The One Hyperscaler Signal That Will Make or Break ARTY in 2026

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By Marc Guberti Published

Quick Read

  • ARTY doubled in 12 months by betting entirely on AI suppliers, but that same purity strips out any hedge if hyperscaler capex softens.

  • NVDA targets 75% gross margin and AVGO runs at 68% EBITDA. If both see simultaneous compression in the same quarter, it signals that AI pricing power is cracking.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and iShares Future AI & Tech ETF didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

The One Hyperscaler Signal That Will Make or Break ARTY in 2026

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The ARTY ETF has nearly doubled in the past year, with shares up 102% over the trailing twelve months and 55% year to date through late May. That run reflects a portfolio built almost entirely around the AI infrastructure stack: GPUs, custom silicon, high-bandwidth memory, optics, cloud capacity, and datacenter power. ARTY closed last week near $75 with roughly $2.1 billion in net assets, and the question for holders now is where AI capex bends first.

What ARTY Actually Owns

ARTY holds 71 positions with the top names weighted between roughly 2.7% and 5%. Four of the article’s named tickers anchor the portfolio: Marvell Technology (NASDAQ:MRVL | MRVL Price Prediction) at 5%, Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) at 4.7%, NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) at 4.7%, and Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) at 4.6%, with Broadcom at 4.3% and Micron at 4.1% rounding out the core. Together those six are 27% of net assets, with TSMC, CoreWeave, SK hynix, Arista, Constellation Energy, and Schneider Electric filling out an unmistakable picks-and-shovels tilt.

The Macro Signal That Drives Everything: Hyperscaler Capex Guides

The single macro factor with the most leverage on ARTY over the next twelve months is the quarterly capex guide from the four hyperscalers plus Oracle. Every top holding sells into that budget. When Microsoft, Meta, Alphabet, and Amazon publish their next quarterly capex numbers and forward language, that is the data point to mark.

What to watch concretely: any hyperscaler reducing 2027 capex guidance versus the prior call. The transmission to ARTY is direct. Broadcom’s CEO is targeting over $100 billion in AI sales by 2027, Oracle’s $553 billion RPO is backed by hyperscaler and AI-lab prepayments, and Micron’s order books reportedly stretch into 2027. Where to find it: each company’s investor relations 8-K and prepared remarks, released quarterly. The historical precedent is 2022, when one quarter of cloud capex digestion took semis down sharply before the AI cycle restarted. A single soft guide from two hyperscalers would compress multiples across most of ARTY’s book at once.

The Fund-Specific Factor: Pure Supplier Exposure With No Hyperscaler Buffer

ARTY’s defining structural choice is that it owns the sellers of AI compute. Microsoft sits at just around 2.5%, and there is no Meta, Alphabet, or Amazon in the top holdings at all. Compare that to a Nasdaq 100 fund where those four names dominate. ARTY’s upside in this cycle has come from that purity, but it also strips out the natural hedge.

The fund-specific signal to monitor is gross-margin direction at the top anchor holdings. NVIDIA is guiding 75% non-GAAP gross margin for Q2, Broadcom is running at a 68% adjusted EBITDA margin, and Micron’s Cloud Memory unit posted a 66% gross margin. Those margins are what justify the fund’s valuation. Track them in each 8-K release. If two of the top holdings guide margins down sequentially in the same quarter, that signals AI-chip pricing power is easing, and ARTY’s NAV would feel it before the broader Nasdaq does. Also worth checking each NPORT filing for any drift toward hyperscaler customers, which would tell you the manager is hedging the supplier bet.

What Matters Over the Next Year

The 10-year Treasury near 4.5% sits in the 91st percentile of its trailing year, with the Fed parked at 3.75% since December. That is the valuation backdrop. The two signals that should change how you hold ARTY: a hyperscaler capex cut in the next earnings cycle, and gross-margin compression at two or more of the fund’s top semiconductor and cloud anchors in the same quarter. Either one would be the first crack.

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About the Author Marc Guberti →

Marc Guberti is a personal finance writer who has written for US News & World Report, Business Insider, Newsweek and other publications. He also hosts the Breakthrough Success Podcast which teaches listeners how to use content marketing to grow their businesses.

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