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3 High-Performing Tech ETFs to Diversify Your Portfolio

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Key Points

  • The Nasdaq’s sharp decline in March highlights a sector-wide selloff driven by various concerns, including tariffs and valuation concerns.
  • Rather than picking individual tech stocks in a volatile market, technology ETFs provide diversified exposure while balancing growth potential and risk.
  • QQQ offers broad Nasdaq-100 exposure, VGT focuses purely on U.S. tech with a cost-efficient approach, and XLK provides a concentrated bet on S&P 500 tech leaders.
  • Five stocks we like better than Vanguard Information Technology ETF.
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With March 2025 proving to be a turbulent chapter for the U.S. stock market, the technology sector is at the heart of the storm. What began as a year of cautious optimism has unraveled into a wave of selling pressure driven by tariff uncertainties, fading AI euphoria, and doubts about lofty valuations. 

The Nasdaq’s sharp retreat reflects a broader reality. Even tech’s brightest stars, including the admired Magnificent Seven, grapple with a more challenging road ahead as investors reassess growth prospects.

Picking a single tech stock in today’s market can feel like navigating a minefield—high reward, even higher risk. That’s where tech ETFs come in, offering diversified exposure with a more balanced risk profile.

3 Tech ETFs for a Diversified Technology Play

So, let’s look at three popular technology ETFs. Each offers broad exposure to the tech landscape and combines growth potential with diversification, making them compelling options amid the sector’s current turbulence.

A Leading Technology ETF: The QQQ

The Invesco QQQ Trust NASDAQ: QQQ is a household name among tech-focused ETFs, tracking the Nasdaq-100 Index, a collection of the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on the Nasdaq.

Invesco QQQ Today

Invesco QQQ stock logo
QQQQQQ 90-day performance
Invesco QQQ
$472.70 +3.78 (+0.81%)
As of 04:00 PM Eastern
52-Week Range
$413.07
$540.81
Dividend Yield
0.63%
Assets Under Management
$297.17 billion

While not exclusively a tech fund, it has a heavy tilt toward the sector, with nearly 50% of its portfolio allocated to the technology sector. This has made it a go-to for investors seeking exposure to America’s tech titans. Magnificent Seven names, including Broadcom and Netflix, and excluding Tesla, mainly dominate its top holdings. Those eight names alone account for nearly half of the fund's weighting. 

With $304 billion in assets under management (AUM), QQQ is a behemoth. It boasts high liquidity, with an average daily trading volume exceeding 34 million shares. The ETF’s expense ratio sits at 0.20%, which is reasonable for its scope, and it offers a modest dividend yield of 0.62%. Year-to-date in 2025, QQQ has felt the heat, down close to 6% and off its 52-week highs by almost 11%, but still maintains a stellar track record of outperformance over the previous decade. 

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The Vanguard Information Technology ETF

The Vanguard Information Technology ETF NYSEARCA: VGT takes a purer approach, zeroing in on the U.S. tech sector by tracking the MSCI US Investable Market Information Technology 25/50 Index. With $78 billion in AUM, VGT spans over 300 holdings, from giants to smaller players, offering a deeper dive into tech than QQQ’s broader lens.

Vanguard Information Technology ETF Today

Vanguard Information Technology ETF stock logo
VGTVGT 90-day performance
Vanguard Information Technology ETF
$546.94 +4.56 (+0.84%)
As of 04:10 PM Eastern
52-Week Range
$478.25
$648.76
Dividend Yield
0.58%
Assets Under Management
$75.48 billion

Its top holdings mirror QQQ’s heavy hitters, with Apple (16.8 %), NVIDIA (13.9%), and Microsoft (13.3%), but its focus stays predominantly on hardware, software, semiconductors, and IT services, with no dilution from other sectors.

VGT’s expense ratio is a razor-thin 0.10%, a hallmark of Vanguard’s cost-conscious ethos, and it has a dividend yield of 0.67%. However, with a tech-heavy focus, it has felt the force of this year's selling pressure even while remaining diversified.

The ETF has fallen over 14% from its 52-week high and just over 10% YTD. Still, this pales compared to NVIDIA’s 17% YTD decline, for example. Including mid-cap stocks in its portfolio adds an interesting growth kicker, appealing to those betting on the next wave of innovation. For investors seeking a tech-only ETF with low costs and broad reach, VGT stands tall.

The XLK: Focusing on S&P 500 Technology Stocks 

The Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund NYSEARCA: XLK offers a focused take on tech, tracking the Technology Select Sector Index, a subset of the S&P 500. With $66 billion in AUM, XLK holds over 70 large-cap stocks, making it leaner and more concentrated than VGT.

Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund Today

Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund stock logo
XLKXLK 90-day performance
Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund
$207.99 +1.51 (+0.73%)
As of 04:10 PM Eastern
52-Week Range
$190.75
$243.14
Dividend Yield
0.75%
Assets Under Management
$64.16 billion

Its top holdings, like QQQ, are heavily concentrated, with Apple (14.4%), NVIDIA (12.9%), and Microsoft (12.8%) comprising over a third of the fund. This top-heaviness amplifies exposure to tech’s most prominent winners and their risks.

XLK’s expense ratio, at 0.09%, closely matches VGT’s, delivering a 0.72% dividend yield. Year-to-date, it’s taken a steeper hit than the QQQs, down nearly 9%, reflecting its reliance on a handful of mega-caps amid the sector’s sell-off. Yet, its long-term performance shines, with annualized returns north of 19% over the past decade. 

XLK suits investors who want a concentrated bet on tech’s elite. The S&P 500’s quality filter also provides a layer of stability. It’s less about breadth and more about riding the giants through thick and thin.

Should You Invest $1,000 in Vanguard Information Technology ETF Right Now?

Before you consider Vanguard Information Technology ETF, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis. MarketBeat has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and Vanguard Information Technology ETF wasn't on the list.

While Vanguard Information Technology ETF currently has a Hold rating among analysts, top-rated analysts believe these five stocks are better buys.

View The Five Stocks Here

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Ryan Hasson
About The Author

Ryan Hasson

Contributing Author

Technical Analysis, Momentum Trading, Risk Management

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Companies Mentioned in This Article

CompanyMarketRank™Current PricePrice ChangeDividend YieldP/E RatioConsensus RatingConsensus Price Target
Invesco QQQ (QQQ)N/A$472.70+0.8%0.63%30.05Moderate Buy$472.70
Technology Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLK)N/A$207.99+0.7%0.75%33.03Moderate Buy$207.99
Vanguard Information Technology ETF (VGT)N/A$546.94+0.8%0.58%32.38Moderate Buy$546.94
Compare These Stocks  Add These Stocks to My Watchlist 

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