Main points
- No official "Bro Billionaire ETF" exists (yet)
- QQQ (Invesco QQQ) is the closest—holds all Magnificent Seven with 48% allocation
- SCHG, VUG, VGT are excellent alternatives with lower fees
- Indian investors can buy through Vested/INDMoney or use Motilal Oswal Nasdaq 100 FOF
- DIY portfolio often better than ETF—lower fees, higher concentration
The Direct Answer
No, there's no ETF called "Bro Billionaire ETF" or "Magnificent Seven ETF." But several ETFs effectively track these stocks:
| ETF | Ticker | Mag 7 Exposure | Expense Ratio | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Invesco QQQ Trust | QQQ | ~48% | 0.20% | US investors, most liquid |
| Schwab US Large-Cap Growth | SCHG | ~42% | 0.04% | Lowest fees |
| Vanguard Growth ETF | VUG | ~45% | 0.04% | Vanguard fans |
| Vanguard Information Tech | VGT | ~55% | 0.10% | Pure tech exposure |
| Motilal Nasdaq 100 FOF | India | ~48% | 0.65% | Indian investors |
Contrarian Take
Everyone's worried about Meta's metaverse spending. They should be. But what they miss is that Meta's AI advertising engine is so far ahead, they can burn $10B yearly on moonshots and still dominate.
Top 5 ETF Options
1. QQQ - The King
Full Name: Invesco QQQ Trust
Ticker: QQQ | Expense Ratio: 0.20%
Magnificent Seven Holdings:
- Apple: 8.9%
- Microsoft: 8.2%
- Nvidia: 7.8%
- Amazon: 5.4%
- Meta: 4.6%
- Tesla: 3.8%
- Alphabet: 9.5% (combined Class A & C)
- Total Mag 7: ~48%
Pros: Most liquid tech ETF ($250B+ AUM), tight spreads, all Mag 7 included
Cons: 0.20% fee adds up over time, includes 93 other stocks diluting concentration
Best For: US investors wanting one-click Nasdaq-100 exposure
2. SCHG - The Cheapest
Full Name: Schwab US Large-Cap Growth ETF
Expense Ratio: 0.04% (5x cheaper than QQQ)
Mag 7 Exposure: ~42%
Why It's Great: Essentially QQQ but with ultra-low fees. Holds 234 stocks but top 10 are heavily weighted toward Mag 7.
Best For: Long-term buy-and-hold investors who hate fees
3. VUG - The Vanguard Option
Full Name: Vanguard Growth ETF
Expense Ratio: 0.04%
Mag 7 Exposure: ~45%
Why It's Great: Vanguard's reputation + dirt-cheap fees + excellent tracking
Best For: Vanguard loyalists, IRA/401k investors
4. VGT - Pure Tech
Full Name: Vanguard Information Technology ETF
Expense Ratio: 0.10%
Mag 7 Exposure: ~55% (highest on this list)
Why It's Great: Sector-specific, includes Broadcom/AMD alongside Mag 7
Cons: Excludes Tesla and Amazon (not pure tech sector)
Best For: Investors bullish specifically on tech sector
5. Motilal Nasdaq 100 FOF (India)
For Indian Investors Only
Expense Ratio: ~0.65%
How It Works: This mutual fund invests in QQQ, giving Indian investors indirect Nasdaq access
Pros: No LRS limit hassle, INR-based, tax-efficient in India
Cons: Higher fees than direct QQQ purchase
Best For: Indian investors who don't want international brokerage accounts
DIY vs ETF: Which Is Better?
ETF (QQQ)
Pros:
- One-click diversification
- Auto-rebalancing
- Lower minimum ($100-200)
- Instant buy/sell
Cons:
- 0.20% annual fee (₹2,000 on ₹10L)
- Only 48% Mag 7 exposure
- Diluted by 93 other stocks
DIY Portfolio
Pros:
- 100% Mag 7 concentration
- Zero ongoing fees
- Full control over allocation
- Tax-loss harvesting
Cons:
- Need $5K+ to start
- Manual rebalancing
- 7 separate transactions
The Math
Scenario: ₹10 lakh invested, 10% annual return, 10 years
QQQ (0.20% fee): Ending value = ₹25.18 lakh
DIY (0% fee): Ending value = ₹25.94 lakh
Difference: ₹76,000 saved over 10 years by going DIY
Our Recommendation: If you have ₹5 lakh+, go DIY. If you're just starting with ₹50K-2L, buy QQQ/SCHG.
FAQ
1. Will someone create an official Bro Billionaire ETF?
Possibly. Given the popularity, an asset manager could launch a "Magnificent Seven Equal Weight ETF" (14.3% each). But none exist yet as of Feb 2026.
2. Can Indian investors buy QQQ directly?
Yes, through Vested, INDMoney, or ICICI Direct Global. Requires international trading account and counts against LRS limit.
3. Is ARKK similar to Bro Billionaire basket?
No. ARKK (Cathie Wood's fund) focuses on disruptive innovation with higher risk. Overlap exists (Tesla, Nvidia sometimes) but different philosophy.
4. What about FANG+ ETN?
Yes! NYSE FANG+ Index (ticker: FANGZ in Singapore) tracks 10 mega-cap tech stocks including all Mag 7. But it's an ETN (note), not ETF—different tax treatment and counterparty risk.
5. Should I just buy the S&P 500?
S&P 500 (SPY/VOO) has ~28% Mag 7 exposure. Less concentrated than QQQ (48%) but more diversified. Choose based on risk tolerance—SPY is safer, QQQ is higher beta.
The Bottom Line
There's no official "Bro Billionaire ETF," but QQQ is 90% of what you need. It holds all seven stocks, costs only 0.20%, and is the most liquid tech ETF on earth.
If you want maximum concentration and zero fees, build a DIY portfolio. If you want simplicity and don't mind dilution, buy QQQ/SCHG/VUG.
Either way, you're getting exposure to the same stocks billionaires own. Execution matters more than the wrapper.