Screening Filters
PriceAboveMA200 (moving_average_relationship)
- Purpose: Select ETFs whose current price is above their 200-day moving average.
- Rationale:
- Being above the 200-day moving average is a classic sign of a longer‑term uptrend and positive market sentiment.
- For a question about the “best ETF forecast for 2026,” we can’t know the future, but it’s reasonable to focus on ETFs that are currently showing technical strength, as they have momentum and are less likely (right now) to be in a major downtrend.
1-Year Price Change ≥ 10% (year_price_change_pct)
- Purpose: Require that the ETF has delivered at least 10% price appreciation over the last year.
- Rationale:
- A solid 1‑year return indicates recent fundamental or thematic strength in the ETF’s underlying holdings.
- When you’re looking ahead to 2026, one way to tilt toward strong candidates is to screen for funds that have already been rewarded by the market over a meaningful period (12 months), rather than those that have lagged significantly.
YTD Price Change ≥ 3% (ytd_price_change_pct)
- Purpose: Ensure positive and reasonable performance in the current calendar year.
- Rationale:
- This avoids ETFs that may have had a good prior year but are currently losing steam.
- Combining 1‑year and YTD filters helps focus on ETFs with both recent and ongoing strength, supporting the idea that they may continue to be relatively attractive as you look toward 2026.
Themes: Large Cap Growth, Technology, Health & Biotech, Emerging Markets, All Cap Equities (themes)
- Purpose: Concentrate on growth‑oriented and equity-based ETFs in sectors/regions with higher long‑term growth potential.
- Rationale:
- Large Cap Growth Equities: Targets established, innovative companies that can compound earnings over time—often core holdings for long‑term growth through 2026.
- Technology Equities: Tech is a key structural growth area (cloud, AI, semiconductors, software). If you’re seeking ETFs that may do well by 2026, tech is a logical hunting ground.
- Health & Biotech Equities: Another secular growth theme (aging demographics, new therapies, biotech innovation) that can drive returns over multi‑year horizons.
- Emerging Markets Equities: Offers higher growth potential tied to developing economies, which could outperform developed markets in some 3–5 year periods.
- All Cap Equities: Keeps the universe broad so you can capture compelling ideas beyond just mega‑caps, while still remaining in the equity growth arena.
- Overall, these themes align with a “best ETFs for the future” style question by emphasizing areas investors commonly look to for multi‑year growth rather than income-only or very defensive funds.
Expense Ratio ≤ 0.60% (expense_ratio)
- Purpose: Limit the search to ETFs with relatively moderate or low annual fees.
- Rationale:
- Over a multi‑year horizon like through 2026, lower fees compound into better net returns, all else equal.
- Screening out very high‑cost ETFs reduces the risk that fees will erode performance, making the remaining funds more appropriate candidates when thinking about future performance.
Why Results Match Your 2026-Focused Question
- The screen emphasizes current technical strength and recent performance (above 200-day MA, positive 1‑year and YTD returns), which is a practical way to tilt toward ETFs that the market currently favors.
- It focuses on growth-oriented and structurally promising themes (tech, health/biotech, emerging markets, growth equities), aligning with the idea of ETFs that have the potential to perform well over the next couple of years.
- It enforces a reasonable fee ceiling, which is critical for maximizing net returns over a multi‑year period leading into 2026.
We cannot guarantee which ETFs will be “best” in 2026, but these filters are designed to identify ETFs that currently show strength, are positioned in growth‑friendly areas, and are cost-efficient—three key pillars when trying to find strong candidates for future performance.
This list is generated based on data from one or more third party data providers. It is provided for informational purposes only by Intellectia.AI, and is not investment advice or a recommendation. Intellectia does not make any warranty or guarantee relating to the accuracy, timeliness or completeness of any third-party information, and the provision of this information does not constitute a recommendation.