Just weeks after new rules helped pave the way for Space Exploration Technologies Corp (NASDAQ:SPCX), or SpaceX to join the Nasdaq 100 Index, BlackRock has launched a new ETF tracking the benchmark, escalating competition with long-time market leader Invesco and recent entrant State Street Global Advisors.
The move demonstrates how issuers are rushing to capitalize on investor demand for technology-heavy portfolios as artificial intelligence continues to fuel the U.S. equity rally.
The new iShares Nasdaq 100 ETF (NASDAQ:IQQ) began trading on Thursday, offering investors exposure to the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on the Nasdaq exchange, joining an increasingly crowded field dominated by the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) and the Invesco NASDAQ 100 ETF (NASDAQ:QQQM). Last month, State Street Global Advisors also rolled out its own Nasdaq-100 ETF, the State Street SPDR Portfolio Nasdaq 100 ETF (NASDAQ:QNDX).
BlackRock’s timing is notable. Earlier this year, Nasdaq revised its eligibility rules to fast-track newly listed companies, enabling SpaceX’s earlier entry into the Nasdaq-100 and boosting the benchmark’s appeal, creating another reason for ETF issuers to compete for investor assets.
The Nasdaq-100 has been among the biggest beneficiaries of the AI investment boom.
The benchmark posted its strongest quarterly performance in six years during the second quarter, powered by gains in Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA), Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT), Broadcom, Inc (NASDAQ:AVGO), Meta Platforms, Inc (NASDAQ:META), and Amazon.com, Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN). Investors have increasingly turned to Nasdaq-100 ETFs for diversified exposure to AI leaders.
That demand has made the category one of the most lucrative in the ETF industry.
While Invesco’s QQQ dominates the Nasdaq-100 ETF market, BlackRock is betting there’s still room for another major player.
The world’s largest asset manager already manages more than $41 billion across its existing Nasdaq-focused ETF lineup, including the iShares Nasdaq Top 30 Stocks ETF (NASDAQ:QTOP) and the iShares Nasdaq Premium Income Active ETF (NASDAQ:BALQ).
The launch of IQQ expands BlackRock’s lineup with a plain-vanilla Nasdaq-100 tracker debuting at a $24 NAV, versus about $722 for QQQ and $297 for QQQM.
Although a fund’s share price does not affect its investment performance, a lower per-share price can make periodic investing and dollar-based purchases more convenient for some retail investors.
Then comes the conversation of the fees. The average expense ratio to be offered by IQQ is 0.12%, with a waiver reducing the fees to 0.10% through July 31, 2027. Although one-month old QNDX offers the same expense ratio of 0.10%, the arrival of Blackrock’s 0.10% Nasdaq ETF can heat up the competition. Meanwhile, QQQ carries a 0.18% fee.
The arrival of BlackRock and State Street into the Nasdaq-100 ETF arena marks the latest example of major asset managers competing over the same benchmark. It’s similar to the battles seen in S&P 500 and spot Bitcoin ETFs.
Competition among ETF issuers has historically delivered meaningful benefits for investors, particularly in the S&P 500 and spot Bitcoin ETF markets. The long-running rivalry between BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street helped drive expense ratios on core S&P 500 ETFs down to as little as 0.03%, making broad-market exposure significantly cheaper than it was decades ago.
More recently, the launch of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs sparked an aggressive fee war, with several issuers cutting management fees and offering temporary fee waivers to attract assets.
Beyond lower costs, increased competition has also improved liquidity and narrowed bid-ask spreads, allowing investors to select funds based on factors such as fees, trading volume and issuer preference. It has also encouraged innovation, leading to the introduction of complementary strategies such as covered-call, income-focused and actively managed ETFs.
If the growing competition among BlackRock, Invesco and State Street in the Nasdaq-100 ETF segment follows a similar path, investors could ultimately benefit from lower fees, better trading efficiency and a broader range of products.
For investors, that rivalry could translate into lower costs and more choices for gaining exposure to one of the market’s most influential indexes.
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