DeepSeek's AI model surpasses ChatGPT downloads on Apple's app store
Leveraged ETFs with Nvidia exposure experience significant losses and volatility
Market adjusts to AI competition, impacting institutional and retail investors
Investors had been sellers of leveraged Nvidia ETFs prior to Monday
By Suzanne McGee
Jan 27 (Reuters) - Prices of exchange-traded funds with outsize exposure to Nvidia NVDA.O plunged in the initial hours of trading on Monday in reaction to news that a Chinese startup has launched a powerful new artificial intelligence model.
Technology market insiders like venture capitalist Marc Andreessen have labeled the emergence of year-old DeepSeek's model a "Sputnik moment" for U.S. AI companies, most of whose share prices slid on news that downloads of DeepSeek already have overtaken those of U.S. rival ChatGPT on Apple's AAPL.O online app store.
While Nvidia's share price had tumbled nearly 17% by midday on Monday, prices of exchange-traded funds that offer leveraged exposure to the chipmaker plunged still further.
The four ETFs that offer daily returns of double the gain in Nvidia were hit with the biggest decline, with the GraniteShares 2x Long NVDA Daily ETF NVDL.O nosediving 32.5%. Its leveraged inverse counterpart, which offers investors a gain of double any losses in Nvidia's stock, soared 31%.
The asset management firms that offer these ETFs could not immediately be reached for comment.
Other leveraged ETFs with large Nvidia exposure made equally dramatic moves. The ProShares Ultra Semiconductors ETF USD.P, which targets a return double that of the Dow Jones U.S. Semiconductors Index .DJUSSC and has more than 40% of its assets in Nvidia, tumbled 24.43% by midday on Monday.
"Volatility is what the gamblers in single-stock ETFs are looking for," said Bryan Armour, ETF analyst at Morningstar. "Those that have a bad experience now might shy away in future, but I’m sure they’ll be replaced by others."
The leveraged ETFs, which carry relatively high fees of close to 1% compared with about 0.4% for a typical actively managed ETF, are the domain of retail traders and speculators, Armour added.
But other ETFs were caught up in the selling, including many owned by institutions and retail investors with a longer investment time horizon.
For instance, the Vanguard Information Technology Index Fund VGT.P traded down 4.7% by midday on Monday. Nvidia is the fund's second-largest holding, at nearly 15% of the portfolio.
The VistaShares Artificial Intelligence Supercycle ETF AIS.P lost about 7% by midday. It has a smaller exposure to Nvidia - only 3% - but owns a wide variety of other AI stocks.
"Innovation and competition emerging in something as early-stage and dynamic as AI is not that surprising," said Adam Patti, co-founder and CEO of VistaShares. "The market will have to sort itself out over the months and years, as to what works and what will prevail."
The rapid growth of AI enthusiasm sent assets in the VistaShares ETF - launched only seven weeks ago - to more than $3 billion by Friday, the firm said. The 2x GraniteShares Nvidia ETF - the largest of the leveraged funds - had $5.3 billion in assets as of Friday, according to data from VettaFi, accounting for about half of GraniteShares' total assets.
The selloff follows a week in which investors "aggressively" unloaded holdings in leveraged technology ETFs, said research firm EPFR in its weekly analysis. The firm said these ETFs recorded the second-largest weekly outflow on record, of $1.8 billion, with investors selling $400 million in leveraged Nvidia exposure alone.
Data for any outflows from these and other AI-themed ETFs on Monday is not available until Tuesday.
(Reporting by Suzanne McGee in Providence, Rhode Island; Editing by Megan Davies and Matthew Lewis)
((Suzanne.McGee@thomsonreuters.com; 917-285-4385;))