QQQJ Invesco NASDAQ Next Gen 100 ETF
Profitability Metrics
Valuation Metrics
Growth & Cash Flow
Price Change
Top 10 Holdings
| Stock Ticker | Weight |
|---|---|
| SNDK | 4.10% |
| LITE | 2.68% |
| TER | 2.48% |
| EBAY | 2.26% |
| KMB | 1.83% |
| FISV | 1.67% |
| BIIB | 1.58% |
| UAL | 1.58% |
| CRWV | 1.53% |
| EXE | 1.53% |
ETF Analysis
Fund Overview
Invesco NASDAQ Next Gen 100 ETF (QQQJ) currently reports 102 stock positions (subject to change), placing it in the expansively diversified range by holdings breadth. The top line-up is SNDK (4.10%), LITE (2.68%), TER (2.48%), with SNDK as the largest single weight at 4.10%. Together, the top three holdings account for 9.26%, which indicates that idiosyncratic risk at the top of the book is relatively contained within the overall portfolio. The resulting profile combines thematic conviction with varying degrees of diversification, which can support upside participation while still spreading idiosyncratic risk beyond the top weights.
Profitability & Capital Efficiency
From a returns-on-capital standpoint, ROIC is 12.06%, WACC is 9.44%, and the economic spread is 2.62%. On balance, the portfolio clears its capital cost hurdle modestly — value creation is present but not emphatic. Supporting metrics show ROE at 16.03% and ROA at 3.28%, a combination that helps frame whether profitability strength is broad enough to hold through different market conditions. Taken together, the return profile suggests a portfolio that is value-creative but with less room for execution slippage.
Valuation
The market currently prices the portfolio at trailing P/E of 22.60, forward P/E of 16.33, PEG of 1.69. The trailing and forward multiples diverge by a moderate amount, consistent with a market that sees improving earnings but is not extrapolating an aggressive growth path. The PEG ratio is consistent with a portfolio that is reasonably valued on a growth basis — not cheap, but not obviously expensive either. The aggregate current ratio of 2.97 points to strong liquidity across holdings. Valuation and liquidity together frame a portfolio where the price paid today is a reasonable bet on earnings delivery — but not a margin-of-safety purchase at current levels.
Margins & Cash Generation
On profitability at each income statement layer, gross margin sits at 52.91%, operating margin at 6.08%, and free cash flow margin at 17.19%. The portfolio's gross margins are solid, reflecting a reasonable balance between revenue realization and direct cost absorption. The operating margin reading is modest, consistent with businesses still working to scale their cost structures efficiently. Free cash flow margins are strong, reflecting capital-efficient businesses that largely self-fund their growth. Taken together, the margin stack suggests quality that is uneven — some layers are more resilient than others, and that asymmetry matters under stress.
Growth & Forward Outlook
Looking at what the businesses are actually delivering versus what analysts are pricing in, TTM revenue growth of 39.08% indicating that revenue growth remains a meaningful tailwind for the portfolio. At the same time, the estimated 12-month price change of 22.59%, where implied upside appears constructive but not aggressive. Revenue growth captures operating momentum, while price targets reflect external expectations that can move with rates, risk appetite, and sector sentiment. Whether current momentum translates into delivered returns will depend on the durability of both top-line trends and the assumptions embedded in analyst targets. The estimated 12-month price change is a weighted composite of analyst price target estimates adjusted by each holding's ETF weight, sourced from publicly available data, and should not be interpreted as a reliable prediction of future performance.
Conclusion
BuyPutting the pieces together, this is a profile with genuine merit: the numbers support confidence in the forward case without requiring heroic assumptions.
The views expressed above are derived from quantitative data only and should not be relied upon as financial advice. Investment decisions should be based on your own research and risk tolerance.