A.I. is still the most significant and disruptive technology driving the markets, as speculation over its true potential value has yet to be quantified.
Stay invested amid market chaos. AI disruption and geopolitics may drive volatility, but these ETFs offer long-term growth and stability.
Most investors who want AI exposure end up overweight in five or six mega-cap names.
The AI sector remains highly attractive, with top quant-rated stocks offering superior growth and fundamentals despite recent volatility and sharp pullbacks. Head of Quantitative Strategy at Seeking Alpha, Steven Cress, shares which AI stocks look best for this year.
AI is entering a long-term growth phase in 2026, with $527B in capex driving a broadening bull market in AI ETFs like AIQ.
AI stocks continued to deliver strong growth last year. The AIQ has more exposure to international stocks than most ETFs, 2026 is shaping up to be another strong year for the fund.
The S&P 500 had another fantastic year, even though no Santa Claus rally came to town to power a year-end bounce.
As the 2026 market landscape takes shape, artificial intelligence (AI) continues to serve as the primary catalyst for global equity performance. According to BlackRock's 2026 outlook, AI remains the “dominant theme” for the investment community, fueling a capital-intensive expansion that is fundamentally supporting corporate earnings and broader macroeconomic growth.
Some tech stocks will perform well thanks to the advent of AI -- and some won't. Figuring out which is which, however, isn't always easy for most investors.
The AI infrastructure buildout is accelerating across semiconductors, cloud computing, and software applications.
AI-fueled record Black Friday spending and soaring e-commerce traffic may lift AI-focused ETFs like IYW, AIQ, FDN, XT and BOTZ amid strong tech and online retail demand.
Three years after the launch of ChatGPT, we are at a crucial juncture when it comes to investing in innovation. On the one hand, given the billions being invested in infrastructure, there are fears about an AI bubble or investors getting over-enthusiastic relative to what is actually possible. On the other hand, the ecosystem is broadening with OpenAI signing deals with more companies, other than the Mag 7, while the U.S. government is committed to AI development.