Holiday rush: Why investors may want to add retail ETFs to their cart

Finance

‘Tis the season for shopping — and maybe for some investors: ETFs.

Despite consumer headwinds tied to the economic slowdown, Amplify ETFs’ Brian Giere sees opportunities in retail.

“We are expecting continued outperformance or record growth in online specifically,” the firms’ head of national accounts told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” last week.

Giere oversees the Amplify Online Retail ETF, which trades under the IBUY. Its largest holdings include Etsy, eBay and Chewy, which were classic stay-at-home trades during the lockdowns.

“A lot of the companies in our IBUY ETF have gotten caught up in some of the growth sell-off especially this year, post-2020,” Giere said. “But the story holds, and I think the trend is there. Shoppers’ habits have changed permanently from the pandemic.”

Giere speculates consumers will use brick-and-mortar stores as showrooms for merchandise they’re interested in buying. Then, he sees them heading online to to find the best deals.

“Their price consciousness is going to win out,” he said. “That’s where we think the online store is going to continue to show strength.”

Yet Giere’s ETF is down 60% this year and off 14% over the past three years.

VettaFi’s Todd Rosenbluth, who’s taking a wait and see approach on retail spending this holiday season, highlights the SPDR S&P Retail ETF as a “more targeted way of getting exposure” to traditional consumer discretionary companies such as Macy’s and Gap.

“This ETF XRT has seen strong inflows in the past month,” the firm’s head of research said. “[It] has become larger than some of the online retail peers that are out there.”

The SPDR S&P Retail ETF is down 26% so far this year.

Disclaimer

Articles You May Like

Rents across the U.S. grew for the first time in 6 months — only Arizona saw price drops in every metro
Nelson Peltz withholds votes from Disney CEO Bob Iger in proxy battle
UBS chief’s surprise return to the Swiss banking giant bagged him a $15.9 million paycheck
Feds seek seizure of two New York apartments worth $14 million tied to former Mongolia leader in alleged mining scheme
‘Glitch’ at Ethiopia’s biggest bank sees customers withdraw millions that isn’t theirs