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The Global X AI & Technology ETF gained over 37% in the past year with broad exposure to international AI firms including Samsung and SK Hynix.
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The Dan Ives Wedbush AI Revolution ETF returned nearly 29% over the past year.
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Both AI-focused ETFs outperformed the S&P 500 in 2025.
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The S&P 500 had another fantastic year, even though no Santa Claus rally came to town to power a year-end bounce. While the AI trade picked up the turbulence into year’s end, odds are that AI-heavy portfolios had an edge over the broad market. And in this piece, we’ll go over a trio of AI-focused tech ETFs that outperformed the S&P last year and could make for a great addition to the portfolios that don’t have quite enough exposure to the AI revolution.
While AI bubble concerns might steer you away from more AI exposure, I do think that a strong showing by the likes of Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), as well as the rise of agentic AI, could help spark more strength in the group of innovators as they look for guidance after a quarter of relative consolidation. In short, the AI trade might be a bit on the expensive side, but a bubble and its bust are not guaranteed, even with smart folks, like Michael Burry, pointing to an AI bubble that could pop at some point.
Either way, here are the S&P-topping AI ETFs that might have another shot at pulling off another market beater in 2026, should the AI trade find a way to regain speed, even as it takes more than an outstanding quarter to impress investors.
First up, we have the Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF (NASDAQ:AIQ), which is one of the most popular AI ETFs on the market. Over the past year, shares gained more than 37%. And while the final quarter of 2025 got increasingly choppy, it appears the high-growth ETF looks ready to break out and pick up where it left off before shares briefly fell into correction territory back in November.
The ETF isn’t just looking to bet on the frontier AI names in the U.S.; it seeks to take a broad “unconstrained” approach to investing in the world’s best AI innovators. In my view, access to AI outside of the U.S. might be the edge the AI ETF has over the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 or most other traditional U.S.-focused tech ETFs.
Underneath the hood, the ETF has significant exposure to U.S. AI names, including Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL). However, what’s more interesting is that it also has a good amount of exposure to South Korea’s Samsung and SK Hynix, two names that have exploded higher in the past year, thanks in part to the memory supercycle.


