XNTK Has Crushed QQQ by Six Points in 2026 and the Reason Is Hidden in How Each Fund Decides Which Stocks Matter

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By Austin Smith Published
XNTK Has Crushed QQQ by Six Points in 2026 and the Reason Is Hidden in How Each Fund Decides Which Stocks Matter

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If you want exposure to U.S. technology through a single ticker, the default answer for most investors is Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ | QQQ Price Prediction), the most recognized tech-tilted ETF in the world. The less obvious choice, SPDR NYSE Technology ETF (NYSEARCA:XNTK), has quietly outpaced it by roughly six percentage points so far in 2026. The funds look interchangeable on a marketing page. They are betting on very different versions of the same trade.

What Each Fund Is Actually Betting On

QQQ tracks the Nasdaq-100, a market-cap-weighted index of the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on the Nasdaq. That construction is an implicit bet that the biggest names keep getting bigger. Apple, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, and Tesla dominate the weight, and non-tech names like Costco and PepsiCo ride along because the index filters by exchange, not by sector.

XNTK tracks the NYSE Technology Index, a modified equal-dollar-weighted basket of roughly 35 leading U.S.-listed tech companies. Equal-weighting strips power from the megacaps and hands real influence to mid-cap names that QQQ barely registers. The bet is that broader tech participation, not Magnificent 7 dominance, drives the next leg of returns.

Where the Difference Shows Up

The year-to-date gap is the cleanest evidence. From December 31, 2025 through May 14, 2026, QQQ rose 17.17%, while XNTK climbed 23.63% over the same window. Over the trailing year the spread widened further: XNTK gained 55.87% against QQQ’s 38.77%. When the rally broadens past the megacap leadership of 2023 and 2024, equal-weighting wins. The same mechanic worked against XNTK during the 2022 rate shock, when concentrated megacap exposure cushioned QQQ on the way down once the largest balance sheets were rewarded for quality.

The Practical Comparison

Factor QQQ XNTK
Expense ratio 0.18% 0.35%
Net assets $385.27 billion Small, niche
Holdings ~100, cap-weighted ~35, equal-weighted
Sector purity Tech-heavy, not pure Pure technology
YTD 2026 return 17.17% 23.63%

QQQ is cheaper, deeper, and tradeable in size. XNTK’s higher fee is the price of stripping out non-tech ballast and giving smaller tech names a real seat at the table.

The Verdict

For investors who want one core tech holding and believe megacap dominance continues, QQQ remains the right tool. For investors who think the AI capex cycle, semiconductors, and mid-cap software names will lead from here, XNTK is the sharper instrument and 2026 is showing why. The calculus flips the moment megacap earnings reaccelerate faster than the rest of tech. Until then, the equal-weighted basket has the wind.

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About the Author Austin Smith →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience in the markets. He spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched new brands in the personal finance and real estate investing space.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. Today he writes for 24/7 Wall St and covers equities, REITs, and ETFs for readers. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast.

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about me here.

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