Hello, Thanks for signing up for MarketBeat Daily Ratings—we’re excited to have you on board. Every weekday, you’ll get a curated summary of new “Buy” and “Sell” ratings from Wall Street’s top-rated analysts, the latest stock news, and bonus investing content—all delivered straight to your inbox. You’re just two quick steps away from completing your sign-up: 1. Make sure our emails go to your inboxGmail users: Mobile: Tap the three dots (…) in the top right and select Move to Inbox or Move to Primary Desktop: Click the folder icon at the top and select Move to Inbox or Primary Apple Mail users:
Tap our email address at the top (next to From: on mobile), then select Add to VIP Other providers:
Reply to this message and add newsletters@analystratings.net to your contacts 2. Confirm your subscriptionClick this link to confirm your subscription. This verifies your account and ensures you receive your newsletters without interruption instead of getting stuck in your spam filter. Confirm your subscription here. After you confirm, feel free to download our popular free report, "7 Stocks to Buy and Hold Forever" with this link. Thanks again for subscribing—we look forward to being part of your investing journey. 
Matthew Paulson
Founder and CEO, MarketBeat. P.S. If you didn’t mean to subscribe, no problem—you can unsubscribe here.
Further Reading from MarketBeat
A One-Stop Shop to Track the Magnificent Seven as Big Tech Tries to StabilizeSubmitted by Jessica Mitacek. Posted: 4/7/2026. 
Key Points
- Despite the recent performances of the Magnificent Seven, analysts forecast double-digit upside potential for each stock over the next 12 months.
- The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (MAGS) provides equal-weight exposure to these companies with a low 0.29% expense ratio, removing the guesswork of picking individual winners.
- The smart money is aggressively buying the MAGS’s dip, with institutional investors having funneled over $128 million into the ETF over the last year compared to only $8 million in outflows.
- Special Report: Elon Musk already made me a “wealthy man”
Following its record close on Oct. 29, the NASDAQ has been embroiled in a selloff aggravated by several factors. Perceived overvaluations, artificial intelligence’s threat to Software-as-a-Service stocks, and a rotation into defensive and cyclical sectors have all contributed to mounting losses. The selloff was punctuated in late March when the index briefly entered a correction. And while the index’s all-time high was less than six months ago, for growth investors accustomed to tech stocks’ recurring double-digit returns and seemingly limitless ceiling, it can feel like an eternity.
Since 2009, the Dividend Machine has posted a total return of 7,056.47% - turning a $10,000 stake into more than $700,000 while the broader market struggled through multiple downturns.
With a 93% win rate since launch, this dividend-focused strategy has kept investors cashing steady checks through every crash. Bill Spetrino has released a free report outlining how to position for income no matter what the market does next. Claim your free report and see how the Dividend Machine works
This is particularly true of shareholders who have been waiting for the Magnificent Seven to return to their former glory. But these mega-cap companies, which remain extremely well-positioned, hold enormous cash reserves. They should continue to reward investors who are long-term, patient, and able to approach the situation with a clear head, recognizing the value propositions and competitive moats they offer. The result is that tech is presenting a rare buying opportunity—but the window may be closing. Rather than trying to pick which individual Magnificent Seven stocks will lead the rebound, one exchange-traded fund (ETF) provides an all-in-one solution for investors seeking simultaneous exposure. One Man’s Trash Is Another Man’s TreasureAs a whole, the tech sector’s year-to-date (YTD) loss of about 6% may look bad on paper, but it has paled in comparison to some of the Magnificent Seven’s performances so far this year:
Only Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL), Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), and NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) have performed in line with the tech sector. Even so, the group as a whole has not been immune to the drawdown, with all seven posting YTD losses. Each underperformer has begun a slow recovery from oversold territory, with the Relative Strength Index suggesting a bottom is likely in place. Moreover, analysts’ average price targets for each stock point to substantial upside over the next 12 months. Amazon, for instance, carries a price target that is nearly 37% higher than current levels. For Meta, that figure climbs to 47%, and for NVIDIA it is more than 55%. In fact, analysts are forecasting double-digit gains for each of the Magnificent Seven over the next year. For context, most financial institutions' price targets for the broad market imply a tempered 10% gain through year-end, which underscores the attractive upside offered by these tech giants at current prices. The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF Removes Conjecture From the EquationLaunched on April 11, 2023 and holding $3.61 billion in assets under management, the Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (BATS: MAGS) is the first-ever ETF to track this cohort of mega-cap tech firms. The fund, which offers equal-weight exposure to the Magnificent Seven stocks, has posted a YTD loss that nearly mirrors the broader NASDAQ. But its balanced exposure to the Magnificent Seven has resulted in a five-year gain of around 132%. MAGS is an actively managed ETF with a net expense ratio of 0.29%, notably lower than the 0.5% to 0.75% range charged by many actively managed portfolios. The fund invests primarily via swaps and forwards, using derivative contracts to hedge risk and pursue symmetric payoff strategies. That structure enables MAGS to periodically rebalance its holdings, ensuring the fund captures the potential of all seven stocks without any single performer exerting an outsized influence on the portfolio. A Strategy That Has Caught the Eye of Wall StreetThe ETF’s actively managed approach has attracted the attention of institutional investors. Despite its roughly 16% loss since the NASDAQ peaked on Oct. 29, the fund has been favored by institutions that viewed its weakness as a buying opportunity. Amid the selloff that began in Q4 2025, for example, institutional buyers piled $8.78 million into the Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF. During the same period, institutional selling was markedly lower at just $26,000. That trend is amplified over the past 12 months: buyers injected more than $128 million into the fund while sellers’ outflows totaled just over $8 million. Based on 335 analysts’ aggregate ratings of the fund’s seven holdings, the ETF receives a Moderate Buy rating. |
Post a Comment
0Comments