Marketdash

The Superstar ETF Trend That All Led to the Same Place: Big Tech and AI

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Celebrity-branded ETFs exploded in 2025, but strip away the star power and they all look remarkably similar. VistaShares CEO Adam Patti explains why every expert-inspired fund became a concentrated bet on technology and artificial intelligence.

Here's a funny thing about 2025's hottest ETF trend: all those celebrity-branded, superstar-inspired funds with their fancy marketing about following legendary investors? They basically all ended up being the same trade. Tech stocks. AI plays. Concentration risk with a bow on it.

The portfolios got packaged around investor acumen and famous names, but when you actually look at what's inside, the story is much simpler. It's about where conviction and opportunity still live in this market, and apparently that address is Silicon Valley.

That convergence mattered because 2025 was defined by absurdly narrow leadership. A handful of technology companies drove most of the market's returns, and investors didn't exactly flee from that concentration. Instead, they found more deliberate, structured ways to lean into it.

Enter funds like the VistaShares Target 15 Berkshire Select Income ETF (OMAH) and VistaShares Target 15 ACKtivist Distribution ETF (ACKY). These products offered something clever: tech-heavy equity exposure paired with income-generating options strategies. You get your AI upside, but with a yield component to soften the ride.

Adam Patti, CEO of VistaShares, pointed to several forces that drove interest in this category. "There were a few factors that drove investors to take a closer look at this category, including a growing interest in and comfort with actively managed solutions," he told MarketDash. Investors increasingly understood "new ways in which investors can add core equity exposure mimicking the ideas and acumen of some of the most well-known investors on the planet alongside an attractive level of income."

In a market obsessed with AI narratives, that pitch resonated. Rather than seeking diversification, investors doubled down on high-conviction exposures, especially technology, while using the ETF structure to manage income and risk along the way.

Why Everything Became a Tech Bet

The technology tilt across these expert-led ETFs isn't really intentional design. It's market reality asserting itself. "Tech has been the north star for investors seeking growth in recent years," Patti explained, pointing to why these portfolios naturally gravitated toward AI and platform companies with scale, liquidity, and visibility. Those same characteristics also make tech stocks easier to package into index-driven strategies that mirror expert holdings.

What drew investors to VistaShares' products was "the potential to gain exposure not only to a differentiated equity portfolio but the potential for attractive income via an active options overlay," Patti said, adding that "2025 provided some very clear proof points."

While this first wave of expert-inspired ETFs has been overwhelmingly tech-centric, Patti suggested that might not always be the case. He said VistaShares is focused less on chasing individual celebrity investors and more on "creating products that meet a clear need in investors' portfolios," particularly those combining differentiated equity exposure with income generation.

Real Money, Real Adoption

Still, the early popularity of funds like OMAH shows just how closely superstar ETFs are tied to today's concentrated market structure. Despite an inception-to-date dip in fund prices driven by the wild swings tech faced this year, Patti pointed to OMAH's rapid asset growth, which surpassed $650 million within months, as evidence that these products are becoming core holdings rather than niche trades.

That's actual money voting with its feet. Investors aren't just tire-kicking these funds. They're building positions.

Looking ahead, Patti emphasized the importance of investors understanding what they actually own. "It is always wise for investors to look under the hood of any ETF," he said, citing time horizon, income targets and correlation as key considerations. Translation: don't buy something just because a famous investor's name is on the wrapper. Know what you're getting exposure to.

For now, the lesson from 2025 is pretty clear. Investors buying superstar-inspired ETFs weren't just betting on famous names or legendary track records. They were making a focused call on technology and artificial intelligence, using expert-led frameworks and income overlays to navigate one of the most concentrated markets in recent memory. The branding might have been about star power, but the portfolios were about where the actual returns lived.

The Superstar ETF Trend That All Led to the Same Place: Big Tech and AI

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Celebrity-branded ETFs exploded in 2025, but strip away the star power and they all look remarkably similar. VistaShares CEO Adam Patti explains why every expert-inspired fund became a concentrated bet on technology and artificial intelligence.

Here's a funny thing about 2025's hottest ETF trend: all those celebrity-branded, superstar-inspired funds with their fancy marketing about following legendary investors? They basically all ended up being the same trade. Tech stocks. AI plays. Concentration risk with a bow on it.

The portfolios got packaged around investor acumen and famous names, but when you actually look at what's inside, the story is much simpler. It's about where conviction and opportunity still live in this market, and apparently that address is Silicon Valley.

That convergence mattered because 2025 was defined by absurdly narrow leadership. A handful of technology companies drove most of the market's returns, and investors didn't exactly flee from that concentration. Instead, they found more deliberate, structured ways to lean into it.

Enter funds like the VistaShares Target 15 Berkshire Select Income ETF (OMAH) and VistaShares Target 15 ACKtivist Distribution ETF (ACKY). These products offered something clever: tech-heavy equity exposure paired with income-generating options strategies. You get your AI upside, but with a yield component to soften the ride.

Adam Patti, CEO of VistaShares, pointed to several forces that drove interest in this category. "There were a few factors that drove investors to take a closer look at this category, including a growing interest in and comfort with actively managed solutions," he told MarketDash. Investors increasingly understood "new ways in which investors can add core equity exposure mimicking the ideas and acumen of some of the most well-known investors on the planet alongside an attractive level of income."

In a market obsessed with AI narratives, that pitch resonated. Rather than seeking diversification, investors doubled down on high-conviction exposures, especially technology, while using the ETF structure to manage income and risk along the way.

Why Everything Became a Tech Bet

The technology tilt across these expert-led ETFs isn't really intentional design. It's market reality asserting itself. "Tech has been the north star for investors seeking growth in recent years," Patti explained, pointing to why these portfolios naturally gravitated toward AI and platform companies with scale, liquidity, and visibility. Those same characteristics also make tech stocks easier to package into index-driven strategies that mirror expert holdings.

What drew investors to VistaShares' products was "the potential to gain exposure not only to a differentiated equity portfolio but the potential for attractive income via an active options overlay," Patti said, adding that "2025 provided some very clear proof points."

While this first wave of expert-inspired ETFs has been overwhelmingly tech-centric, Patti suggested that might not always be the case. He said VistaShares is focused less on chasing individual celebrity investors and more on "creating products that meet a clear need in investors' portfolios," particularly those combining differentiated equity exposure with income generation.

Real Money, Real Adoption

Still, the early popularity of funds like OMAH shows just how closely superstar ETFs are tied to today's concentrated market structure. Despite an inception-to-date dip in fund prices driven by the wild swings tech faced this year, Patti pointed to OMAH's rapid asset growth, which surpassed $650 million within months, as evidence that these products are becoming core holdings rather than niche trades.

That's actual money voting with its feet. Investors aren't just tire-kicking these funds. They're building positions.

Looking ahead, Patti emphasized the importance of investors understanding what they actually own. "It is always wise for investors to look under the hood of any ETF," he said, citing time horizon, income targets and correlation as key considerations. Translation: don't buy something just because a famous investor's name is on the wrapper. Know what you're getting exposure to.

For now, the lesson from 2025 is pretty clear. Investors buying superstar-inspired ETFs weren't just betting on famous names or legendary track records. They were making a focused call on technology and artificial intelligence, using expert-led frameworks and income overlays to navigate one of the most concentrated markets in recent memory. The branding might have been about star power, but the portfolios were about where the actual returns lived.