3 Red-Hot ETFs Set to Soar Over the Next Decade

One of the big pluses of investing in exchange-traded funds (ETFs) is the broad-based exposure you get from a hot investment theme without necessarily having to pick a winner in a sector.

The three themes featured here -- copper mining, cybersecurity, and U.S. infrastructure spending -- are all highly attractive for long-term investors. Still, they also contain a lot of stock-specific risk.

That's why it makes sense for most investors to buy into the Global X Copper Miners ETF (NYSEMKT: COPX), Global X Cybersecurity ETF (NASDAQ: BUG), and the Global X U.S. Infrastructure Development ETF (NYSEMKT: PAVE). Here's the lowdown.

ETF

Net Assets

Expense Ratio

Dividend Yield

Number of Holdings

Global X Copper Miners ETF

$1.9 billion

0.65%

2.10%

37

Global X Cybersecurity ETF

$780 million

0.5%

0.1%

26

Global X U.S. Infrastructure Development ETF

$7.3 billion

0.47%

0.49%

100

Data source: ETF presentations.

Global X Copper Miners ETF

The case for copper rests on the idea that rising demand from clean energy technologies, the trend of electrification of everything, electric vehicles (EVs) and charging networks, and data centers powering A.I. applications will put upward pressure on copper prices.

At the same time, as paradoxical as it sounds, the same environmentally sensitive push behind clean energy is often behind the movement to restrict copper mining permits. In addition, it takes time, multimillion-dollar investment, and permitting to bring a new copper mine into production.

That said, picking a winner among copper mining stocks is not always easy, not least because many of them have assets in politically unstable countries. For example, my favorite copper mining stock is Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE: FCX). Still, it's not without political risk, as its mines in Indonesia and South America are subject to the risk of increased taxes and royalty payments.

The 37 holdings in the ETF (including Freeport-McMoRan) help to diversify that risk, as does the diversification in its country holdings, with 47% in North America and 5% to 10% each in China, Australia, Japan, and the U.K. It offers a less risky way to get exposure to the upside potential for copper miners to benefit from potentially rising prices.

Global X Cybersecurity ETF

There's little doubt that cybersecurity is a growth industry. All it takes is a major cyber event or two -- such as the recent attack on Johnson Controls -- to stimulate renewed interest in spending on it.

That said, it's a fast-changing field, and it's not easy for retail investors to stay abreast of which company is leading the next generation of cybersecurity threat prevention.