The JPMorgan Active Growth ETF ( NYSEARCA:JGRO) delivered a 14.2% return over the past year, trailing the S&P 500's 17.9% gain by nearly 4 percentage points. For investors paying a 0.44% expense ratio for active management, underperformance raises a key question: what should you watch to understand whether this fund can close the gap? JGRO's $8.5 billion portfolio reveals a critical vulnerability through its concentration strategy. The fund's top three positions control over a quarter of assets, creating exposure to mega-cap technology headwinds.
JGLO's 15% gain over the past year stems from heavy concentration in mega-cap technology. The fund places over a quarter of its assets in just six companies-NVIDIA ( NASDAQ:NVDA), Microsoft ( NASDAQ:MSFT), Apple ( NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon ( NASDAQ:AMZN), Alphabet ( NASDAQ:GOOGL), and Meta. This concentrated approach explains both the fund's recent gains and its vulnerability to tech sector rotation. When Tech Dominance Becomes a Double-Edged Sword The biggest factor shaping JGLO's future is whether mega-cap technology stocks can sustain market leadership or if returns are broadening.
BKLC tracks the Solactive GBS United States 500 Index, a market-cap-weighted index of the 500 largest U.S. companies. It holds 506 stocks with heavy concentration in mega-cap technology. NVIDIA represents 7.3% of the portfolio, Apple 6.6%, and Microsoft 6.0%. Information technology accounts for 34% of assets, followed by financials at 12% and communication services at 11%. The ETF delivers appreciation and dividend income from large U.S. companies, weighted by market value.