These 3 Niche ETFs Might Just Buck a Bear Trend


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Navigating the Market with Niche ETFs

The current state of the broad stock market is precarious, with big indexes like the S&P 500 ($SPX) sitting at historically expensive prices and heavily reliant on a few massive AI stocks to prevent a downturn.

However, when the main market begins to crack, certain specialized niches can hold up well on their own. By looking outside the usual tech stocks, three specific funds have a real chance to perform well even in an awful market.

The Roundhill Sports Betting & iGaming ETF (BETZ)

The Roundhill Sports Betting & iGaming ETF (BETZ) focuses on online gambling and sportsbooks. This business is all about entertainment and doesn’t care about corporate tech trends. The fund holds a small, focused group of online betting companies like DraftKings (DKNG) and Flutter Entertainment (FLUT).

Instead of needing a booming economy to grow, these companies win as more states and countries legalize online gambling. Plus, huge global sports events keep drawing in new users automatically. Because betting is a habit that people rarely give up during tough times, these companies can keep growing their revenues even if big tech companies see their budgets cut.

The VanEck Video Gaming and eSports ETF (ESPO)

The VanEck Video Gaming and eSports ETF (ESPO) tracks the digital video game industry. This fund owns more than 25 of the biggest game publishers and console makers in the world, including names like Nintendo (NTDOY), Tencent (TCEHY), and Electronic Arts (EA). No single stock is allowed to make up more than 8% of the fund, which keeps it safe from one bad company ruining the whole portfolio.

The big advantage here is that video games are now a massive, everyday part of global entertainment. Companies make highly profitable, recurring money through in-game downloads and online subscriptions. While normal tech companies are at risk of a big crash if their expensive AI investments don’t pay off, game companies are launching highly anticipated new games to a loyal audience of billions of players.

The Pacer Industrial Real Estate ETF (INDS)

The Pacer Industrial Real Estate ETF (INDS) is completely different because it owns physical property rather than software companies. This fund invests 100% of its money into real estate companies that own warehouses, shipping hubs, and self-storage facilities. Its biggest holdings are in well-known storage and logistics landlords.

While regular office buildings are in deep trouble right now, industrial warehouses are still in high demand. Companies desperately need these spaces to run e-commerce shipping networks and store inventory locally.

Because these landlords lock in long-term, predictable rent payments, the fund pays out a reliable 3.3% dividend yield, making it a nice tangible defense play while the rest of the stock market looks shaky.

This market calls on us to dig just a bit deeper. Sure, we are near all-time highs for the major indexes. But that is exactly the reason to look around the corner, to a time when stocks will transition from rolling corrections to a full-scale selloff. In any market, there’s at least a fighting chance to identify niche ETFs and stocks that transcend the broader-based selling pressure.