of sectors.

Are the “Qs” investing in what you think they are?

For many years, the Invesco QQQ ETF Trust (ticker: QQQ) has been strongly associated with technology stocks. With nearly USD 300 billion of assets under management (AUM) at 20 basis points,4 it is the standard against which all technology investments, public and private, are measured. However, despite its significant emphasis on technology, it is not a technology ETF.

QQQ mirrors the performance of the Nasdaq-100 Index®, which includes 100 of the largest nonfinancial firms listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market. Consumer staples, health care, industrials, materials, utilities, and energy compose approximately 20% of the index.4 (Figure 3) At the individual stock level, companies such as Costco, T-Mobile, PepsiCo, and Linde may be among the top 20 holdings—making up about 8% of the index. Investors looking for pure exposure to technology companies may want to consider whether the Qs can consistently deliver this over time.

The portfolio of QQQ, widely considered a tech ETF, includes non‑tech sectors

(Fig. 3) Investors seeking technology exposure should evaluate a fund’s sector holdings; TTEQ shows narrower concentration.

Pie chart comparison between a leading tech exchange-traded fund and TTEQ’s sector concentration, indicating the importance of evaluating holdings.

As of October 31, 2024.
Sources: Invesco.com, Lens. QQQ is the largest technology ETF traded in the United States, by assets under management, tagged by VettaFi’s ETF Database.

A disciplined, strategic approach can identify critical opportunities

Our fundamentally driven investment strategy sets the T. Rowe Price active Technology ETF (TTEQ) apart from passive alternatives. We can tactically recognize change, disruption, and extreme outcomes for companies, which we believe provides the opportunity for positive returns.

Our framework seeks companies that:

1. Sell mission-critical, linchpin technologies. These are technologies that make their users’ lives dramatically better.

2. Innovate in secular growth markets. We want to invest in companies that are gaining share in fast-growing end markets.

3. Have improving fundamentals. We look for revenue that is accelerating, operating margins that are expanding, or free cash flow conversion that is improving. We are focused on improving fundamentals over the next 12 to 18 months.

4. Have reasonable valuations. TTEQ is valuation-aware. We aim to avoid cheap, yet broken, technology stocks. However, we also aim to avoid overpaying for exceptional companies where the stock price cannot compound in line with its underlying growth because of its starting valuation.

Our investment framework, alongside the analysis, insights, and industry expertise of T. Rowe Price’s exceptional team of in‑house analysts covering technology firms worldwide, results in a portfolio distinctively poised to identify standout tech companies with improving fundamentals.

Advantages of the T. Rowe Price Technology ETF

  • Portfolio design. Technology‑related companies make up an increasing share of diversified market cap‑weighted benchmarks. TTEQ’s strategic design brings exposure to one of the largest and fastest‑growing subsectors across the globe.

  • Broadened industry exposure. TTEQ can invest in enduring technology‑enabled companies, beyond those just classified in core “information technology,” including those in consumer discretionary, communication services, or financial services.

  • Broadened geography exposure. TTEQ will primarily invest in U.S. companies, but it will also have exposure across both developed and emerging markets. Many investors often overlook the importance of mission-critical, linchpin international companies. We believe the growth potential of technology markets outside the U.S. is frequently underestimated, with numerous innovative companies in Latin America, Europe, and Asia completely transforming their regional economies. Our global research capabilities give us a differentiated edge in accessing this broader set of alpha opportunities.

  • Concentrated, yet diversified. Given the immense size of the mega-cap companies in most technology benchmarks today, investors may find themselves overly concentrated in these select few names. TTEQ generally aims to limit individual position sizes to 10% or less and intends to manage a portfolio comprising 40 to 50 stocks.

  • Framework-based approach. Passive investing is simply a rebalancing strategy, where the passive portfolio is adjusted to align with the underlying index at specific time intervals or based on rules regarding portfolio concentration. Conversely, TTEQ employs a framework-based strategy and is designed to outperform the index.

Call 1-800-225-5132 to request a prospectus or summary prospectus; each includes investment objectives, risks, fees, expenses, and other information you should read and consider carefully before investing.

1Sources: Crafts (2021), NBER, BEA, Haver, IMF, J.P. Morgan Private Bank. Data as of December 31, 2023.
2Sources: Crafts (2021), NBER, BEA. Data as of December 31, 2023.
3Sources: AI chip market—AMD Data Center and AI Technology Premier; software forecast—William Blair Research based on data from IDC; Worldwide Semiannual Artificial Intelligence Tracker, 2H21. There is no guarantee that any forecasts made will come to pass.
4Source: Invesco, as of September 30, 2024. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Additional Disclosure

CFA® and Chartered Financial Analyst® are registered trademarks owned by CFA Institute.

VGT, the Vanguard Information Technology Fund, tracks an index of stocks of large, medium-size, and small U.S. companies in the information technology sector, as classified under the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS). This GICS sector is made up of companies in the following three general areas: internet services and infrastructure companies, including data centers and cloud networking and storage infrastructure; companies that provide information technology consulting and services, technology hardware and equipment, including manufacturers and distributors of communications equipment, computers and peripherals, electronic equipment, and related instruments; and semiconductors and semiconductor equipment manufacturers.

IXN, the iShares Global Tech ETF, has exposure to electronics, computer software and hardware, and informational technology companies. It has targeted access to technology stocks from around the world.

XLK, the Technology Sector SPDR® fund, is composed of companies primarily involved in such industries as software and service, IT consulting services, semiconductor equipment, computer and peripherals.

Important Information

This material is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended to be investment advice or a recommendation to take any particular investment action.

The views contained herein are those of the authors as of October 2024 and are subject to change without notice; these views may differ from those of other T. Rowe Price associates.

This information is not intended to reflect a current or past recommendation concerning investments, investment strategies, or account types, advice of any kind, or a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any securities or investment services. The opinions and commentary provided do not take into account the investment objectives or financial situation of any particular investor or class of investor. Please consider your own circumstances before making an investment decision.

The specific securities identified and described are for informational purposes only and do not represent recommendations.

ETFs are bought and sold at market prices, not NAV. Investors generally incur the cost of the spread between the prices at which shares are bought and sold. Buying and selling shares may result in brokerage commissions which will reduce returns.

Information contained herein is based upon sources we consider to be reliable; we do not, however, guarantee its accuracy.

Risk Considerations: Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. All investments are subject to market risk, including the possible loss of principal. All charts and tables are shown for illustrative purposes only. Technology companies: A fund that focuses its investments in specific industries or sectors is more susceptible to adverse developments affecting those industries and sectors than a more broadly diversified fund. International investing: Non-U.S. securities tend to be more volatile and have lower overall liquidity than investments in U.S. securities and may lose value because of adverse local, political, social, or economic developments overseas, or due to changes in the exchange rates between foreign currencies and the U.S. dollar. Emerging markets: Investments in emerging market countries are subject to greater risk and overall volatility than investments in the U.S. and other developed markets.

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Please see below for the top ten holdings of the T. Rowe Price Technology Fund (TTEQ), as of October 31, 2024.

top ten holdings of the T. Rowe Price Technology Fund (TTEQ), as of October 31, 2024.
Security Name Ticker TTEQ Wt %
NVIDIA CORP NVDA US 10.5
APPLE INC AAPL US 9.4
MICROSOFT CORP MSFT US 9.0
AMAZON.COM INC AMZN US 5.8
TAIWAN SEMICONDUCTOR-SP ADR TSM US 5.4
META PLATFORMS INC-CLASS A META US 5.3
ALPHABET (COMBINED) GOOG 3.1
ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES AMD US 3.0
TENCENT HOLDINGS LTD 700 HK 2.8
VISA INC-CLASS A SHARES V US 2.6
 

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