Traders Turn Bearish On Financial ETFs

The Financial Select Sector SPDR (NYSE:XLF), the largest financial services exchange traded fund by assets, is up just 2.2 percent year-to-date, well below the 5.7 percent returned by the S&P 500. Financials' laggard status is encouraging some traders to make bearish bets against the S&P 500's second-largest sector weight.

When it comes to sector-level bets on rising interest rates, many investors believe the best place to go is to financial services. However, when the Federal Reserve raised interest rates last month, it sounded a surprisingly dovish tone, stoking concern about bank stocks and ETFs like XLF.

Data suggest some traders have eyeing June options in XLF.

Leveraged financial services ETFs are painting a different picture. For example, traders have added an average of more than $793,000 per day to the Direxion Daily Financial Bull 3X Shares (NYSE:FAS) over the past 30 days, according to Direxion data.

Over the same period, the Direxion Daily Financial Bear 3X Shares (NYSE:FAZ) has averaged daily outflows of almost $431,000. FAS attempts to deliver triple the daily returns of the Russell 1000 Financial Services Index while FAZ seeks to deliver triple the daily inverse returns of that index.

Disclosure: The author owns shares of XLF.

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