Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF

PWB · AMEX

Market closed$154.34$-1.49 (-0.96%)After hours $154.32 · -0.01%

Key statistics

Previous close$155.83
Open$152.10
Day high$156.11
Day low$150.40
52-week high$169.01
52-week low$116.28
Market cap2.38B
Volume104.35K
Average volume96.22K
P/E ratio36.43
Forward P/E
EPS4.24
Dividend yield0.00%

Market context

Why it moved

PWB shares declined modestly as investor sentiment remained cautious following Pacific West Bank's reported second-quarter net loss, weighing on the stock's near-term outlook.

What is happening

Recent company-specific developments and publisher coverage.

July 18, 2026The Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF closed modestly lower, pressured by a broad technology and semiconductor selloff that hit several of its top holdings hard. AMD fell over 5%, NVDA dropped around 2.4%, AMAT and LRCX each declined more than 4%, and META retreated roughly 4.5% amid concerns over AI capex sustainability and an underwhelming Netflix earnings forecast — all weighing on the growth-heavy portfolio. The risk-off mood was amplified by escalating U.S.-Iran military tensions threatening Strait of Hormuz oil flows and news of a powerful Chinese AI model from startup Moonshot, renewing doubts about the durability of the AI trade that has fueled large-cap growth outperformance.

-0.9562

July 17, 2026Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF declined as a broad tech and AI-linked selloff weighed heavily on its top holdings, including Applied Materials, AMD, Lam Research, Micron, and NVIDIA, which all fell amid investor concerns that richly valued semiconductor and growth names have run ahead of fundamentals. Despite TSMC reporting a record 77% jump in Q2 profit — validating ongoing AI chip demand — markets focused on valuation risk, with the Nasdaq Composite dropping ~0.8% and the S&P 500 slipping 0.4%. Caterpillar, another top holding, also fell ~3.5% on cooling industrial data, further pressuring the ETF. In after-hours trading, the fund edged modestly higher, recovering a fraction of the session's loss.

-2.1537

July 16, 2026The Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF declined amid renewed semiconductor-led selling pressure, with several top holdings — including AMAT, LRCX, and AMD — experiencing continued volatility after a sharp sector selloff earlier in the week tied to U.S.-Iran tensions and broader tech rotation. While chip-equipment names like Applied Materials (+4.1%) and Lam Research (+4.9%) rebounded on Wednesday, the ETF still closed down roughly 1.4%, underperforming the broader market as IBM's historic 25% plunge on disappointing AI-revenue results weighed on sentiment across large-cap tech. Investors are also weighing Q2 earnings season expectations, a softer-than-forecast CPI print, and Fed rate uncertainty ahead of the July 28-29 FOMC meeting.

-1.4114

July 15, 2026The Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF closed up nearly 1.7%, lifted by a broad market rebound after June CPI came in softer than expected at 3.5% year-over-year—its biggest monthly drop since April 2020—easing rate-hike fears and boosting growth-oriented holdings. Key ETF constituents led the recovery: Applied Materials rose ~4.1% on improving chip-equipment sentiment, Lam Research gained ~4.9%, Visa jumped ~2.5% following a new AI financial assistant announcement, and Mastercard advanced ~2% amid broadly positive analyst sentiment, all offsetting drag from AMD (-4.2%) and a KeyBanc downgrade on Apple. The softer inflation print provided relief after Monday's sell-off driven by renewed U.S.-Iran tensions and semiconductor weakness, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq also recovering modestly.

1.6998

July 13, 2026The Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF fell over 2% as a confluence of macro headwinds weighed on its semiconductor- and tech-heavy holdings. Renewed U.S.-Iran military exchanges sent oil prices surging above $79/barrel (Brent), reigniting inflation fears and pressuring risk assets broadly, while Asian chip stocks sold off sharply—SK Hynix tumbled nearly 14% in Seoul—casting doubt on AI momentum heading into earnings season. Top PWB holdings AMAT, AMD, LRCX, MU, META, and NVDA all faced pressure, despite broadly constructive analyst sentiment on the group. Investors now await a packed week of Q2 earnings from major banks and TSMC, alongside June CPI data.

-2.162

July 11, 2026The Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF edged modestly higher, closing up around 0.5%, as the AI semiconductor theme continued to buoy its top holdings. Applied Materials — the fund's largest position — surged nearly 10% after CEO Gary Dickerson signaled multi-year chip demand visibility extending to 2030, prompting sharp analyst price target increases from TD Cowen (to $700) and Mizuho (to $650). Micron climbed after announcing a $3B U.S. supply-chain investment, AMD advanced on strong AI data-center momentum, and Meta surged on AI cloud ambitions — all meaningful holdings — while Visa and Mastercard provided relative stability ahead of their late-July earnings reports. Volume ran well above average at over 3x the norm, reflecting elevated investor interest, and shares continued higher in after-hours trading as the S&P 500 approached its 52-week high.

0.5139

July 10, 2026The Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF gained nearly 2% as Wall Street staged a broad recovery despite ongoing U.S.-Iran military exchanges and renewed geopolitical uncertainty in the Persian Gulf. The ETF's top holdings were a key driver: Micron announced it is accelerating U.S. investments to over $250 billion through 2035 amid surging AI memory demand, Applied Materials' CEO signaled that AI capital spending may extend longer than expected, and Visa continues to draw bullish institutional interest ahead of its July 28 earnings. The rebound came after a mid-week selloff tied to the collapse of the U.S.-Iran ceasefire framework and a sharp chip-sector rotation, with the S&P 500 closing at record highs as investors refocused on strong Q2 corporate earnings expectations.

1.9182

July 8, 2026The Invesco Large Cap Growth ETF closed modestly higher, even as the broader S&P 500 faced a risk-off session driven by renewed U.S.-Iran military exchanges that sent oil prices surging and inflation fears resurfacing ahead of Fed minutes. The ETF's resilience was supported by strength in key holdings: Palantir rose ~4.5% on continued AI and defense momentum, Visa held up on strong digital payments growth and record stablecoin transaction volumes, and Mastercard maintained solid footing with bullish analyst sentiment. However, top semiconductor holdings AMAT, AMD, and LRCX all declined sharply—down 8%, 6.5%, and 6.9% respectively—as a broad chip selloff deepened on AI trade cooling concerns and valuation resets, partially offsetting gains elsewhere in the portfolio.

0.7566

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