Staples ETFs Are Hot, But Big Holdings Are Pricey

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This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

The Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLP) , the largest consumer staples ETF, and rival staples ETF are soaring this year as investors embrace defensive sectors. For its part, XLP is higher by almost 20%.

The consumer staples segment has long been viewed as a high-quality and defensive play. The slow and steady nature of the consumer staples business has long been touted as a safe play for all periods since consumers will still need to buy the basic necessities.

Consumer staples are the products that people use frequently and occupy a significant chunk of the average household’s budget. The sector provides the goods that shoppers typically consume on a weekly or even daily basis, and many will continue to purchase these products even during a recession.

As marquee XLP components, such as Coca-Cola (KO), Procter & Gamble Co. (PG) and Walmart (WMT) have all been trading at or near all-time highs, some market observers have grown concerned the consumer staples sector is becoming richly valued.

Pricey Consumer Staples

Credit Suisse analyst Kaumil Gajrawala reviewed large- and mega-cap consumer staples fare, such as Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, PepsiCo. (PEP) and Colgate-Palmolive (CL) , revealing a tepid stance those names.

“With these stocks trading at 15-year peak valuations, Gajrawala wrote that he is neutral to negative on the space, and is concerned that investors are overlooking necessary investments at some companies, like Pepsi and Coke, that could require 'years-long spending,'” reports Teresa Rivas for Barron's.

Investors typically shift into consumer staples during bouts of market volatility because of the sector’s relatively generous dividend payouts and the slow-and-steady nature of the consumer staples business – consumers usually continue purchase basic products that staples firms sell regardless of market or economic conditions.

Related: Health Concerns Over Vaping Escalate As Walmart Pulls E-Cigarettes From Shelves

Consumer staples, health care, and industrial sectors typically outperform during the so-called slowdown period of a business cycle when economic growth starts decelerating but remains positive, the economy runs beyond its full capacity and monetary policy becomes restrictive.

“Organic-sales growth has been a big driver for consumer-staples stocks in recent years, but Gajrawala said he sees risks to the shares on this count,” according to Barron's. “The strength of the U.S. dollar is a headwind, as is the fact that organic-revenue improvement in the first half of the year was largely driven by changes to pricing and mix made in the fall of 2018, setting up difficult comparisons in the second half of the year.”

For more information on the market sectors, visit our sector ETFs category.

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