Gratus Wealth Advisors sold 164,630 shares of QQEW -- worth an estimated $22.3 million based on average closing prices for the quarter -- reducing its stake by more than 60%.
The fund's quarter-end position value fell by $25.0 million, reflecting both the share sale and market price changes during the period.
After the transaction, Gratus holds 106,444 QQEW shares valued at $13.5 million, representing 1.9% of the firm's assets under management (AUM).
According to a recent SEC filing, Gratus Wealth Advisors, LLC, significantly reduced its stake in the First Trust Nasdaq-100 Select Equal Weight ETF (NASDAQ:QQEW), selling 164,630 shares during Q1 2026. The estimated transaction value was $22.3 million, based on the average closing price for the quarter. The quarter-end position value in QQEW declined by $25.0 million, reflecting both the share sale and price movement during the period.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| AUM | $1.6 billion |
| Expense ratio | 0.55% |
| Dividend yield | 0.35% |
| 1-year return (as of 5/4/26) | 12.24% |
The First Trust Nasdaq-100 Select Equal Weight ETF (QQEW) tracks the Nasdaq-100 through an equal-weight methodology -- meaning each of the index's roughly 100 holdings receives a similar allocation, rather than concentrating heavily in the largest companies.
At first glance, selling more than 60% of an ETF position looks significant -- but some context helps put this move in perspective. Gratus is a wealth management firm, and the 13F filing reflects a snapshot of holdings at quarter-end rather than a real-time window into the firm's thinking. The filing alone doesn't tell us why the position was trimmed.
That said, the sale comes against a backdrop of relative underperformance. QQEW has gained about 12% over the past year, but it has lagged the S&P 500 by roughly 16 percentage points over that stretch -- a meaningful gap for any position in a managed portfolio. Equal-weight strategies like QQEW tend to shine when smaller and mid-cap names in the Nasdaq keep pace with -- or outrun -- the mega-cap leaders. In periods where a handful of giants (like the Magnificent 7 stocks) are doing the heavy lifting for the index, an equal-weight approach will naturally trail the cap-weighted alternative.
It’s also worth noting that Gratus still holds a substantial position in the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) -- $37.0 million -- providing continued Nasdaq-100 exposure through the cap-weighted version of the same index.
For long-term investors, the equal-weight approach offers genuine diversification benefits over time and can limit concentration risk relative to market-cap-weighted funds. But when the market's biggest names are driving returns, the equal-weight trade-off comes at a cost -- and that dynamic has been on full display over the past year.
As for why Gratus trimmed the position -- whether it's QQEW's recent underperformance, a decision to redeploy capital into other parts of the portfolio, or simply routine rebalancing -- we can’t be sure. Whether QQEW's relative underperformance persists will depend largely on how broad -- or narrow -- market leadership turns out to be going forward.
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Andy Gould has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.