QQQ

Why the QQQ ETF Has Crushed the Competition in 2015

QQQ Total Return Price Chart
QQQ Total Return Price Chart

QQQ Total Return Price data by YCharts .

Parsing the Cubes

The QQQ ETF, whose shares are sometimes referred to as the Cubes to reflect the three Qs in its ticker, tracks the Nasdaq 100 index. As a result, the ETF holds the 100 Nasdaq stocks that make up that index, giving investors broad diversification that represents the makeup of the Nasdaq stock exchange.

However, the diversification that the QQQ ETF provides doesn't come close to what the SPDR S&P or SPDR Dow ETFs give. That's because the Nasdaq exchange is heavily weighted toward the technology industry, with tech companies having initially sought out listing on the computer-driven Nasdaq as an alternative to the more staid New York Stock Exchange. When you look at the QQQ ETF, you'll see that more than 55% of its value is in technology stocks. Consumer and healthcare stocks make up nearly all of the remainder. That leaves sectors like energy and utilities completely shut out of the index, while telecoms and industrials have only minimal representation.

The big winner for the QQQ

Moreover, the weightings in the Nasdaq 100 give some stocks more influence than others, and so you can generally trace the advance in the QQQ ETF to just a few stocks. The most important is Amazon.com , whose shares have doubled so far in 2015. With the stock now making up nearly 6% of the value of the QQQ ETF, that doubling corresponds to about three percentage points of the ETF's year-to-date gain.

Amazon's recent growth has centered on a couple of things. First, the company's Amazon Web Services has seen rapid growth, with revenue jumping 78% to top the $2 billion mark and making more than half a billion dollars in segment operating income. Second, Amazon continues to make progress in its core retail services division. Even though that area has never been strongly profitable, investors remain comfortable with the huge sales growth that Amazon has achieved there. Shareholders are convinced that in time, profits will come, and that will bolster the company's prospects even further.

Tech titans top the list

In addition, a couple of other big-name tech stocks have also made big contributions to the QQQ ETF's success. Google parent Alphabet has seen its shares jump about 40% so far this year, and combining the two share classes, Alphabet makes up about 9% of the ETF's assets. Doing the math, that means Alphabet has boosted the QQQ ETF's returns by two to three percentage points. In addition, Facebook has kept climbing into the stratosphere with a 35% rise, and that has added more than a full percentage point to the ETF's total return as well.

Both Alphabet and Facebook have done well lately. Alphabet's most recent quarterly report included 13% sales growth that sent adjusted earnings up by 19%, and Alphabet has successfully pushed toward boosting its mobile-search business to go beyond its historical dominance of desktop Internet search.

Meanwhile, Facebook has reached all-time highs, going above the $300 billion market-cap mark as sales rose more than 40% in its most recent quarter. With 1.55 billion active monthly users and more than 1 billion using Facebook every day, the social-media giant has boosted its advertising revenue and has effectively captured more than its share of the mobile market.

As long as the biggest tech companies in the Nasdaq 100 keep doing well, the PowerShares QQQ ETF will be in a strong position to benefit from that favorable trend. That could give the QQQ ETF not just the title over the SPDR S&P 500 and SPDR Dow ETFs for 2015, but also bode well for future years, too.

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The article Why the QQQ ETF Has Crushed the Competition in 2015 originally appeared on Fool.com.

Dan Caplinger owns shares of Alphabet (C shares). The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Alphabet (A and C shares), Amazon.com, and Facebook. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days . We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy .

Copyright © 1995 - 2015 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy .

The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.


The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

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