Subscribe

Retail ETFs are no holiday bargain

In the nine years since retail ETFs began to trade, investors would have been better off sticking with a boring old S&P 500-stock index fund.

Ho Ho No.
Nothing says the holidays quite like articles about how investors can play the holiday shopping season with exchange-traded funds that track retail stocks. It’s a seemingly logical idea, not to mention low-hanging fruit for a financial writer: The most wonderful time of the year is supposed to be the most wonderful time for retail sales.
Not to be a Scrooge, but such retail-oriented ETFs tend to underperform the market during this time. In the nine years since retail ETFs began to trade, investors would have been better off just sticking with their boring old S&P 500-stock index fund.
The table below shows the performance of the two most popular retail ETFs, the SPDR S&P Retail ETF (XRT) and the Market Vectors Retail ETF (RTH) during the holiday shopping season, from Black Friday through the day after Christmas.
https://s32566.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/assets/graphics src=”/wp-content/uploads2015/11/CI1026911125.JPG”
At first glance, retail ETFs appear to shine during the holiday season, with XRT and RTH showing only one year of negative returns each and returning an average of 3% and 1.8%, respectively, during the period. The problem is that the market ordinarily performs better. As such, the holidays are good for the market, but not “extra good” for retailers.
As an aside, the reason the returns for XRT and RTH are so different is worth exploring. XRT drills into mid- and small-cap retailers and then equally weights the portfolio, giving all companies the same presence, regardless of size. Walmart gets the same weighting as Men’s Wearhouse. This means a higher correlation to small-caps — and additional volatility.
Because RTH is weighted by market capitalization, such giants as Amazon.com, Home Depot and Walmart eat up a third of the total weighting in the ETF. This means that investors in the ETF live and die according to the results for a few big companies. Over the past couple of years, this has been the way to go, with RTH trouncing both XRT and the S&P 500 index, as seen in the chart below.
https://s32566.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/assets/graphics src=”/wp-content/uploads2015/11/CI1026921125.JPG”
RTH’s performance has been driven by Amazon and Home Depot, both up more than 200% during this time. Together, the two retails contributed nearly all the excess return. If their stocks ever crater, they will take RTH down with them.
As is so often the case in markets, investing in a retail ETF over the long term may prove a jolly idea, but trying to time a play for a few weeks in late November and December is likely to put some proverbial coal in your portfolio.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Tech stocks drag US futures as GDP stats awaited

Meta dropped 15% in premarket trading Thursday.

ESG mandated US funds posted $9B outflows in Q1

First three months of 2024 was challenging for sustainable funds.

International exporters to US set to win amid dollar gains

While other international stocks are pressured, exporters should win.

Two words that turned $8.99 into a cool million dollars

A think tank intern's crypto bet was a most unusual 'investment'.

Ultra-rich tax to save Social Security? Swing state voters in favor

Ideas such as a billionaire tax prove popular in Bloomberg poll.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print