Best SEMI AI ETF: Which one had a 1,000%+ Total Return?

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NVDA has been a growth machine, but has it reached a pause? In this video I talk about the top tech and semiconductor ETFs that are passively managed and weighted against different indexes. These choices can both fuel growth in a portfolio, and perhaps, help manage concentration risk of holding just one stock. Review includes: SMH, SOXX, XLK & FTEC
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I have smh, but now plan to add soxx. Thanks for the video

johnl
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Thank you for the video!
We have $SMH on fractional shares & drip for all accounts for the past 6yrs. Cheers!

PJAYDUB
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The only ETF i own is QQQ. From the data i found NVDA makes up 8.7%. It is obviously less than the sector focused ETFs but worth thinking about if you already hold it.

I also hold some NVDA outright and the biggest mistake i have made over the past few years is to sell to lock in gains and diversify. If i still had all my original shares i would be doing well 😂. As it is, with the shares i have left i am buying protective puts for the inevitable crash. I don't plan on selling anymore until i need to exercise my options.

mikesurel
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ThanX As always... A great video....!!! I hold XLK, SMH, QQQM, and I hold I am plugging and chugging Always appreciate your videos and Please be well....

loakland
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Thanks, Dream.
SMH and FTEC give me something to think about

fractalclues
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I prefer SOXQ, .same holdings as SOXX, almost half the expense ratrio.

camai
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I sold my NVDA shares earlier in the year, and want to get back into the chip market. But my 336 shares of MSFT make many of the tech ETFs a bit redundant. Your FTEC/SOXX/SMH investing strategy looks like a safe but profitable strategy! I like it 👌

Duke_of_Prunes
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Hey Dream Gurl! A Techie talking technology has always been my dream! Can you take a look at the Yieldmax family of ETFs in a future video please? Loved your strategy video! Cheers!

craigmetcalfe
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SMH has my interest because it's more focused on the chip makers themselves, they will be the biggest winners long term, imo, and the data seems to support that. Now, what ETFs are there that focus on the raw materials suppliers and chip making equipment suppliers? I also have to wonder about potential investments in utility companies in the areas where all these types of factories are at. How would one go about easily finding that information?

uinmlcs