compare vgt, qqq, spy, brkb

Here’s the high-level comparison between Vanguard Information Technology ETFInvesco QQQ TrustSPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, and Berkshire Hathaway Class B over the past ~10–20 years.

Asset What it is Approx 10Y CAGR Approx 20Y CAGR Volatility Main Driver
VGT Pure US tech ETF ~22–24% ~18–20% Very high Mega-cap tech dominance
QQQ Nasdaq-100 ETF ~21–22% ~15–16% High Tech + growth stocks
SPY S&P 500 ETF ~15% ~10–11% Medium Broad US economy
BRK.B Berkshire Hathaway ~12–13% ~10–11% Lower Cash flow businesses + capital allocation

QQQ and SPY performance figures are supported by long-term total return comparisons. 
BRK.B long-term return estimates are supported by Berkshire/S&P comparisons and CAGR datasets. 

The important part is why they behaved differently.


1. Why VGT and QQQ massively outperformed

VGT = concentrated AI/cloud/software/semi exposure

Vanguard Information Technology ETF is almost a direct bet on:

  • NVIDIA
  • Microsoft
  • Apple
  • Broadcom
  • Adobe
  • Salesforce

Over the last 15 years, software margins, cloud computing, smartphones, AI accelerators, and internet platforms created one of the strongest capital concentration cycles in history.

The key economic reason:

Software and semiconductors scale almost infinitely with low marginal cost.

For example:

  • A railroad needs more track to grow.
  • Insurance needs more underwriting capital.
  • But software can serve millions more users with minimal incremental cost.

That creates:

  • higher operating leverage
  • higher ROIC (return on invested capital)
  • faster earnings compounding

VGT is even more concentrated than QQQ in those winners.

That is why VGT generally beat QQQ.


2. Why QQQ beat SPY

Invesco QQQ Trust tracks the Nasdaq-100, which excludes:

  • banks
  • energy
  • industrials
  • many slow-growth sectors

So QQQ became heavily tilted toward:

  • cloud
  • semis
  • internet
  • AI
  • SaaS
  • hyperscalers

Meanwhile SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust includes everything:

  • utilities
  • oil
  • consumer staples
  • insurers
  • telecom
  • etc.

So SPY has:

  • better diversification
  • lower concentration risk
  • lower upside during tech supercycles

QQQ benefited from:

  • zero-rate environment (2009–2021)
  • explosive multiple expansion
  • hyperscaler dominance
  • AI wave

That produced extraordinary returns. 


3. Why Berkshire underperformed QQQ/VGT

Berkshire Hathaway Class B is fundamentally different.

Berkshire owns:

  • insurance
  • railroads
  • utilities
  • manufacturing
  • consumer businesses
  • large cash reserves

Examples include:

  • BNSF Railway
  • GEICO
  • Berkshire Hathaway Energy

Those are excellent businesses, but they are:

  • capital intensive
  • slower growth
  • regulated
  • tied to GDP growth

Also:

Berkshire became too large

This is extremely important.

When Buffett managed small capital in the 1960s–1980s:

  • he could buy small undervalued companies
  • special situations mattered
  • arbitrage opportunities moved returns

Today Berkshire is near trillion-dollar scale.

That creates a mathematical problem:

A company that large cannot compound at 20% forever because:

  • there are not enough large opportunities
  • acquisitions move the needle less
  • cash drag becomes enormous

Buffett himself has repeatedly said size is Berkshire’s enemy.

That’s why Berkshire’s:

  • volatility stayed lower
  • drawdowns stayed smaller
  • returns converged closer to SPY over time

rather than matching QQQ/VGT. 


4. Risk-adjusted comparison

This is where the story becomes more nuanced.

During crashes

BRK.B often holds up much better.

Examples:

  • 2022 tech crash
  • dot-com collapse
  • rising-rate periods

QQQ/VGT can drop:

  • 30–50%
  • because long-duration growth stocks are highly sensitive to interest rates

Berkshire’s businesses:

  • generate real cash flow
  • often benefit from inflation
  • have insurance float
  • hold huge liquidity reserves

So Berkshire historically had:

  • smaller drawdowns
  • lower volatility
  • more defensive behavior

Example comparisons show BRK.B drawdowns materially smaller than QQQ. 


5. The hidden macro reason

The last 15 years were probably the greatest environment ever for:

  • long-duration growth assets
  • software monopolies
  • tech platform scalability

Key conditions:

  • near-zero interest rates
  • globalization
  • cloud adoption
  • smartphones
  • AI
  • cheap capital

That disproportionately favored:

  • VGT
  • QQQ

If future decades become:

  • inflationary
  • energy constrained
  • higher-rate
  • infrastructure-heavy

then:

  • SPY or BRK.B may relatively improve
  • while tech multiples compress

Simplified intuition

Think of them like this:

Asset Analogy
VGT Leveraged bet on the digital economy
QQQ Growth-oriented innovation engine
SPY The entire US corporate economy
BRK.B Giant actively managed value/quality conglomerate

If you had invested $10k roughly 15–20 years ago

Approximate outcome:

Asset Approx Ending Value
VGT Highest
QQQ Very high
SPY Strong
BRK.B Good but no longer extraordinary

QQQ total return since 2010 exceeded 1600% in some comparisons, while BRK.B was closer to ~500–700%. 

所有跟帖: 

如果把这几个回报率除以它们对应的Beta(波动率/风险指数), 最后估计risk adjusted returns差别不 -inet-fan- 给 inet-fan 发送悄悄话 inet-fan 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 05/18/2026 postreply 11:46:56

比较一下vnq, xlre。十年前是如何的风光。 -月光寶盒- 给 月光寶盒 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 05/18/2026 postreply 11:48:07

那个时候房地产热的不得了 -麻你- 给 麻你 发送悄悄话 麻你 的博客首页 (45 bytes) () 05/18/2026 postreply 12:10:29

那时候好多精妓在坛子里爬进爬出。 -月光寶盒- 给 月光寶盒 发送悄悄话 (187 bytes) () 05/18/2026 postreply 14:15:34

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