Don’t Overlook Consumer ETF Returns

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Much like the S&P 500’s own track record in this latest (ongoing) earnings cycle, roughly 82% of the consumer discretionary sector has thus far beaten earnings estimates in a pretty solid showing. That doesn’t mean investors are flocking to the sector.

The S&P 500 may be in record territory, but investor appetite for cyclical sectors such as consumer discretionary remains muted at best.

So far this year, U.S. consumer discretionary ETFs—as a segment—have attracted under $200 million in net creations.

The biggest fund, the $14 billion Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR (XLY), is actually a net asset loser year to date despite strong performance relative to the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY):

 

 

The relative aversion to consumer discretionary stocks isn’t all that surprising in a year when playing defense has been an overarching theme. Unlike staples, discretionary names are seen as riskier bets in a global economic slowdown.

That said, there are three interesting pockets within discretionary names that are standing out lately.

Homebuilder Stocks

A look at the top asset-gathering ETFs year to date shows that second only to the broader Vanguard Consumer Discretionary ETF (VCR)—a fund that competes with XLY, but offers a much deeper portfolio, with some 300 holdings, and cheaper, at 0.10% in expense ratio—homebuilder ETFs are right there at the top.

 

2019's Top Gainers ($, Millions)

 

The housing market may not be going gangbusters this year, but homebuilders are one of the best-performing segments within consumer discretionary names due to expectations that low—and lowering—interest rates will foster an uptick in demand for housing.

Low unemployment rates and strong consumer confidence also feed into this outlook for a strong housing market going forward.