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SpaceX confidentially filed for an initial public offering (IPO) in early April, adding fresh momentum to investor interest in the company and the broader artificial intelligence (AI) ecosystem. Rather than concentrating exposure on a single IPO debut, the KraneShares Artificial Intelligence and Technology ETF (AGIX) offers a diversified way to gain exposure to AI-related public companies and private AI firms.
AGIX is designed to provide exposure across multiple parts of the AI stack, including private AI companies. The fund’s positioning is tied to developments such as SpaceX’s earlier this year merger with xAI in a $1.25 trillion transaction.
In addition to xAI, AGIX includes exposure to Anthropic, another major large language model (LLM) developer. The combination of xAI and Anthropic is presented as a way for investors to participate in AI innovation without relying on access to a single company’s IPO allocation.
The article describes AGIX as a hybrid portfolio that includes both public equities and private companies. It highlights that the fund’s public holdings include major technology firms such as Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, and Alphabet.
It also notes that these large-cap technology companies have strategic ties to AI development, including investments in Anthropic, and that Alphabet has a 7% stake in SpaceX. The article states that this stake “could be worth over $100 billion once the rocket company hits the public markets.”
The article flags one drawback: AGIX’s nearly 1% expense ratio, which it says is higher than most ETFs. It characterizes the fee as an “admission fee” for access to private-market innovation that is otherwise limited by venture capital minimums, accredited investor requirements, and lockup periods.
The argument presented is that AGIX’s diversified structure could reduce single-company execution risk associated with a capital-intensive, niche business like SpaceX, while still offering exposure to AI capabilities that may support future growth in areas such as launch systems and satellite data analysis.
The article also contrasts AGIX with the idea of a SpaceX IPO valued at a “$2 trillion premium,” describing AGIX as a cheaper alternative to pursuing that single-company outcome.
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