Water is scarce, AI is thirsty, and big investors are buying in. That leaves a fair question for everyone else.
How does a normal investor get exposure? The good news is you don't need to buy a farm.
Start with a water ETF
An ETF is a fund that trades like a stock but holds many companies at once. Water ETFs hold the firms that move, clean, and meter water.
That means utilities, pump makers, and pipe suppliers. They come bundled into one ticker you can buy through any brokerage.
Two of the biggest are the Invesco Water Resources ETF (PHO) and the First Trust Water ETF (FIW). Both charge around 0.5% a year.
PHO launched in 2005 and holds about 37 companies. FIW started in 2007 and holds around 36. Each manages well over a billion dollars.
Their top holdings look a lot alike. You'll find names like American Water Works, Ecolab, and Xylem in both.
There's also a global option, the Invesco S&P Global Water ETF (CGW). It adds water companies based overseas.
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Step up to farmland and futures
Want the water itself, not just the plumbing? Farmland REITs are the next rung up.
A REIT is a company that owns property and pays most of its profit to shareholders. Gladstone Land (LAND) is one to know.
It owns about 99,000 acres of farms across 14 states. It also holds more than 55,000 acre-feet of California water.
Farmland Partners (FPI) is another name in the same space. At the top of the ladder sit the water futures (NQH2O).
One futures contract covers 10 acre-feet of water. That's a lot for a small investor to handle.
They're real, but they're built for big players hedging price risk. They're not made for everyday portfolios.
How to think about the risk
Water belongs with other alternative investments. That means it can be rewarding and bumpy at once.
These funds can also fall for reasons that have nothing to do with water. They hold stocks, so they move with the market too.
Fees and taxes chip away at returns too, so none of this is a sure thing. Spreading exposure across a fund is usually calmer than betting on one name. Size it like a side dish, not the main course.
Worth Noting
Don't pile in because a chart looks scary or a thumbnail looks exciting. Understand the drivers first: water scarcity, AI demand, and a weaker dollar.
Then size any position on purpose. Start small, and learn how each piece behaves.
This isn't investment advice, and water can fall like anything else, so do your own research first.
Water is a long-term bet on something the world can't stop needing.
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