April 10, 2026
Theme Signal
The 4/10 setup points to a thematic market where biotech, semiconductors, regional banks, and selective cyclicals are carrying the bounce, while software, cloud, and cybersecurity remain the clear pressure point as AI disruption fears move back to the foreground.
Investment Digest
U.S. equities finished higher on Thursday, with the S&P 500 posting a seventh consecutive gain and the index moving to within a little more than 2% of its late-January high. Mag 7 outperformed again, Amazon was the standout, semis and memory remained strong, and cyclical groups such as banks, machinery, retail, and homebuilders participated. At the same time, software came under renewed pressure, energy and commodity chemicals lagged, and the market continued to trade the same post-ceasefire tension between recovery momentum and lingering structural damage from the Iran conflict.
This morning’s tone is more cautious but not decisively risk-off. S&P futures are off 0.1%, Treasury yields are up slightly, gold and silver are lower, bitcoin is softer, and WTI crude is rebounding 2.2%. That mix fits with a market that is still leaning constructive on the ceasefire and Saturday’s Pakistan talks, but is increasingly aware that the easy part of the rebound may already be behind it. The market is now having to weigh mechanical support from positioning and CTA buying against questions about ceasefire durability, only limited Strait of Hormuz normalization, and whether rate relief can persist after today’s CPI and Michigan inflation expectations. At the same time, AI remains a major two-way force, with insatiable demand for compute continuing to support semis and infrastructure while stronger frontier models keep disruption concerns trained on software.
Thematic Tail of the Tape
The latest theme data show that leadership is no longer centered on ceasefire relief alone. Instead, the strongest parts of the thematic universe are increasingly concentrated in biotech, semiconductors, and selected cyclicals that can benefit from both improving risk appetite and still-solid end-demand. LABU gained 2.78%, PSI rose 2.48%, FTXL added 2.39%, SOXX gained 2.22%, WGMI rose 2.10%, SOXQ added 2.07%, KRBN gained 2.05%, SHOC rose 1.91%, HYDR added 1.90%, and XHB gained 1.76%. That is a fairly revealing leaderboard. Semiconductors remain firmly in control, but the rebound is also broad enough to pull in biotech, carbon, hydrogen, and homebuilders, which suggests the market is still willing to re-engage with higher-beta and growth-sensitive themes as long as rates stay reasonably contained and the geopolitical backdrop does not worsen.
The semiconductor leadership is especially consistent with the latest headlines. TSMC’s stronger-than-expected quarter, Amazon’s commentary around compute demand, the Meta-CoreWeave infrastructure deal, and the continuing race to secure AI capacity all reinforce why chip and AI-adjacent funds remain near the top of the table. The key distinction in the current tape is that the market still wants exposure to the compute buildout, but it is becoming increasingly selective about where that exposure sits.
That selectivity is most obvious in software and cybersecurity, which dominate the bottom of the board. WCLD fell 5.65%, BUG lost 5.42%, HACK dropped 5.09%, IHAK fell 4.51%, CLOU declined 4.10%, CIBR lost 3.93%, IGV fell 3.90%, SKYY dropped 3.34%, and XSW lost 3.06%. This is the clearest thematic message in today’s data. Investors are not backing away from AI; they are continuing to rotate away from software exposures seen as more directly vulnerable to AI-enabled disruption, pricing pressure, or multiple compression. That split between semiconductor strength and software weakness has become one of the market’s most persistent internal themes, and it lines up directly with the latest scrutiny around Anthropic’s Mythos model, OpenAI release constraints, and broader cybersecurity concerns tied to stronger frontier systems.
The flow picture remains more disciplined than the one-day leaderboard. On a 1-month basis, the largest inflows went to SPY at $14.08B, VTI at $4.88B, EFG at $4.88B, SCHD at $2.77B, and QQQ at $2.57B. IWM and IGV also remain notable, with IWM at $2.11B and IGV at $1.37B. That mix shows investors are still committing capital to broad equity, dividends, and large-cap growth even with the market already well off the lows, while software continues to attract structural flows despite weak price action. On the outflow side, AGG saw $(3.37B), GLD saw $(2.76B), EEM saw $(2.36B), VTV saw $(1.89B), ITA saw $(1.64B), and SLV saw $(1.11B). Year-to-date flows reinforce a similar split. VTI, SCHD, IGV, EFG, SMH, CGDV, EEM, VUG, GRID, and KOPX are among the strongest inflow recipients, while SPY, QQQ, IWM, SLV, GLD, FDN, and KLMN remain among the larger outflow buckets. The broader message is that investors are still allocating toward growth, semiconductors, software, and dividend quality, but with increasingly sharp distinctions inside growth itself.
Bottom Line
The current setup reflects a market where the rebound is still intact, but the thematic leadership has become much more discriminating. Biotech, semiconductors, regional banks, and selected cyclicals are continuing to work, while software, cloud, and cybersecurity have become the clear weak spot as AI disruption concerns intensify. The structural flow picture remains supportive for broad equity, dividends, semiconductors, and even software on a longer-horizon basis, but the near-term tape is drawing a sharper distinction between AI infrastructure winners and software names exposed to disruption risk. The practical takeaway is that the market still wants growth and beta, but it wants them through chips, compute, and selected cyclicals far more than through software application layers right now.
Thematic ETF Performance — Top 5 (1D)
| ETF | Theme | 1D | 1W | 1M |
| LABU | Biotechnology | +2.78% | +6.16% | +7.26% |
| PSI | Semiconductors | +2.48% | +11.67% | +17.14% |
| FTXL | Semiconductors | +2.39% | +11.65% | +15.21% |
| SOXX | Semiconductors | +2.22% | +11.49% | +12.63% |
| WGMI | Blockchain | +2.10% | +15.66% | +10.80% |
Thematic ETF Performance — Bottom 5 (1D)
| ETF | Theme | 1D | 1W | 1M |
| WCLD | Software | -5.65% | -8.74% | -14.35% |
| BUG | Cybersecurity | -5.42% | -3.98% | -8.41% |
| HACK | Cybersecurity | -5.09% | -3.07% | -4.38% |
| IHAK | Cybersecurity | -4.51% | -2.91% | -4.23% |
| CLOU | Cloud Computing | -4.10% | -5.93% | -5.89% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Inflows (1M)
| ETF | Theme | 1M Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| SPY | Reference Securities | $14,082,320,248.35 | +0.51% | +0.58% |
| VTI | Dividend | $4,880,204,248.80 | +0.67% | +0.52% |
| EFG | ESG | $4,878,771,030.00 | +1.97% | -0.26% |
| SCHD | Dividend | $2,767,311,500.00 | +0.58% | +0.26% |
| QQQ | Reference Securities | $2,565,091,450.00 | +0.52% | +0.68% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Outflows (1M)
| ETF | Theme | 1M Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| AGG | Reference Securities | $(3,370,593,300.00) | -0.61% | +0.06% |
| GLD | Natural Resources | $(2,759,817,000.00) | -7.33% | +0.78% |
| EEM | Reference Securities | $(2,359,397,704.05) | +3.13% | -0.26% |
| VTV | Reference Securities | $(1,892,676,376.01) | +1.78% | +0.48% |
| ITA | Aero/Defense | $(1,637,138,038.05) | -4.17% | -0.18% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Inflows (YTD)
| ETF | Theme | YTD Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| VTI | Dividend | $16,405,902,851.71 | +0.67% | +0.52% |
| SCHD | Dividend | $5,793,345,000.00 | +0.58% | +0.26% |
| IGV | Software | $5,345,330,874.00 | -12.62% | -3.90% |
| EFG | ESG | $4,878,771,030.00 | +1.97% | -0.26% |
| SMH | Semiconductors | $3,662,371,185.00 | +9.11% | +1.75% |
ETF Fund Flows — Top 5 Outflows (YTD)
| ETF | Theme | YTD Flows | 1M Return | 1D |
| SPY | Reference Securities | $(20,925,308,637.25) | +0.51% | +0.58% |
| QQQ | Reference Securities | $(9,443,993,550.00) | +0.52% | +0.68% |
| IWM | Reference Securities | $(5,070,216,893.10) | +3.46% | +0.57% |
| SLV | Natural Resources | $(2,771,841,500.00) | -12.61% | +1.36% |
| GLD | Natural Resources | $(2,674,053,100.00) | -7.33% | +0.78% |