Making Sense of Nvidia’s Earnings & ETF Impact

Another earnings season is nearing a close, but not before we hear from Nvidia.

The largest company in the world, with a market capitalization of about $4.4 trillion, reports Q2 results today, after the market close.

It would be an understatement to say that Nvidia results matter. What we learn today about the company’s earnings and forward guidance will impact many metrics. These include market sentiment, risk appetite, big tech and growth stock momentum, the AI investment theme, etc. Nvidia is a pivotal character in many story lines.

Nvidia Everywhere

In the ETF world, over 3.5 billion shares of Nvidia are held across over 670 ETFs, according to FactSet data. Consider the size of that footprint for a minute.

For example, the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) — the year’s most popular ETF, with inflows now exceeding $80 billion — owns more than $100 billion worth of Nvidia shares. Nvidia represents about 8% of the fund’s exposure. The Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ), where Nvidia snags nearly 10% of the fund, has over $36 billion worth of Nvidia shares.

As you go down into sector, style, and thematic plays, that footprint is equally impressive, FactSet data shows. And that’s to say nothing of leveraged and single-stock strategies.

The Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLK) has 16% tied to Nvidia. The growth-focused Fidelity Fundamental Large Cap Growth ETF (FFLG), too, has nearly as much. The growth-meets-innovation AOT Growth and Innovation ETF (AOTG) has nearly 13% in Nvidia. The AI-focused Janus Henderson Global Artificial Intelligence ETF (JHAI) has over 14%.

Semiconductor ETFs have massive exposure to Nvidia. Single-stock and leverage funds do too. ESG ETFs are holders. Quality funds, free cash flow ETFs, dividend strategies, momentum plays, aerospace and defense. That’s a long list of Nvidia stakeholders, all eyeing the latest peek into the company’s bottom line.