The energy sector is garnering a lot of investor attention lately. With increasing geopolitical tensions, talks of further OPEC cuts and decreasing production, oil prices are having a good time.
Reason Behind the Appeal
OPEC is scheduled to meet on Nov 30, 2017 to decide on the future of oil production cuts. The markets believe that the OPEC will be extending the output cut deal to 2018 to further stabilize oil prices. Investors breathed a sigh of relief as they appear convinced that member countries are adhering to the OPEC deal.
The impact of hurricanes in the United States led to a decline in U.S. oil production. Declining U.S. drilling activity has provided support to prices. U.S. oil rigs drilling for new production fell to 736 in the week ending Oct 20 compared with 743 in the previous week, per an Economic Times article citing Baker Hughes data.
Moreover, clashes between government forces and Kurdish groups in Iraq have led to supply problems in the world’s second-largest oil producing country. Adding to the agony, President Donald Trump proposed new sanctions on Iran and accused the Middle Eastern country of not adhering to the landmark nuclear deal which imposed curbs on Iran’s nuclear capacity in exchange for freeing assets and easing international trade restrictions. Although still uncertain, oil prices have been rallying on risks of new sanctions on Iran.
Let us now discuss two ETFs focused on providing exposure to energy equities.
Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE – Free Report)
This fund seeks to provide exposure to energy stocks and tracks the Energy Select Sector Index. It has AUM of $16.5 billion and charges a moderate fee of 14 basis points a year. It has 32 holdings and bears significant concentration risk as over 72% of the assets are allocated to the top 10 holdings.
From a sector look, the fund has exposure to Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels and Energy Equipment & Services, with 85.4% and 14.6% exposure, respectively (as of Sep 30, 2017). The fund’s top three holdings are Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM – Free Report), Chevron Corp (CVX – Free Report) and Schlumberger Ltd (SLB – Free Report) with 23.9%, 17.5%, and 6.8% allocation, respectively (as of Oct 23, 2017). The fund has lost 4.0% in a year and 10.5% year to date (as of Oct 23, 2017). XLE currently has a Zacks ETF Rank #4 (Sell) with a High risk outlook.