An old knock on ETFs is that rarely, if ever, do equity-based funds outperform the best-performing stock in their lineups.

Then again, stock ETFs rarely perform as poorly as the worst stocks on their rosters. For investors, finding an ETF that delivers better returns than a fair amount of its top holdings is a good thing.

It is even better when that ETF is devoted to one of the best sectors for future dividend growth. That being technology. Say an early happy first birthday to the First Trust NASDAQ Technology Dividend Index Fund TDIV, which turns one year old next Tuesday.

TDIV is a prime example of a new ETF that has been at the right place at the right time. While tech, broadly speaking has been laggard sector this year, tech stocks continue to bolster their dividend footprints. In the first quarter, technology led the S&P 500 in terms of dividend growth for the second consecutive quarter, according to FactSet data.

Growth in tech sector dividends has been fueled in part by Apple AAPL initiating a payout then announcing a significant increase to that payout earlier this year. Cisco CSCO announced a 75 percent increase to its dividend last year.

Related: These ETFs Are Full of Recent Dividend Raisers.

Tech is now the largest dividend-paying sector in the U.S. As for TDIV, Cisco is that ETF's largest holding and Apple is second. The two combine for nearly 17 percent of the ETF's weight. TDIV, which excludes companies that have cut or suspended their payouts, is up 14.1 percent this year, easily trouncing the 8.3 percent gain for the Technology Select Sector SPDR XLK.

TDIV is also outpacing plenty of its marquee holdings, including Apple. Proving TDIV offers something for conservative investors, the fund has 20 percent allocation to telecom names. That means Windstream WIN is the ETF's tenth-largest holding.

Excluding Windstream, TDIV's other top-10 holdings are all pure tech stocks. Of that group of nine, only Cisco, Hewlett-Packard HPQ, Texas Instruments TXN and Microsoft MSFT have outperformed TDIV this year.

Given that from 1998 through 2011 HP did not raise its dividend, it is not unreasonable to say investors that wanted tech exposure and dividend growth would have avoided that stock, at least until last year. Legitimate dividend growers in the tech space would certainly include International Business Machines IBM, Intel INTC and Microsoft. IBM is slightly lower this year and TDIV is nearly 400 basis points ahead of Intel.

Oracle ORCL and Qualcomm QCOM also rank among the TDIV top-10 holdings that have lagged the ETF. Voracious repurchasers of their own shares, Oracle and Qualcomm have also been outpaced by the PowerShares Buyback Achievers Portfolio PKW.

As for telecom, TDIV devotes a combined 10.2 percent of its weight to Windstream, CenturyLink CTL, Vodafone VOD, Verizon VZ and AT&T T. Only Verizon and Vodafone of that group have delivered year-to-date returns that are superior to TDIV. Translation: Only five of TDIV's 14 holdings have been better than the ETF this year.

In terms of number of S&P 500 members that yield two percent or more, tech is in the middle of the road, trailing financial, discretionary, industrials and utilities. However, tech had a five-year dividend growth average of 12 percent in the first quarter, double that of the S&P 500, according to Loomis Sayles data. That indicates TDIV's days of out-performance could just be getting started.

For more on ETFs, click here.

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