Tuttle Files Magnificent 10 ETF Adding AMD, Broadcom, Palantir

CryptoBriefing reports that Tuttle Capital Management filed for a new ETF, the proposed Magnificent 10, which would add Advanced Micro Devices, Broadcom (AVGO), and Palantir (PLTR) to the original Magnificent 7 roster of Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Nvidia, and Tesla. CryptoBriefing states the filing follows Tuttle's December 2025 launch of the Magnificent 7 Income Blast ETF (MAGO) and that the new fund is expected to use an options-overlay approach similar to that earlier product. CryptoBriefing also notes the Cboe launched the Magnificent 10 Index (MGTN) in September 2025 and has listed futures and options on that index. Roundhill Investments' MAGS ETF is cited as an existing competing product providing equal-weighted exposure to the original Magnificent 7.
What happened
CryptoBriefing reports that Tuttle Capital Management filed for a new ETF called the proposed Magnificent 10, expanding the Magnificent 7 basket to include Advanced Micro Devices, Broadcom (AVGO), and Palantir (PLTR) alongside the original seven mega-cap names. CryptoBriefing states the filing follows Tuttle's December 2025 launch of the Magnificent 7 Income Blast ETF (MAGO). CryptoBriefing reports the new fund is expected to layer options strategies over the broader basket, echoing Tuttle's earlier product design.
Technical details
CryptoBriefing notes the Cboe launched the Magnificent 10 Index (MGTN) in September 2025 and that Cboe has rolled out futures and options contracts on MGTN to serve institutional demand. CryptoBriefing also cites Roundhill Investments' MAGS ETF as an existing competitor that provides equal-weighted exposure to the original Magnificent 7.
Editorial analysis
Industry context: ETF issuers have been broadening concentrated, thematic baskets to capture a wider set of firms tied to AI and digital transformation. Products that add semiconductor and AI-infrastructure suppliers such as AMD and Broadcom, plus data- and analytics firms like Palantir, reflect a push to include hardware, silicon, and enterprise-data exposure alongside cloud and software mega-caps.
Editorial analysis
For practitioners: concentrated, thematic ETFs with options overlays change exposure in two ways that matter for portfolio construction and factor analysis. First, inclusion of chipmakers and analytics firms shifts sector and supply-chain exposures within a concentrated tech index. Second, an options-overlay strategy alters realized return profiles and tail-risk characteristics compared with a pure equity index, which affects backtesting and risk-model calibration.
What to watch
Observers should track the ETF filing documents for an official prospectus that specifies index methodology, weighting, and the exact options strategy. Separately, watch for asset flows into MGTN-linked products and any market activity in the MGTN futures/options that CryptoBriefing reports as already listed by Cboe.
Roster (per CryptoBriefing)
- •Apple
- •Microsoft
- •Alphabet
- •Amazon
- •Meta
- •Nvidia
- •Tesla
- •Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)
- •Broadcom (AVGO)
- •Palantir (PLTR)
Scoring Rationale
This filing is notable for market structure and portfolio-construction reasons rather than for a technical AI advance. Adding chipmakers and enterprise-data firms to a mega-cap tech basket affects sector exposures and derivative-linked access, which matters to investors and data practitioners modeling market impact.
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