The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (NASDAQ:IGV) closed Friday at $88.20, down 16.5% year to date and 18.9% over the past year, despite the broader AI trade still drawing capital. IGV’s slide accelerated this month after top holding Oracle posted its worst week since the 2001 dot-com bust, dropping 19.4% in five sessions on debt and free-cash-flow concerns. With a 0.39% expense ratio, IGV remains the cleanest single-ticker proxy for U.S. software, but the next 12 months hinge on two specific signals.
The Fund’s Current Position
IGV tracks the S&P North American Expanded Technology Software Index and is market-cap-weighted, which concentrates exposure in the AI-software winners that have driven both its prior run and its current drawdown. The top six holdings span the full valuation spectrum: Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT | MSFT Price Prediction) at a 22 P/E, Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) at a 25 P/E, Palantir at 127, and Palo Alto Networks at 267. That dispersion is the whole story: when the AI narrative compresses, the high multiples take the elevator down while the cheaper names cushion only so much.
Macro Signal: The 10-Year Treasury Yield
The single most important macro factor for IGV over the next year is the 10-year Treasury yield, currently at 4.40% and sitting in the 79th percentile of its 12-month range. Software multiples are the most duration-sensitive in the equity market because cash flows skew far into the future. The yield’s spike to 4.67% on May 19 coincided with IGV’s worst month of the year. The Fed has held the upper bound at 3.75% since December 2025, meaning the long end is doing the policy tightening that the Fed has paused.
Watch the daily FRED series DGS10. A sustained break above 4.50% would likely pressure the names with no earnings cushion: Adobe, Palantir, and Palo Alto. A move back below 4.15%, the early-March low, would do the opposite. Check it weekly, and around every BLS jobs report and CPI release, since those prints drive most of the curve’s repricing.
Fund-Specific Signal: AI Capex Credibility
The fund-specific factor that matters most is whether the hyperscaler AI capex cycle remains self-funding. Oracle alone spent $55.7 billion in TTM capex against negative $23.7 billion in free cash flow and $130 billion in debt. Microsoft’s quarterly capex hit a multi-billion-dollar sum, up sharply year over year, with an a fast-scaling AI run rate. That is the bull case. The bear case showed up in Oracle’s stock this month: when investors question the financing math, the multiple resets fast.
Monitor two specific items. First, hyperscaler commercial RPO disclosures each quarter, Microsoft’s commercial RPO was reported as a record figure last quarter, and any sequential deceleration signals demand cooling before revenue prints. Second, free-cash-flow guidance on the next earnings calls. Intuit and Adobe (NASDAQ:ADBE) trade at 9 and 8 forward P/Es respectively, which gives IGV some ballast, but the top-heavy weighting means Oracle and Microsoft set the tone.
What This Means Going Forward
If the 10-year yield holds below 4.50% and the September-quarter earnings season shows hyperscaler RPO growth holding above 80%, IGV’s drawdown likely marks a multiple reset rather than a structural break. The single most actionable trigger is Oracle’s Q1 FY27 report, the company guided 27% to 29% revenue growth, and any miss would test whether the AI-software bid has truly stabilized.
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