$XLP
2 analysts · 0 active debates

State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF XLP

Currently 1 bullish, 0 bearish — stable.

Analysts are holding steady at 1 bullish to 0 bearish.

2 YouTube analysts cover State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLP).

2 analysts have covered XLP so far…

Analyst opinions

Analyst opinions

MMMinority Mindset — YouTube finance analystMinority Mindset18d ago
Product note$XLPSwingFundamental

consumer staples defensiveness when markets wobble.

XLP is positioned as a defensive allocation because consumer staples products remain purchased through recessions and booms.

XLP is framed as a basket approach to owning companies selling everyday necessity goods that people keep buying regardless of the economy. The cushion comes from demand durability, not from guaranteed upside.

Publish-day $84.58 · 06/08
"Japan Just Sent A Warning To The U.S. Stock Market (How To Prepare)"
STStockCharts TV — YouTube finance analystStockCharts TV22d ago
BEAR$XLPSwingTechnical

failed breakout and sideways behavior signal weak follow-through.

XLP is failing on its breakout attempt, making the current technical picture less compelling.

XLP’s breakout is explicitly called out as failed, and the speaker says they aren’t a big fan of what the ETF is doing. That means upside follow-through is missing right now, leaving it more likely to remain range-bound than lead a rotation.

Publish-day $84.58 · 06/03
"These Sectors Could Be Next in the Rotation"
MMMinority Mindset — YouTube finance analystMinority Mindset24d ago
Product note$XLPSwingFundamental

consumer staples ETF for stability across cycles.

XLP is positioned as a defensive consumer-staples basket meant to hold up better across booms, recessions, or flat markets.

Consumer staples are framed as necessities people buy regardless of the economy, helping reduce portfolio volatility. XLP is offered as ETF exposure to those stable demand categories even though prices can still decline.

Publish-day $84.58 · 06/02
"This Is Why The New Fed Is Worried About A 2026 Recession (It's Not What You Think)"

No official filings surfaced for XLP yet.