Wall Street loved the Magnificent Seven trade, and it made many investors rich. Now that trade has a successor called the MANGOS - and asset managers have already filed the first ETFs built around it.
A New Acronym For The AI Rally
US asset managers have filed for the first exchange-traded funds (ETFs) - baskets of stocks you can buy with one ticker - built around what they're calling the MANGOS. It's the latest attempt to turn the AI trade into something investors can own with one click.
The Magnificent Seven name covered the giants that drove most of the market's gains over the past two years. The MANGOS group is being pitched as the next chapter, with names Wall Street thinks will carry the AI buildout from here.
Acronyms like this aren't new on Wall Street. FAANG gave way to MAMAA, the Magnificent Seven followed, and the MANGOS is the AI-era version of the same playbook - a marketing wrapper around whichever mega caps are leading the rally.
Single-ticker funds matter because they take the work out of building a basket. Instead of buying six or seven stocks one at a time, an investor can own the whole group with one trade.
Two issuers led the filings. Yorkville America - the firm behind the Truth Social ETF franchise - and ETF industry newcomer Corgi Securities both filed late Monday with the SEC for permission to launch funds tied to the MANGOS name.
The acronym caught fire on X in the days leading up to SpaceX's record $75 billion IPO. It refers to four public companies - Meta, Nvidia, Google (Alphabet), and SpaceX - plus two private AI leaders, Anthropic and OpenAI.
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Why The Filings Are Happening Now
Issuers don't file new ETFs unless they think there's demand, and demand for AI exposure is the hottest theme in the fund business right now.
Branded baskets are good business for issuers. They give retail investors a clean way to bet on a trend without having to pick a single winner.
They also give fund companies something new to market when the old story starts to fade. The Magnificent Seven trade is getting crowded and harder to pitch, making a fresh acronym a fresh sales angle.
Money has poured into AI-themed funds over the past two years, with broader tech and chip ETFs leading the pack. The MANGOS launches are aimed at the next wave of buyers looking for something more specific than a broad tech basket - and willing to pay a fund fee for the convenience.
What To Watch
The real test isn't the filing - it's the flows.
Plenty of themed ETFs have launched with a clever name and pulled in almost nothing, while others have crossed billions of dollars in months. The difference usually comes down to timing and whether the underlying trade keeps working.
Two things will decide which way this one goes: whether the MANGOS name sticks beyond Wall Street trading desks, and whether the AI rally keeps rewarding the same handful of mega caps it's been rewarding all along.
The acronym is new, but the bet is the same one investors have been making for two years - that the biggest tech names will keep capturing most of the upside from AI.
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