Consumer Staples Are Losing Their Safe-Haven Status. Here's Why.
Quick Take
Consumer staples are losing their appeal as safe investments due to rising costs and changing consumer behavior.
Key Points
- Rising inflation pressures profit margins.
- Shifts in consumer preferences impact sales.
- Investors are seeking higher growth alternatives.
📖 Reader Mode
~2 min readThere’s a large camp among Wall Street analysts that assumes when the technology and other growth sectors plunge, the safety trade is in consumer staples. Those are the stocks that make the things we use for daily living. Toothpaste, soap, and just about anything they sell at Costco (COST), Walmart (WMT), or Target (TGT).
I’ve never been in that camp. Because in contemporary markets, it is more likely that even brief flights to quality will soon see those lower-volatility stocks succumb to whatever is ailing the broader market. In part, this is because these stocks tend to be richly valued to begin with, as the market respects their relatively stable financial conditions.
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As you can see, that giant trio is part of the top 11 holdings of the S&P 500 Consumer Staples Sector SPDR ETF (XLP). Those top 11 holdings occupy about two-thirds of all the real estate within that exchange-traded fund (ETF).
A Closer Look at XLP
Clearly, XLP is in at least a mini upswing. Here’s the daily chart. It even has a PPO indicator (bottom of the chart) that is bordering on positive territory and sloping up nicely. Still, I think XLP looks more like it is headed for another short-term period of outperformance, rather than a renaissance. I see this type of chart a lot in the current market. That is, there’s upside room, but not near 10%. Even for a trade, I aim for at least a 10% gain and will settle for 5% if the pattern does not work out.
While XLP has shed its 2025 status as an artificial intelligence (AI)-overshadowed laggard sector, the question remains: Is this a genuine safety trade or simply a place to hide while waiting for the AI/tech stock bear market to strike?
This is a good indication of what I’m talking about. Over the past month, there have been lots of big wins and just as many losses within this portfolio. This is a typical look for XLP, since its stock holdings do many different things in their role as providers of consumer durable goods.
XLP is the giant of its space, as is the case with most of the SPDR sector ETFs. It is nearing $15 billion in assets. But selling at nearly 20x trailing earnings, as a basket, this ETF is not going to be a world-beater. And this is a market where earnings misses, or other negative events, can take a big chunk out of any single stock. WMT’s earnings are this week, and that event alone could shake the sector lower.
— Originally published at finance.yahoo.com
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