XLK vs. VGT vs. FTXL: Which Tech ETF Belongs in Your Portfolio?

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By Austin Smith Published

Quick Read

  • VGT and XLK provide durable tech exposure anchored by NVIDIA, Apple, and Microsoft, while FTXL’s outsized returns stem from pure semiconductor concentration that creates severe downside risk when chip demand cycles turn.

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XLK, VGT, and FTXL all carry the “tech ETF” label, but they are built for fundamentally different investors. Here is how they stack up across three dimensions that matter most: cost efficiency, growth trajectory, and portfolio fit for retirement investors.

Cost & Structure

On expenses, XLK and VGT are nearly identical and both exceptional. XLK carries a net expense ratio of 0.08% against VGT’s 0.09% — a difference so small it is effectively irrelevant over any time horizon. FTXL is the outlier here: its expense ratio is listed at 0.006%, though this figure warrants independent verification given it appears unusually low for a specialized semiconductor fund. Even if accurate, FTXL’s narrow focus introduces a different kind of cost — concentration risk — that offsets any fee advantage.

VGT holds over 400 positions with $126.5 billion in net assets, while XLK holds 75 positions across $87.7 billion. FTXL manages just $1.6 billion — a fraction of either competitor — which matters for liquidity and long-term fund stability. Winner: XLK and VGT tie; FTXL trails on scale and risk concentration.

Growth Trajectory

This is where the comparison gets decisive. Over the past year, FTXL returned 98.23%, nearly doubling. XLK returned 35.6% over the same period, and VGT returned 34.65%. Year-to-date in 2026, the gap is even more striking: FTXL is up 17.35%, while XLK is down 2.46% and VGT is down 2.49%.

The driver is FTXL’s pure semiconductor mandate. Micron Technology and Intel alone represent 28.04% of the fund, and the entire portfolio is built around chipmakers and semiconductor equipment companies. When the semiconductor cycle accelerates — as it has with AI infrastructure buildout — FTXL captures that upside with intensity that broad tech ETFs cannot match. Over five years, FTXL returned 149.88% versus XLK’s 122.21% and VGT’s 113.08%. Winner: FTXL on raw growth, with the caveat that its volatility cuts both ways.

Stability & Retirement Suitability

For retirement investors, the question is not just who won last year — it is who will not crater a portfolio when the cycle turns. FTXL’s concentration in semiconductors is precisely what makes it dangerous in a downturn. The same structural bet that produced 98% returns in one year can produce severe drawdowns when memory chip demand softens or geopolitical risk hits supply chains.

XLK and VGT both hold NVIDIA, Apple, and Microsoft as their top three positions, providing durable mega-cap anchors. XLK has been operating since December 1998 — through the dot-com crash, the 2008 financial crisis, and multiple tech corrections — giving it a 27-year stress-tested track record. XLK’s ten-year return of 633.28% versus VGT’s 664.5% shows VGT with a marginal long-run edge, but XLK’s tighter, more concentrated 75-stock portfolio can be easier to understand and monitor. FTXL only launched in September 2016 and has not been tested through a full bear market cycle at scale. Winner: VGT for retirement stability, with XLK as a close second.

Verdict

If you are building or preserving wealth in a retirement account, VGT is the right choice. Its $126.5 billion scale, 400+ holdings, near-zero expenses, and superior ten-year track record make it the most complete long-term tech holding available. XLK is a credible alternative for investors who prefer a leaner, more concentrated portfolio at marginally lower cost.

FTXL belongs to a different conversation entirely — it is a tactical semiconductor play for investors with a specific thesis on chip cycle timing and the risk tolerance to match. For a retirement portfolio, that kind of single-sector concentration is a bet, not a foundation.

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About the Author Austin Smith →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience in the markets. He spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched new brands in the personal finance and real estate investing space.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. Today he writes for 24/7 Wall St and covers equities, REITs, and ETFs for readers. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast.

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about me here.

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