The Financial Select Sector SPDR (NYSE: XLF), the
largest exchange traded fund dedicated to the financial services sector, attempted to shake its laggard status in the third
quarter, posting a solid gain of 3.7 percent.
After confounding investors with its laggard ways in the first half of 2017, XLF is now up an admirable 12.3 percent
year-to-date and residing near new highs. Some data points suggest investors are comfortable wagering on more upside for the big
financial services ETF.
“XLF has notably outpaced the broad market in the trailing one month period, although it is still lagging the S&P 500 by a
bit year-to-date,” said Street One Financial Vice President Paul Weisbruch in a note
out Tuesday. “Some may see the recent one month out-performance as the sector potentially narrowing the gap ahead of corporate
earnings season, which is of course anticipated shortly for the Financials.”
Interesting Options Activity
Some options traders have recently been gobbling up December $27 calls in XLF. It's not a stretch to say that is a high
probability trade as XLF closed just over $26 on Tuesday.
“XLF remains the 'go-to' fund in this sector in many ways however, even after all of these years (XLF debuted back in 1998)
largely because of the popularity and depth and liquidity in its listed options,” said Weisbruch. “Today’s trading provides no
exception, as we have seen good sized activity (over 50,000 contracts traded thus far) in the December 27 calls in XLF. With more
than two months left until expiration, these options cover the next earnings cycle for this entire group.”
XLF allocates nearly 23 percent of its combined weight to just two stocks – Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc.
(NYSE: BRK-B) and Dow component JPMorgan Chase & Co.
(NYSE: JPM).
Big Inflows
In the third quarter, investors added nearly $1.9 billion in new assets to XLF, good for the best total among all sector ETFs.
Only eight other ETFs saw larger third-quarter inflows than XLF.
XLF devotes just over 44 percent of its weight to bank stocks, 20.6 percent to capital markets firms and 18.7 percent to
insurance providers.
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Disclosure: The author owns shares of XLF.
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