Data refreshed 10 June 2026 – SMH historical return
What If You Invested $1,000 in SMH on 1 June 2015?
This standard WWIBWN scenario tracks what a $1,000 investment in the VanEck Semiconductor ETF on 1 June 2015 would be worth now.
Invested on 2015-06-01.
Adjusted historical close.
Latest available weekly close.
About 21.5x the original stake.
Quick Answer
If you had invested $1,000 in the VanEck Semiconductor ETF on 1 June 2015, the investment would now be worth an estimated $21,486.32.
The semiconductor industry became one of the biggest beneficiaries of AI, cloud computing and increasing global demand for advanced technology. SMH gave investors exposure to multiple leading chip companies rather than relying on a single winner.
The Investment Breakdown
| Measure | Result |
|---|---|
| Asset | VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) |
| Start date used | 2015-06-01 |
| Amount invested | $1,000 |
| Adjusted entry price used | $26.5709 |
| Units bought | 37.6352 |
| Latest close used | $570.91 |
| Estimated value now | $21,486.32 |
| Estimated gain | $20,486.32 (2,049%) |
Methodology: For consistency, WWIBWN standard 2015 scenarios use 1 June 2015 as the starting date unless otherwise stated. IPO and launch-based scenarios use the relevant IPO, direct listing, launch or earliest available trading date. Figures are updated weekly using the latest available market data. This standard scenario uses 1 June 2015 and Yahoo Finance adjusted historical chart data. Adjusted close accounts for fund distributions and corporate actions. It does not include tax, trading fees, FX movement, custody costs or slippage.
About the Asset
The VanEck Semiconductor ETF is designed to provide exposure to leading semiconductor companies.
Rather than investing in a single stock, SMH holds major chip designers and manufacturers. Its holdings have included Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Broadcom, AMD, Qualcomm and Intel.
Why This Starting Date Matters
WWIBWN standard 2015 scenarios use 1 June 2015 for consistency. At the time, artificial intelligence was still in its early stages, data centres were expanding, cloud adoption was accelerating and demand for advanced chips was growing steadily.
Buying SMH then meant gaining sector exposure before the AI boom, the explosion in demand for Nvidia GPUs and massive data-centre expansion.
The Investment Journey
2015-2019: Steady Growth
Cloud computing, smartphones and enterprise technology spending drove consistent semiconductor demand and earnings growth.
2020-2021: Pandemic Acceleration
Remote working, cloud services and digital transformation accelerated. Global chip shortages highlighted the industry’s strategic importance.
2022: Market Correction
Rising interest rates, inflation concerns and slowdown fears weighed on technology investments despite continued long-term semiconductor demand.
2023-Present: The AI Boom
Generative AI created enormous demand for advanced chips. Major SMH holdings became central to the AI infrastructure buildout.
What Drove Returns?
Artificial Intelligence
The AI revolution created enormous demand for advanced semiconductor hardware.
Data Centre Expansion
Cloud providers invested billions in infrastructure requiring increasingly powerful chips.
Digital Transformation
Businesses continued moving services online, increasing demand for computing power.
Diversification
SMH benefited from growth across the semiconductor ecosystem rather than relying on one company.
Industry Leadership
Many of the world’s most innovative technology companies became major holdings within the fund.
Could You Have Seen It Coming?
Partially. Continued technology growth was visible, but predicting the scale of AI adoption and advanced-chip demand was extremely difficult.
Investors faced trade tensions, semiconductor cycles, supply-chain disruptions, manufacturer competition and technology-market corrections.
Different Investment Amounts
| Initial Investment | Estimated Value Now |
|---|---|
| $100 | $2,148.63 |
| $500 | $10,743.16 |
| $1,000 | $21,486.32 |
| $5,000 | $107,431.59 |
| $10,000 | $214,863.17 |
Risks Along the Way
SMH investors experienced semiconductor shortages, market crashes, interest-rate shocks, trade disputes and technology-sector volatility. Long-term demand grew, but the path was not smooth.
Key Takeaways
SMH provided diversified exposure to the semiconductor industry. Investors benefited from AI, cloud computing and digital transformation while reducing single-company risk compared with owning one chip stock.
Related Scenarios
What If You Invested $1,000 in Nvidia on 1 June 2015?
What If You Invested $1,000 in AMD on 1 June 2015?
What If You Invested $1,000 in QQQ on 1 June 2015?
What If You Invested $1,000 in VOO on 1 June 2015?
FAQ
What is SMH?
SMH is the VanEck Semiconductor ETF, which provides exposure to leading semiconductor companies.
Why has SMH performed so well?
AI, cloud computing, smartphones and data centres increased demand for semiconductor products.
Is SMH diversified?
Yes. SMH holds multiple semiconductor companies, reducing reliance on a single stock while remaining concentrated in one industry.
Is SMH better than buying Nvidia?
SMH provides broader semiconductor exposure, while Nvidia creates greater company-specific upside and risk.
What companies are in SMH?
Major holdings typically include leading chip designers and manufacturers such as Nvidia, TSMC, Broadcom and AMD. Holdings change over time.
Data and Editorial Information
This scenario is generated from market data and reviewed for calculation consistency before publication.
Historical entry and latest prices come from Yahoo Finance chart data. Adjusted close is used where available to reflect splits, distributions and other corporate actions.
The latest available adjusted market close is used for the calculation.
$1,000 divided by the entry price gives the units bought. Units bought multiplied by the latest price gives the estimated current value.
10 June 2026. Latest price used: $570.91 from 2026-06-10.
Prepared and reviewed by WWIBWN for educational and historical context. Calculations exclude tax, fees and personal circumstances.
Read more about WWIBWN or report a possible data issue.
Important: WWIBWN is for education and historical context only. This is not financial advice, and past performance does not predict future returns.