US shares
HNDQ
Betashares Nasdaq 100 Currency Hedged ETF · Betashares
The same 100 largest non-financial companies on the US Nasdaq market as NDQ, but with the currency exposure hedged back to Australian dollars.
What the fee costs you
The management fee is 0.51% a year. Here’s what that works out to in dollars:
A 0.51% yearly fee works out to about $51 a year per $10,000 invested.
A rough guide based on the headline fee only. Other costs (such as brokerage or buy/sell spreads) aren’t included.
The basics
- Issuer
- Betashares
- Asset class
- US shares
- Number of holdings
- ~100
- Where it invests
- Almost entirely the United States.
- Income paid
- Half-yearly
- Currency hedged
- Yes — It's currency-hedged back to Australian dollars, so day-to-day moves in the US dollar against the Australian dollar are largely smoothed out, leaving mainly the US market itself.
Its character
Very heavily weighted to technology, with names like Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft and Amazon at the top. It is the hedged twin of NDQ, so it tracks the same US tech-heavy basket but strips out most of the currency swing.
What to keep in mind
Concentrated in one country and one broad theme — US technology — so it can swing harder than a broad market fund. Hedging removes most of the currency effect but not the ups and downs of the US shares themselves.
How this fund relates to others
Holds the same 100 Nasdaq names as NDQ, just currency-hedged, so the two overlap almost completely. Those names also sit inside the S&P 500 funds and overlap with global funds' top holdings.
Figures last verified 2026-06-22against the issuer’s factsheet and PDS.