Sector mix, yield, and fees shape how these consumer staples ETFs fit different investor priorities beyond just price or payout.
Beta measures price volatility relative to the S&P 500; beta is calculated from five-year weekly returns. The one-year return represents total return over the trailing twelve months. FSTA has a lower ...
Looking at the underlying holdings of the ETFs in our coverage universe at ETF Channel, we have compared the trading price of each holding against the average analyst 12-month forward target price, ...
IYK offers a lower expense ratio and higher dividend yield than PBJ. IYK has delivered stronger one-year total returns and similar risk metrics compared to PBJ. PBJ is more concentrated in food and ...
Expense ratios, sector exposure, and fund size set these two consumer staples ETFs apart for investors weighing cost versus coverage.
The consumer staples sector outperformed the broader market in the recent volatile period, as it historically does well in risk-averse environments. iShares US Consumer Staples ETF offers exposure to ...
IYK invests in large-cap consumer staples stocks in the U.S. While the fund is defensive in nature, it is not immune to a decline if the economy heads to a recession. Since IYK is richly valued, ...
Expense ratios, dividend yields, and portfolio breadth set these consumer staples ETFs apart for investors weighing cost ...
XLP comes with a much lower expense ratio and a slightly higher yield than IYK. IYK holds more stocks and mixes in some healthcare exposure, while XLP focuses entirely on consumer defensive names. XLP ...
FSTA charges a much lower expense ratio and holds nearly twice as many stocks as IYK. IYK has a slightly higher one-year return and dividend yield, but FSTA has shown stronger growth within the last ...