The Race to Offer Compute Futures to Masses Has Already Started

Wall Street is racing to turn computing power into a tradable commodity with the first ETFs being filed even before the futures contracts they would track have started to trade.

Roundhill Investments, the boutique firm behind the fastest-growing exchange-traded fund in history, has submitted paperwork with regulators for the Roundhill Compute ETF under the ticker GPUX. The actively managed ETF would hold futures contracts pegged to the price of computing power. Per the prospectus, this includes cloud computing, high-performance computing and storage required to run calculations, process data and train artificial intelligence and machine-learning models.

Last week, paperwork for the ProShares AI Computing Power ETF also landed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. That fund would aim to track the market for AI computing power, primarily through investments in compute futures contracts tied to graphics processing units, or GPUs.

Both filings arrive just days after an announcement by CME Group Inc. and the index provider Silicon Data teaming up to launch the compute futures market — built on the underlying capacity that powers AI training and inference in data centers. The project is pending regulatory review.

“There are a few gold rushes going right now in ETFs — and computing power is one of them,” said Eric Balchunas, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “The issuers have learned to be avid readers and consumers of everything that’s coming out especially from the tech world so they can get ahead of the trend.”