Invesco QQQ Trust ([QQQ]( — top holding recently crossed $3 trillion market cap threshold.
QQQ tracks 100 largest non-financial Nasdaq companies, with roughly 76% concentrated in tech and related sectors.
Fund returned 456% over ten years but endures severe drawdowns; designed for long-term growth investors only.
The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.
QQQ’s top holding recently crossed a $3 trillion market cap threshold—and it’s not alone in that club inside this single fund.
Executives and guests applaud at the Nasdaq stock exchange, with real-time market data displayed on a large screen.
READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks
Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1 (NASDAQ:QQQ) tracks the Nasdaq-100 Index, which holds the 100 largest non-financial companies on the Nasdaq. That exclusion of financials means the fund is structurally tilted toward technology, communications, and consumer internet businesses, with essentially no exposure to banks, insurers, or real estate.
QQQ is a pure growth-and-innovation exposure vehicle. Its job is to give investors ownership of the largest, most liquid companies shaping the digital economy, weighted by market cap. The fund has $395 billion in net assets, an expense ratio of just 0.18%, and has been trading since March 10, 1999. With a dividend yield of roughly 0.5%, income is not the point. Capital appreciation is.
The return engine is straightforward: QQQ rises when underlying companies grow earnings, expand margins, and attract higher valuations. The information sector generated $317.7 billion in profits in Q4 2025, up 9.6% year over year. That profit growth is the fundamental engine underneath QQQ’s price history.
The long-term numbers are hard to argue with. QQQ has gained 456% over the past ten years, rising from around $109 in April 2016 to roughly $606 by April 2026. Over the past year alone, the fund is up nearly 46%. These are the returns of a concentrated bet on the companies that have dominated global commerce for the past decade.
Reddit investors understand this dynamic viscerally. One r/wallstreetbets thread recently celebrated a “100k gain on QQQ calls to come back from 100k in losses over the last 5 years, finally green,” accumulating 834 upvotes and 177 comments. The emotional range of that post—a five-year loss recovered in a single trade, captures exactly how QQQ behaves: it can punish investors for years and then reward them spectacularly.