---
title: "Pinnacle Associates 13F (2026 Q1): Stocks and ETFs Side by Side"
type: research
slug: pinnacle-associates-13f-2026-q1
canonical_url: https://13finsight.com/research/pinnacle-associates-13f-2026-q1
published_at: 2026-05-24T10:10:52.143Z
updated_at: 2026-05-24T10:10:55.030Z
author: Marcus Chen
author_title: Senior Market Analyst
author_url: https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
word_count: 528
locale: en
source: 13F Insight
---

# Pinnacle Associates 13F (2026 Q1): Stocks and ETFs Side by Side

> Pinnacle Associates' 2026 Q1 13F blends hand-picked megacaps, Johnson & Johnson, Apple, Nvidia, with broad-market index ETFs like SPY, VTI and a new Nasdaq-100 sleeve. A core-satellite book that shows where the firm bets actively and where it is content to own the market.

A book that mixes stock-picking with index funds Most 13F filings are pure stock portfolios, but Pinnacle Associates' 2026Q1 filing is a useful example of a different, increasingly common structure: a book that blends individual stocks with broad-market index ETFs. The roughly $7.78 billion portfolio, spread across about 500 positions, holds megacap franchises like Johnson & Johnson, Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, and Broadcom right alongside index funds, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF, Vanguard Total Stock Market, Vanguard Small-Cap, and a new Nasdaq-100 position. Reading that mix correctly tells you a lot about how the firm builds portfolios. The largest single holding is Johnson & Johnson at 5.33%, followed by Apple at 4.10%, with the rest of the book, including the ETFs, sitting below 2.5% each. The simultaneous presence of hand-picked megacaps and broad index funds is the signature of a core-satellite approach: use low-cost index ETFs to capture broad market exposure efficiently, then layer selected individual stocks on top where the manager has a view. What the ETF holdings tell you When a manager holds the S&P 500, total-market, small-cap, and Nasdaq-100 ETFs, it is making a deliberate statement: for a chunk of the portfolio, it would rather own the market cheaply than try to beat it. That is not an admission of weakness; it is a sensible acknowledgment that broad, diversified exposure is hard to improve on and cheap to obtain, freeing the manager to concentrate its active effort where it believes it can add value. The Vanguard Small-Cap and total-market funds, in particular, efficiently capture corners of the market that are costly to cover stock by stock. For anyone reading the filing for ideas, this distinction matters enormously. The ETF positions are not stock picks, they are beta, broad market exposure, and treating them as conviction calls would misread the portfolio entirely. The individual stocks, the megacap franchises at the top, are where the firm's active views actually live. A steady quarter with one new index sleeve Reported value was essentially flat on the quarter, down 0.3%, and has grown steadily from roughly $6.4 billion to $7.8 billion over two years, consistent with market gains and inflows. The most notable change was the new Nasdaq-100 ETF position, adding a layer of large-cap-growth index exposure, alongside a modest 8% trim to Nvidia. The combination, adding a growth-tilted index fund while taking a little off the single hottest megacap, reads as a measured way to keep growth exposure while diversifying how it is obtained. How to read a hybrid stock-and-ETF filing The key discipline with a filing like Pinnacle's is to separate the two layers. The ETFs tell you how the manager obtains broad market exposure; the individual stocks tell you where it is making active bets. Conflating them, or scanning the ETF tickers for stock ideas, leads nowhere. Read this way, a hybrid book is informative precisely because it shows you which exposures the manager chose to express actively and which it was content to obtain passively, a window into where it believes its stock-picking is worth the effort. You can explore the full holdings, the position changes, and the longer history on the Pinnacle Associates filer page.

## FAQ

### What is unusual about Pinnacle Associates' 13F?

It blends individual stocks with broad-market index ETFs. The roughly $7.78 billion book holds megacaps like Johnson & Johnson, Apple, and Nvidia alongside funds such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF, Vanguard Total Stock Market, Vanguard Small-Cap, and a new Nasdaq-100 position.

### What is a core-satellite approach?

It uses low-cost index ETFs to capture broad market exposure efficiently, then layers selected individual stocks on top where the manager has a view. Pinnacle's mix of index funds and hand-picked megacaps is a clear example.

### What do the ETF holdings tell you?

That for part of the portfolio, the manager would rather own the market cheaply than try to beat it, a sensible choice that frees active effort for where it can add value. The ETFs are broad market exposure, not stock picks, and should not be read as conviction calls.

### What are Pinnacle's largest holdings?

Johnson & Johnson (5.33%) and Apple (4.10%) lead, followed by Nvidia, Microsoft, and Broadcom, with index ETFs including SPY, Vanguard Small-Cap, Vanguard Total Stock Market, and a new Nasdaq-100 position each below 2.5%.

### What did Pinnacle change in 2026 Q1?

Reported value was essentially flat, down 0.3%. The notable change was a new Nasdaq-100 ETF position adding large-cap-growth index exposure, alongside a modest 8% trim to Nvidia, a measured way to keep growth exposure while diversifying how it is obtained.

### How should I read a hybrid stock-and-ETF filing?

Separate the two layers. The ETFs show how the manager obtains broad market exposure; the individual stocks show where it makes active bets. Scanning ETF tickers for stock ideas misreads the portfolio, the active views live in the single-stock holdings.

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Source: 13F Insight — https://13finsight.com/research/pinnacle-associates-13f-2026-q1
Author: Marcus Chen — https://13finsight.com/authors/marcus-chen
Last updated: 2026-05-24T10:10:55.030Z