Look to State Street, Invesco, VanEck for Top-Performing ETFs in 2026
The top-performing non-leveraged ETFs of 2026 span a distinct blend of digital assets, next-generation semiconductor technology, and localized international equity plays. For advisors assessing portfolio allocations heading into the second half of the year, these performance figures highlight a sustained risk-on appetite among investors.
Key Takeaways
- Digital assets and hardware infrastructure dominate the top-performing ETFs of 2026, driven by a resurgence in blockchain strategies and semiconductor manufacturing demand.
- The State Street Galaxy Digital Asset Ecosystem ETF (DECO) leads all non-leveraged funds with a year-to-date return of 79.6% as of June 2.
- International single-country exposures, specifically targeting Taiwan’s tech-heavy ecosystem, emerged as prominent performance drivers alongside traditional energy commodities.
Digital Asset Infrastructure Takes the Lead
The top spot on the leaderboard belongs to the State Street Galaxy Digital Asset Ecosystem ETF (DECO), which posted an impressive 79.6% return for the year-to-date period through June 2. This active ETF benefits from its flexible mandate to hold equity in digital assets, with significant exposure to blockchain infrastructure providers such as Riot Platforms (RIOT) and specialized digital mining entities. The fund’s performance underscores a broader return of capital to digital asset ecosystems, consistent with institutional adoption patterns observed over the past year.
Semiconductor Hardware and Momentum Strategies Surge
Close behind, specialized technology and semiconductor themes dominated the next several tranches of performance data. The Invesco Dorsey Wright Technology Momentum ETF (PTF) posted a 77.1% gain, propelled by its underlying relative-strength tracking methodology, which systematically overweights high-momentum tech leaders.
Hardware providers showed similarly strong returns, with the VanEck Fabless Semiconductor ETF (SMHX) returning 76.8% and the broader VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) gaining 75.6%, underscoring ongoing global capital expenditures on advanced artificial intelligence (AI) applications.
Analyzing the Structural Differences in Chip Design ETFs
SMH and SMHX offer similar exposure, as the two portfolios have a 44% overlap by weight. However, SMHX focuses exclusively on asset-light, fabless enterprises that prioritize innovation in chip design while delegating the manufacturing process to third parties.