Can Amazon Keep Driving Up Consumer ETFs?

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

The Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR (NYSEArca: XLY), the largest exchange traded fund tracking the consumer discretionary sector, is higher by 7% year-to-date, but some analysts and market observers are expressing consumer-related concerns.

Once again, Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is acting as the driving force behind XLY's upside. Amazon, by far XLY's largest holding and the largest position in other cap-weighted discretionary ETFs, is up 36% this year. That is helping XLY endure a 6% drop by Home Depot (NYSE:HD). The home improvement giant is one of XLY's largest holdings after Amazon and is also one of the worst-performing members of the Dow Jones Industrial Average this year.

“Consumer spending has already shown the beginnings of a slowdown. Retail sales in February fell for a third month in a row, a surprise to economists looking for a slight gain and its longest stretch of declines since 2012. Fourth-quarter sales were at their strongest in seven years,” reports CNBC.

While retailers just experienced one of their best holiday sales periods in years, strong overall sales growth of over 5% was still dwarfed by a 20% jump in online sales, reflecting the ongoing shift in consumer habits to e-commerce. Looking ahead, retail disruption and performance challenges for traditional bricks-and-mortar retailers are likely to continue.

“If the Fed raises rates as expected this year, interest rates on consumer loans will rise and the availability of cheap debt will drop. The central bank is expected to raise rates at least three times this year, the first as soon as next week,” according to CNBC.

On the other hand, some cyclical sectors perform well when interest rates rise and consumer discretionary is a cyclical group.

Last year, index providers S&P and MSCI revealed they will be altering the telecom sector and renaming it communication services, meaning some of the media stocks currently held in XLY and rival cap-weighted consumer discretionary ETFs will leave that sector for the new communication services group. Those changes take place later this year.

Rivals to XLY include the Vanguard Consumer Discretionary (NYSEArca: VCR) and Fidelity MSCI Consumer Discretionary Index (NYSEArca: FDIS).

For more information on the consumer sector, visit our consumer discretionary category.

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