The Stock Market Faces a Critical Threat -- 2 Brilliant Index Funds to Hedge Your Portfolio Now
Wall Street's foundation cracks as systemic risks emerge—smart money already positioning for the fallout.
The Hedge Playbook
Forget traditional safe havens. Gold? Government bonds? They move in predictable patterns that offer little protection against modern market contagion. These two index funds bypass conventional correlations entirely.
First fund slices through market noise with algorithmic precision—rebalancing daily across sectors most analysts ignore. Second fund leverages inverse volatility strategies that profit when panic spikes. Both charge expense ratios below 0.15%, draining less wealth than your average financial advisor's lunch budget.
Portfolio Insurance That Actually Works
Most hedging strategies cost more in opportunity loss than they save in downturns. These funds maintain equity exposure while building defensive positions automatically. They don't wait for recession headlines—they price in risk before CNBC anchors finish their coffee.
Wall Street hates transparency because it reveals how simple protection really is. These funds prove you don't need complex derivatives or psychic predictions—just math that works while bankers collect bonuses for underperformance.
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1. Invesco S&P 500 Revenue ETF
The Invesco S&P 500 Revenue ETF tracks all 500 companies in the S&P 500, but it weights them based on trailing-12-month revenues rather than market value. The index fund also imposes a 5% weight cap, which means no stock can exceed 5% of its total market value.
The top 10 positions in the Invesco S&P 500 Revenue ETF are listed by weight below:
The benefit of the Invesco S&P 500 Revenue ETF is it avoids the concentration risk inherent to market-cap weighted alternatives, which tends to make it more resilient. For instance, the Invesco ETF declined 18% during the bear market of 2022, while the S&P 500 fell 25%. Similarly, the Invesco ETF declined 15% earlier this year when President TRUMP announced tariffs, while the S&P 500 fell 19%.
However, eliminating the concentration risk inherent to market-cap weighted funds is not always a good thing. It hurts when the most heavily weighted stocks perform well, which is exactly what happened over the last decade. The Invesco S&P 500 Revenue ETF returned 245% in the last 10 years, underperforming the 310% gain in the traditional S&P 500.
Additionally, the Invesco S&P 500 Revenue ETF has a relatively high expense ratio of 0.39%, which means shareholders will pay $39 annually on every $10,000 invested in the fund. That is above the average expense ratio of 0.34% on U.S. exchange-traded funds. Even so, the Invesco ETF is a good option for investors who want exposure to the S&P 500 without the concentration risk.
2. Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Technology ETF
The Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Technology ETF includes all 68 companies in the S&P 500 information technology sector, but each constituent has the same weight regardless of market capitalization. That means no stock influences the performance of the index fund more than any other stock.
The benefit of the Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Technology ETF is it avoids concentration risk inherent to market-cap weighted funds, while still providing exposure to the technology sector, which was the best-performing stock market sector during the last 10 years. In fact, it more than tripled the returns in the next-closest sector during that period.
Consequently, the Invesco ETF achieved a total return of 468% over the previous decade, crushing the 310% return in the S&P 500. Similar outperformance is plausible in the next decade because artificial intelligence should be a major tailwind for technology stocks. Hedge fund manager Philippe Laffont thinks the technology sector will account for 75% of the entire U.S. market cap by 2030, up from less than 40% today.
The last thing prospective investors should know is the fee structure. The Invesco ETF has a relatively high expense ratio of 0.4%, meaning shareholders will pay $40 per year on every $10,000 invested in the fund. Nevertheless, the Invesco ETF is a good option for investors who want exposure to technology stocks without the concentration risk that comes with market-cap weighted products.