April 22, 2026
Theme Signal
The 4/22 setup points to a thematic market where software, semiconductors, and cybersecurity remain the primary leadership group, while energy, materials, and hard-asset trades are trying to stabilize but still lag the broader AI and growth complex.
Investment Digest
U.S. equities finished lower on Tuesday, but the selloff was fairly orderly and more mixed beneath the surface than the headline index declines implied. Software, semiconductors, managed care, energy, memory, and discounters held up better, while aerospace and defense, cruise lines, airlines, payments, exchanges, and apparel retail were the more obvious laggards. The equal-weight S&P again outperformed the cap-weighted index, which continues to argue that this is not a pure mega-cap unwind so much as a selective pause after a powerful three-week rally.
This morning’s tone is firmer. S&P futures are up 0.6%, Treasury yields are down 2 to 4 basis points, the dollar is slightly softer, gold and silver are rebounding, bitcoin is higher, and crude is only modestly firmer. The key near-term tailwind is the ceasefire extension, which fits the broader market bias toward de-escalation even if the blockade remains in place and refined-product disruption is still a meaningful concern. Outside of geopolitics, the market is still leaning on the same broader supports that have driven the rebound: resilient consumer and macro data, AI and datacenter capex strength, software stabilization, and a more constructive tone around corporate pricing power and earnings. With no economic data today, the market’s focus shifts more toward earnings quality, tomorrow’s 20-year auction follow-through, and Thursday’s PMIs and claims as tests of whether the growth narrative can keep carrying risk assets higher.
Thematic Tail of the Tape
The latest theme data show that the market’s strongest leadership remains concentrated in software, semiconductors, and cybersecurity rather than in the harder-asset trades that had re-emerged earlier in the week. The top one-day performers were HACK at 1.59%, XSD at 1.68%, IHAK at 1.78%, BUG at 1.88%, SOXX at 0.75%, SKYY at 0.92%, CLOU at 0.60%, FTXL at 0.54%, SOXQ at 0.52%, and IGV at 0.44%. That is a very consistent message. Cybersecurity, cloud, and semiconductors are still the cleanest expression of the market’s preferred thematic mix: AI-adjacent growth with visible demand, better earnings leverage, and less direct sensitivity to the geopolitically driven oil trade.
That leadership also fits the current headline flow. Adobe’s $25B buyback, Manhattan Associates’ strong bookings and raised guidance, ABB’s datacenter order surge, and continued commentary around AI infrastructure demand all reinforce why software and semiconductor-linked funds are continuing to screen well. Even after the market’s big run, investors are still favoring the areas most directly tied to compute demand, networking, cloud, and enterprise IT spend rather than rotating wholesale into broad cyclicals.
The weakest themes were concentrated in metals, uranium, blockchain, and parts of the commodity complex. SILJ fell 6.55%, GDX lost 6.19%, KOPX dropped 5.54%, SLV fell 5.07%, URNM lost 4.72%, NLR fell 4.60%, IBLC declined 4.37%, BKCH lost 4.32%, BITQ fell 4.24%, and CRPT dropped 4.13%. That is notable because it shows the market was still fading hard-asset inflation expressions and higher-volatility crypto-linked beta at the same time. Even with crude firmer and geopolitical uncertainty unresolved, investors have not yet embraced a sustained rotation back into commodity leadership. Instead, the market is still rewarding more growth-oriented, AI-linked, and software-driven themes.
The flow picture remains supportive, but it also shows how concentrated the current allocation backdrop is becoming. On a 1-month basis, the largest inflows went to SPY at $21.09B, QQQ at $4.58B, VTI at $2.02B, SOXX at $1.75B, and IGV at $1.10B. BAI at $1.01B and CGDV at $1.00B also remain notable, while GRID brought in $772.47M and SPMO added $742.06M. On the outflow side, SCHD saw $(12.50B), AGG saw $(3.48B), IWM saw $(3.11B), VYM saw $(2.73B), and VTV saw $(2.36B), with SMH also seeing a sizable $(1.42B) one-month outflow despite strong performance. Year-to-date flows reinforce the same broad split. VTI, SCHD, IGV, SMH, EFG, VUG, CGDV, EEM, SOXX, and GRID remain among the largest inflow recipients, while SPY, IWM, QQQ, SLV, GLD, and FDN remain major outflow buckets. The practical takeaway is that investors are still adding to selective growth, semiconductors, software, and momentum, but the market is increasingly differentiated beneath the surface and much less interested in broad benchmark exposure or traditional hedges.
Bottom Line
The current setup still favors a growth-and-AI-led market, even if the broader tape has become more rotational and uneven. Cybersecurity, software, and semiconductors remain the cleanest leadership groups, while metals, uranium, and precious-metals-linked themes continue to lag despite lingering geopolitical uncertainty. The flow picture remains supportive for software, semiconductors, and broad growth exposure, but it also shows increasingly sharp differentiation beneath the surface. The practical takeaway is that the market still wants to own compute, cloud, cybersecurity, and selective software rebound, while remaining much less convinced that the latest oil and geopolitical flare-up is enough to sustain a durable move back into hard-asset leadership.
Thematic ETF Performance — Top 5 (1D)
| ETF | Theme | 1D | 1W | 1M |
| BUG | Cybersecurity | +1.88% | +8.06% | +5.17% |
| IHAK | Cybersecurity | +1.78% | +6.99% | +8.29% |
| XSD | Semiconductors | +1.68% | +9.53% | +33.59% |
| HACK | Cybersecurity | +1.59% | +5.67% | +4.93% |
| CIBR | Cybersecurity | +1.48% | +5.46% | +6.45% |
Thematic ETF Performance — Bottom 5 (1D)
| ETF | Theme | 1D | 1W | 1M |
| SILJ | Natural Resources | -6.55% | -4.20% | +16.12% |
| GDX | Natural Resources | -6.19% | -4.89% | +16.06% |
| KOPX | Natural Resources | -5.54% | -5.36% | +17.94% |
| SLV | Natural Resources | -5.07% | -4.66% | +11.33% |
| URNM | Uranium | -4.72% | -2.61% | +15.41% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Inflows (1M)
| ETF | Theme | 1M Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| SPY | Broad Market | $21,092,035,901.25 | +8.56% | -0.65% |
| QQQ | Broad Market | $4,581,932,550.00 | +10.82% | -0.38% |
| VTI | Dividend | $2,017,718,244.74 | +8.93% | -0.68% |
| SOXX | Semiconductors | $1,748,730,540.45 | +26.52% | +0.75% |
| IGV | Software | $1,096,465,354.85 | +4.45% | +0.44% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Outflows (1M)
| ETF | Theme | 1M Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| SCHD | Dividend | $(12,495,724,500.00) | +2.80% | -0.16% |
| AGG | Broad Market | $(3,479,600,810.00) | +1.16% | -0.37% |
| IWM | Broad Market | $(3,112,827,912.70) | +13.33% | -1.02% |
| VYM | Dividend | $(2,726,301,702.20) | +6.32% | -0.47% |
| VTV | Broad Market | $(2,358,784,113.57) | +4.90% | -0.63% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Inflows (YTD)
| ETF | Theme | YTD Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| VTI | Dividend | $18,050,806,862.58 | +8.93% | -0.68% |
| SCHD | Dividend | $6,605,912,500.00 | +2.80% | -0.16% |
| IGV | Software | $5,824,477,340.45 | +4.45% | +0.44% |
| SMH | Semiconductors | $5,284,744,145.00 | +20.77% | +0.15% |
| EFG | ESG | $4,974,533,234.00 | +9.47% | -2.37% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Outflows (YTD)
| ETF | Theme | YTD Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| SPY | Broad Market | $(16,136,054,115.40) | +8.56% | -0.65% |
| IWM | Broad Market | $(5,904,272,184.35) | +13.33% | -1.02% |
| QQQ | Broad Market | $(4,233,215,350.00) | +10.82% | -0.38% |
| SLV | Natural Resources | $(2,842,374,000.00) | +11.33% | -5.07% |
| GLD | Natural Resources | $(2,150,394,800.00) | +3.92% | -2.83% |