You know what's interesting? Everyone's talking about buying AI stocks in 2026, but most people are approaching it completely wrong. They're chasing companies with 'AI' literally in the name when the real money is actually sitting in a different sector entirely.



Here's what I've been noticing: the semiconductor space is where the actual infrastructure of AI is being built. Think about it - you can't run any AI model without chips. And right now, there's this massive buildout happening across hyperscalers and tech giants who are pouring insane amounts of capital into AI infrastructure. That's the real story.

I got pretty bullish on the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (ticker SMH) a couple months back, and honestly, the numbers speak for themselves. Over the past year through mid-February, this fund returned 62.6% - that's nearly four times what the S&P 500 delivered at 15.9%. But what really caught my attention is the longer-term picture. Over five years, we're talking 243% returns. Over a decade? 1,860%. That's not luck - that's structural positioning in the right place.

Why semiconductors over individual AI stocks? Well, volatility is real in this space. Today's winners can easily become tomorrow's losers when tech moves this fast. An AI ETF structure actually solves that problem because you're not betting on one company's execution - you're diversifying across the entire chip ecosystem. The fund holds 25 semiconductor companies, and it's been around since 2011, so it's got actual track record unlike some of these newer AI-focused funds that just popped up.

Looking at the top holdings, you've got Nvidia obviously dominating at nearly 19% of the portfolio with a $4.6 trillion market cap. But then you've got the entire supply chain represented - TSMC handling foundry work, ASML and Lam Research making the equipment that manufactures chips, companies like Broadcom and Micron handling different parts of the value chain. That diversification is exactly why this structure works.

The expense ratio sits at 0.35%, which is pretty reasonable for a sector-specific fund. And here's the kicker - all those hyperscalers have already signaled they're ramping up AI spending even more in 2026. That means the chipmakers and equipment manufacturers are still positioned to capture the most direct benefit from this AI revolution.

The semiconductor ETF approach lets you ride the AI infrastructure wave without the individual stock risk. It's why I keep coming back to this one when people ask me about playing the AI trend. The hardware buildout isn't slowing down anytime soon.
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