The Consumer Staples ETF (XLP): The Way to Ride Out Volatility? - YouTube

Channel: The Motley Fool

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Vincent Shen: Now, let's get into the rest of our discussion.
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That's what role consumer and retail can play for investors in a weak market.
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We bring this up now, because yesterday, the S&P, DOW, and NASDAQ each declined 2-3%.
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All three indices are down significantly from their highs earlier this year.
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Volatility has been the name of the game for a few weeks now.
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Asit and I talked about what's driving some of this volatility two weeks ago.
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But that doesn't necessarily make it any easier to sift through all these headlines,
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these predictions that you see that the next bear market is coming, it's on its way.
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As this bear sentiment grows, we're seeing certain names in consumer and retail outperform.
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Specifically, we're talking about consumer staples and the value that they can have in
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your portfolio as a source of stability and diversification, especially when you're hoping
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to play defense without panicking and selling out of all your positions.
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I remember back in Econ 101, my professor discussed certain sectors of the economy,
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concepts like inelasticity of demand.
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Asit, can you break down consumer staples for us, and the appeal that they can have
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in down markets? Asit Sharma: Absolutely.
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Consumer staples are pretty much what they sound like.
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They're the staples that you buy every day that exist in your household.
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We're going to talk a little bit in this show about Procter & Gamble.
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They give you maybe the easiest way to think of consumer staples.
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They have everything from Tide to packaged food products that they own and that consumers buy.
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Consumer staples, the things that you buy before the layer of your income that we call
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discretionary income.
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I'm going to briefly mention discretionary consumer stocks as a group, as well.
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We'll touch on that during the show. Discretionary income is also just what it sounds like.
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It's the money that you can afford to use for the things that are treating yourself in life,
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maybe going out to eat or buying stuff from amazon.com.
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Amazon is thought of as a discretionary stock.
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These are the two poles of consumer stocks.
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I should say, these are the traditional ways to think of consumer stocks.
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On this show, of course, we talked a few months ago in our future episode about how the line
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between tech and consumer stocks is becoming vague.
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Some stocks which we now classify as consumer stocks might as well be tech companies.
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But we're going back to bedrock definitions today.
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I'll flip it back to you, Vince, so we can dive into the rest of the tickers
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that we have for folks today.
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Shen: A big thing that I want to cover to start things off and to offer some perspective
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as to why this sector, these consumer staples, these names, this part of the economy,
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can be very powerful during times when things are uncertain, people are more bearish in the market.
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It's the performance of certain proxies.
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Asit, one that you turned me on to before the show the show is the Consumer Staples ETF, ticker XLP.
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You look at it as a proxy for this sub-sector.
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You only have to look at the past month to see how its trading has diverged from the broad market.
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Since the big sell-off in mid-October, XLP is up almost 9% while the S&P 500 is flat
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over the same period.
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That outperformance also shows through year to date in more recent months.
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You shared the chart with me, Asit. How did those numbers pan out?
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Sharma: Let's start with the year to date numbers. This is from Fidelity.
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You can also find this if you go to the S&P website and look at their sector funds.
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Fidelity's numbers show that year to date, the healthcare sector has the largest gain. It's gained 11%.
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Next is consumer discretionary, which is up 8%. I'm rounding here.
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Information technology is next, then utilities. Information technology is up about 7%, utilities up 4%.
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Everyone who's followed market understands that conditions have really deteriorated over
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the last three to six months.
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I'm going to now read you a three-month view of market sector leaders.
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The first is consumer staples. That's up 6% in a three-month period.
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Utilities are up 3.5%. Healthcare is up only 2%. Real estate is up less than 1%.
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Every other sector, from communication services to financials to information technology to energy,
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they're all negative over the last three-month period.
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Shen: I'll also give you a more historical look. Take 2008 and the lead-up to the financial crisis.
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That was a year when the S&P 500 shed just under 40%. A huge scare for investors across the market.
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The XLP during that time took a hit of just 17% that year.
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It's not hard to see how having part of your portfolio invested in consumer staples during
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that time could have softened the blow from the rest of the market as things were selling off.
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I took a look at the fact sheet for XLP.
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The top industries represented in it -- these are the things that arguably, you can't go without.
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That's the main theme for these industries. Think about food and beverages, household products.
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Tobacco is also traditionally included in this category, as well.
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Among the top ten holdings for XLP, you have companies like Procter & Gamble, which we mentioned,
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Coca-Cola, Walmart, Costco, Altria, among others.
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These are supposed to be the companies that remain stable even in these weaker market
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or economic conditions. People need what they sell regardless of those conditions.