Is the Materials ETF in Trouble?

The start of the New Year also led to the beginning of the much awaited U.S. recovery. The economy started the period on a high note and a solid first quarter performance is a testament to this bullish trend (Top Performing ETFs of the First Quarter).

Indeed, the S&P 500 recorded strong gains in Q1 and remains at elevated levels. S&P 500 registered a 10% rise in the first three months of the year in spite of new worries in the euro-zone debt crisis.

Panic initially spread in the market following the Cyprus issue but with the distressed euro-zone member opening its banks, tensions finally eased. This once again set the platform for S&P 500 to push into record territory.

The strong momentum of the S&P 500 since the start of the year indicates that the bull may be back in the market. A number of sectors have performed remarkably well in the year-to-date period, thanks to the market optimism (Four ETFs to Buy on the Market Pullback).

In fact, many of the nine main sectors of the S&P 500 have posted remarkable growth year to date, suggesting that the positive sentiment is pretty widespread throughout the equity world. However, one sector which remains impervious to the overall bullish sentiment and strength in the market is the material sector.

XLB in focus

When almost all the SPDR exchange traded funds (ETFs) have exhibited a strong performance in the year-to-date period, Materials Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLB) which has been designed to tap the broad material sector has fallen far behind. When SPDR S&P 500 (SPY) returned 9%, the fund could just manage to provide investors with a gain of 1.62% in the year-to-date period (5 Sector ETFs Surging to Start 2013).

The fund’s asset base of $2.8 billion is spread across holdings of 32 securities. Monsanto is the largest holding in XLB, accounting for 11.7% of the ETF. Other top holdings include Du Pont de Nemours Co with 9.7% and Dow Chemical with 7.8%. The fund appears to be quite popular as indicated by its trading volume of more than 14 million shares a day.

The fund relies heavily on the chemical sector in which it has assigned an asset base of 71.5%. Metals & mining also gets a double-digit allocation of 16.56%. XLB charges a fee of 18 basis points annually.

Behind the Slumping Materials ETF

It appears that the industrial metals sector continues to suffer from unfavorable supply and demand conditions in 2013. Metal producers are subject to cyclical fluctuations in prices, general economic conditions and end-user markets. The tepid global economic growth outlook has emerged as a major headwind for the global metal industry (Time to Sell the Steel ETF?).