Through May 13, the S&P 500 was sporting a month-to-date loss of around 4 percent. A loss like that in such a small time frame often prompts investors to assess defensive strategies.
Exchange traded funds offer investors plenty of avenues for getting defensive, whether it be at the sector level or via broader market funds.
What Happened
Some of investors' favorite ETF destinations when volatility rises are low volatility funds, such as the iShares Edge MSCI Min Vol USA ETF (CBOE: USMV) and the Invesco S&P Low Volatility ETF (NYSE:SPLV). With the seasonally weak period of the year for stocks here, investors may increasingly gravitate to funds such as SPLV and USMV.
Why It's Important
Broadly speaking, stocks were faltering this month, but SPLV and USMV met their primary objective, which is to perform less poorly than the broader market when stocks decline. While the S&P 500 was down 4 percent as of May 15, SPLV and USMV were lower by 0.70 percent and 1.60 percent, respectively.
Investors “could use lower volatility ETFs, which tend to have higher relative weightings in defensive sectors,” said Rosenbluth. “However, it is important to look inside since they are not constructed the same and they are heavily reconstituted throughout the year, unlike the market-cap weighted S&P 500 Index.”
SPLV's relative durability can be traced to its significant weights to defensive sectors. As of May 14, the Invesco ETF allocated a combined 44.73 percent of its weight to the defensive utilities and real estate sectors. USMV devotes nearly 17 percent of its weight to utilities and real estate stocks.
What's Next
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