The semiconductor landscape in early 2026 has shifted from a “rising tide lifts all boats” mania to a surgical market where efficiency and valuation finally matter again.
For years, the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) has been the retail investors’ darling due to its heavy concentration in “AI kings” like Nvidia.
However, the First Trust Nasdaq Semiconductor ETF (FTXL) is stealing the spotlight this quarter.
As of March 25, FTXL is up an impressive 18% year-to-date, handily “outperforming” its market-cap-weighted peers.
This divergence comes as investors grow weary of “over-concentrated” portfolios, looking instead toward FTXL’s unique methodology that prioritises fundamental strength over simple size; a move that’s paying off handsomely amidst a volatile March.
What’s helping FTXL fund outperform peers in 2026?
The primary reason for FTXL’s outperformance this year is its underlying index, the Nasdaq US Smart Semiconductor Index.
Unlike conventional funds that allocate the largest slice of the pie to the biggest companies, FTXL utilises a “factor-weighted” approach; it ranks firms based on three key metrics – volatility, value, and growth.
In the current environment, where mega-cap AI stocks are trading at eye-watering multiples, First Trust’s tilt toward “value” is acting as a major tailwind.
By limiting allocation to overextended names and increasing exposure to ones offering robust cash flow and reasonable price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios, FTXL is finding success in avoiding the sharp pullbacks seen in momentum-heavy portfolios.
In short, this “smart beta” strategy is helping First Trust capture the AI upside without the painful downside of a concentrated bubble.
FTXL offers diversified exposure to AI beyond heavyweights
Another secret to FTXL’s success this year is its exposure to the “secondary AI wave” – the hardware and memory providers that often sit in the shadow of the primary GPU designers.
While market-cap funds are often essentially a bet on one or two dominant players, First Trust ETF offers a more balanced distribution across the entire silicon ecosystem.
This includes exposure to power management chips, specialised analogue semiconductors, and high-bandwidth memory leaders like Micron.
As the market evolves, investors are pivoting toward names that “enable” infrastructure – not ones that design the logic only.
FTXL’s equal-weighted approach ensures that a breakthrough in memory or a sizable military drone contract for a mid-cap firm actually moves the needle for shareholders.
Bottom line: a strategic shift for the remainder of 2026
As we move deeper into 2026, the era of “easy money” in the semiconductor space appears to be transitioning into a “stock-picker’s market.”
FTXL’s performance suggests that the mechanical advantages of market-cap weighting are hit with diminishing returns once valuations become stretched.
For investors looking to maintain exposure to the indispensable semiconductor sector while mitigating the concentration risk of a few tech giants, FTXL offers a compelling, data-driven alternative.
Its focus on fundamental health and multi-factor stability makes it an ideal vehicle for navigating the current tech and geopolitical shifts.
While the tech sector may face more wobbles, the structural design of FTXL provides a disciplined framework that is clearly winning the race for alpha in 2026.
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