When the fund manager who was the biggest supporter of a sector begins stealthily leaving, a certain type of stillness descends upon it. It’s important to note that Cathie Wood hasn’t completely given up on Archer Aviation. However, ARK Invest’s decision to sell over 2.22 million ACHR shares across three of its flagship ETFs, for a total of about $12.72 million, is not something you make arbitrarily. And upon closer inspection, the explanation is more intriguing than the figures would imply.
ARKK, ARKQ, and ARKX all saw a significant reduction in their Archer positions as a result of the selling of ARK Invest ACHR shares. ACHR’s holdings dropped to 1.4% of the fund after ARKK, the flagship Innovation ETF that made Cathie Wood famous during the pandemic-era tech boom, sold slightly more over 953,000 shares. In a similar move, ARKQ reduced 866,000 shares, making Archer its fifteenth largest position. The space and defense-focused fund ARKX sold about 402,000 shares. When taken as a whole, it reads less like a panic sale and more like a purposeful repositioning, the type of trim that indicates a change in belief without completely shutting the door.
Electric air taxis are manufactured by Archer Aviation. Assembled at the company’s San Jose plant, the Midnight aircraft is intended for short urban routes—the kind of commute that sounds like science fiction until you realize that big airlines as United Airlines have already placed orders. The technology is genuine. The goal is believable.
Apparently, the regulatory apparatus that stands between Archer and actual commercial money isn’t progressing quickly enough. The gap between a promising prototype and a paying passenger has grown in ways that strain institutional patience, and FAA certification timelines have lingered. As that reality sunk in earlier in the year, Archer’s shares dropped more than 23%, and ARK’s reduction escalated in tandem with that decline.
Where the cash went is what makes the selling of ARK Invest ACHR shares very telling. Pony AI. DoorDash. Not precisely the future moonshot region around which ARK established their brand. Both businesses make actual money from autonomous systems that are in use right now, not in five years or while they are awaiting certification. Wood’s team appears to be recalibrating, subtly moving the objectives from “companies that will change everything eventually” to “companies changing things right now.” That might be a short-term change. It might also indicate something deeper about ARK’s changing ideology.
The contrast with Vanguard, which has apparently continued to strengthen its ACHR position throughout the same period, is difficult to ignore. It is worthwhile to sit with that disparity. When two major institutional players examine the same business, the same regulatory framework, and the same uncertainty over the timing, they come to different conclusions. Where ARK is cutting, Vanguard, who is usually the steady hand in the room, seems to see value. This indicates that either ARK is responding to short-term noise that longer-horizon investors can easily ignore, or Vanguard is seeing something that ARK is not.

All three ARK portfolios still include Archer. That is important. A complete departure would have conveyed a completely different message. However, as the story develops, it seems less like a judgment on Archer itself and more like an illustration of how dramatically the investment landscape has changed since 2021, when it seemed virtually necessary to support bold, pre-revenue businesses. The eVTOL industry is still alive. There is no cancellation of the flying taxi. Simply said, it’s taking longer than the slide decks indicated, and longer is a word that funds are increasingly unable to afford in the current situation.
