Concentrated bets on a handful of mega-cap technology names drove most of the S&P 500's returns over the past three years, and Roundhill built MAGS to deliver that exposure in one ticker without forcing investors to guess which name will lead next.
The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (NYSEARCA:MAGS) holds seven names at equal weight: Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Tesla, each sized at about 14% of net assets. The fund charges 0.29% in expenses, which is steep for a seven-stock basket but cheaper than building and rebalancing the position yourself in a taxable account.
The portfolio role here is narrow on purpose. MAGS is a way to overweight the cohort that already dominates cap-weighted index funds, but with two changes that matter. First, it strips out the other 493 names in the S&P 500 entirely. Second, it equalizes the weights, so Tesla carries the same load as Apple and NVIDIA. That makes MAGS a bet on the group, not on which member runs hardest.
The return engine is plain long-only equity exposure. No options overlay, no leverage, no derivatives. Investors collect the cash flows and multiple expansion of seven businesses tied to cloud, digital advertising, smartphones, AI accelerators, and electric vehicles. The quarterly equal-weight rebalance trims winners and tops up laggards, which acts as a drag when one or two names trend hard and a tailwind when leadership rotates inside the seven.
The strategy has worked. MAGS returned 43% over the past year, ahead of the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) at QQQ's 40% and the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) at SPY's 29%. Since the fund's launch in April 2023, it has gained 181%, against 99% for QQQ and 73% for SPY.
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Year-to-date in 2026 tells the other side. MAGS is up just 1%, while QQQ has added 10% and SPY 6%. The VIX spike above 31 in late March pressured concentrated growth positions, and the seven names have not recovered evenly. The concentration that produced the outperformance is the same concentration that produces these stretches of underperformance.
On retail forums, MAGS shows up most often as a satellite holding rather than a core position. The common pattern is investors using a 5% to 15% allocation alongside a broad index fund to express a tech tilt without overhauling the whole portfolio. That usage matches the math: MAGS amplifies whatever the seven do, in either direction.
Single-factor concentration. Seven names that mostly trade on AI capex, cloud growth, and rate sensitivity. The 10-year Treasury near 4.4%, up from the February low, has already pressured these multiples once this year.
Rebalancing tax drag. Quarterly equal-weighting means realized gains inside the fund when one stock outruns the others. In a taxable account, that distribution risk is real even though the fund is ETF-structured.
Overlap with what you already own. If you hold an S&P 500 or Nasdaq-100 fund, MAGS doubles down on positions that already dominate those indexes. The diversification math gets thinner the more you add.
MAGS makes sense as a 5% to 15% satellite for investors who want concentrated mega-cap tech exposure with built-in equal-weighting, but anyone treating it as a diversified core holding is buying seven correlated bets dressed up as a fund.
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