Consumer Staples Continue Rollercoaster Ride Lower

 | Oct 06, 2017 12:04AM ET

Consumer staples stocks have always been known for their relatively low volatility and conservative nature. It’s one of the reasons they are such a prominent aspect of many retirement portfolios and continue to serve as a reassuring equity allocation for countless investors.

These companies are typified by their mature business models and inelastic consumer trends. Think grocery stores, beverage companies, consumer goods, tobacco stocks, and drug store chains. They sell products that are constantly in demand no matter what the overall economy is doing. For this primary reason, they are considered more stable than speculative or growth-oriented stocks.

The largest exchange-traded fund that tracks this sector is the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR (NYSE:XLP). This market-cap weighted index fund owns 34 large-cap consumer stocks from within the broader S&P 500 Index. Top holdings include well-known names such as Procter & Gamble Company (NYSE:PG) and the Coca-Cola Company (NYSE:KO).

The relatively small number of holdings, combined with the market-cap weighted nature of this fund, means that the top 10 stocks make up most of the portfolio exposure. XLP charges an expense ratio of 0.14% and has total assets exceeding $8.7 billion.

A look at the chart below shows how this fund peaked in June and has been on a rollercoaster ride lower ever since. XLP is now testing its 200-day moving average (smooth red line) and may ultimately breach this long-term trend line to the downside.