Everyone piled into AI by buying chip stocks. That was the easy trade. The next big wave might not run on a chip at all. It might just walk. A new fund is betting the next leg of AI is robots shaped like us. And real money is already showing up.
The Fund Doing It
The fund is the KraneShares Global Humanoid Robotics and Physical AI ETF. Its ticker is KOID. An ETF, or exchange-traded fund, is just a basket of stocks. You buy it in one click, like a single stock. This is the first U.S. fund built only for the humanoid theme. So it spreads its bets across the whole robot supply chain.
That means the brain, which is the chips and software. The body, which is the motors and sensors. And the firms that build the machines. Physical AI covers more than robots too. It also includes things like self-driving cars.
It is not the only robot fund out there. An older one, called ROBO, has traded since 2016. But KOID is the first built only for humanoids. Being first can help it grab attention and cash early. Some funds chase only the chipmakers. This one casts a wider net. It wants a piece of the whole build-out. The fund holds stocks from around the world. That spreads the risk across many names.
It charges 0.69% a year. That is $69 on every $10,000. The fund turned one year old on June 4. It already holds about $241 million. About $89 million of that came in this year alone. Tech and industrial stocks make up most of it.
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What's Behind The $5 Trillion Forecast
Morgan Stanley put a huge number on this market. It sees $5 trillion by 2050. The logic is simple. As robots get cheaper, more firms buy them.
Two years ago, one humanoid robot cost about $200,000. That is the price of a house in some towns. Morgan Stanley sees that falling to about $150,000 by 2028. That should pull in many more buyers. Firms are already testing robots in warehouses and factories.
There is a catch most investors miss. This is a global fund. About 28% of it sits in Chinese stocks, second only to the U.S. China leads the world in building robots. So the fund's growth is tied to the U.S.-China race.
Worth Noting
A theme this young can swing hard both ways. A forecast for 2050 is a long way off. A lot can change between now and then. Robots could one day work in stores and homes too.
The robots are not cheap yet. The whole bet is that one day they will be.
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