XLE

Prezzo Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund ETF

XLE
$0
+$0(0,00%)
Nessun dato

*Data last updated: 2026-04-28 22:09 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-28 22:09, Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund ETF (XLE) is priced at $0, with a total market cap of --, a P/E ratio of 0,00, and a dividend yield of 0,00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $0 and $0. The current price is 0,00% above the day's low and 0,00% below the day's high, with a trading volume of --. Over the past 52 weeks, XLE has traded between $0 to $0, and the current price is 0,00% away from the 52-week high.

XLE Key Stats

P/E Ratio0,00
Dividend Yield (TTM)0,00%
Shares Outstanding0,00

Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund ETF (XLE) FAQ

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Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund ETF (XLE) is currently trading at $0, with a 24h change of 0,00%. The 52-week trading range is $0–$0.

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Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund ETF (XLE) Latest News

2026-03-31 06:22

华尔街集体看空?恐慌指数跌至极端,市场崩盘押注激增

Gate News 消息,2026年3月31日,华尔街悲观情绪持续升温,多项市场指标显示投资者正大规模押注股市下跌。CNN股市恐慌与贪婪指数已跌至9的极端水平,为去年11月以来最低点,反映市场风险偏好显著下降。与此同时,Kobeissi Letter 数据显示,不同资产类别的空头头寸同步攀升,市场防御情绪明显增强。 具体来看,罗素3000指数成分股的空头持仓中位数升至4.3%,创下15年来新高,甚至高于2022年熊市期间的峰值。能源板块压力更为突出,道富能源精选行业SPDR ETF(XLE)的空头持仓达到2008年金融危机以来最高水平,且近期增速创下本世纪最快纪录。 期权市场同样释放出强烈避险信号。SPDR标普500指数ETF信托(SPY)的看跌期权成交量飙升至860万份,为2025年4月关税冲击以来的高点。与此同时,杠杆多空ETF交易比率降至约1.1,接近2022年熊市和2020年疫情时期水平,表明空头力量与多头几乎持平,市场方向分歧加剧。 分析人士指出,当情绪指标、空头仓位、期权对冲及资金流动同时达到极端水平时,历史上往往伴随市场剧烈反转。不过,在当前地缘政治紧张和宏观经济压力叠加的背景下,这一规律是否仍然适用仍存在不确定性。 市场参与者正密切关注股市走势对风险资产的外溢影响。若避险情绪进一步升温,比特币等数字资产可能再次成为资金分流的重要方向。短期来看,全球市场或仍处于高波动区间,投资者需警惕情绪驱动带来的快速变化。

Hot Posts su Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund ETF (XLE)

SelfRugger

SelfRugger

04-24 04:46
These 4 sectors 'can't be disrupted' by AI volatility ===================================================== Yahoo Finance Video and Josh Lipton Wed, February 18, 2026 at 9:30 PM GMT+9 In this video: XLE -1.10% XLP -1.46% XLU -0.26% XTL +0.15% GQG Partners portfolio manager Brian Kersmanc joins Market Domination Overtime host Josh Lipton to outline three sectors that he believes are effectively invincible against the recent market (^DJI, ^GSPC, ^IXIC) disruption caused by fears surrounding the artificial intelligence (AI) trade. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination Overtime. Video Transcript 00:00 Speaker A The theme of these sort of um of the AI disruption fears, right? 00:04 Speaker A And how it keeps moving. Like first it was software, I mean, which has been shelved. But then you saw wealth management, and then even trucking at one point, Brian, you saw that. 00:13 Speaker A I mean, how how as an investor do you try to navigate that? 00:16 Speaker A You go to bed at night thinking you've got your money parked in a relatively safe place while you're dreaming away the night. 00:23 Speaker A you know, Sam Altman throws a grenade at your vertical, right? You wake up, you've been hit hard. 00:28 Speaker A How do you try and navigate what increasingly probably looks to a lot of folks like kind of a mine field? 00:34 Speaker B I think what's interesting in this market, I I think we can all agree that there was a elevated valuations coming into a lot of this. The market overall was at a pretty high valuation. 00:41 Speaker B I think as you go through and you see some of where these disruption points are coming through, it's almost an excuse sometimes to to say, okay, let's sell off a little bit of this because we're coming in from such a frothy level. 00:50 Speaker B But realistically, what we want to do is try to go back to, okay, where am I getting real solid earnings, real solid free cash 00:55 Speaker B flow, where can I get a high single digit, low double digit return and not pay too much for that, you know, level of uh, you know, returns over time. 01:02 Speaker B And realistically, it also comes back to where am I not necessarily seeing as much of that capital intensity. 01:07 Speaker B Um and ironically, where I'm finding lower valuations, good returns, good free cash flow, and a little bit less capital intensity, are things like consumer staples, things like energy, things like utilities, um, even things like telecom, which is interesting because in prior cycles, those have been the cap intensive areas. 01:21 Speaker B But if I compare that to say the hyperscalers, that's about a third the CAPEX intensity on a CAPEX to sales basis. 01:27 Speaker B And those are also areas that can't necessarily be disrupted by everything that's going on within the AI ecosystem and you're not afraid of that over spending happening. 01:33 Speaker B Um so those are areas that we're definitely finding more interesting and they're getting a little bit of love, I would say within the last couple of months as well. 01:38 Speaker A Do you Brian, do you actively kind of screen for that? I'm just curious whether that's a variable. Like do you think to yourself, hey, before I put money to work, I think, you know, this name or, you know, this vertical would be somewhat more relatively resilient to getting blown up by an LLM. 01:54 Speaker B Yeah, so what we think about when we're looking at any one of these stocks is we're fundamental bottom-up investors. 02:00 Speaker B And at the end of the day, it's really three levers that I think about when I buy a stock. 02:04 Speaker B It's what is that earnings growth or free cash flow growth? What is the dividend yield I'm going to get from that? And what is the multiple compression risk that I face with that company over time? 02:11 Speaker B That could be because the the headroom isn't necessarily there, how much you continue to grow at the pace that you're growing, or that could be because of some sort of disruption risk. 02:17 Speaker B And if I kind of use those three sort of vertices, if you will, to think about a stock, that's where we end up in the portfolio we have now. 02:22 Speaker B It's a collection of businesses that I believe gives us the highest probability to achieve a high single digit, low double digit total return and not necessarily get uh punished by either valuation compression or disruption fears. Terms and Privacy Policy Privacy Dashboard More Info
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ContractFreelancer

ContractFreelancer

04-20 01:50
So Friday's market selloff was pretty brutal, especially if you were holding tech. All three major indexes went red - the Dow dropped 1.1%, Nasdaq fell 0.9%, and the S&P 500 slid 0.4%. Typical risk-off day, but the magnitude caught a lot of people off guard. What really did the market crash lower was the tech sector getting hammered. Semiconductor stocks led the retreat as investors started questioning whether AI spending can actually justify these valuations we've been seeing. Microsoft dropped 2.2% and Salesforce fell 2.4% as traders reassessed how quickly companies can turn AI investments into real revenue. The whole narrative around AI monetization seems to be shifting from "buy everything AI-related" to "actually show me the profits." Then you had geopolitical tensions with Iran adding fuel to the fire - oil prices jumped roughly 2% on supply disruption concerns. Brent crude hit $72.48 and WTI climbed to $67.02. Meanwhile, producer-side inflation came in hotter than expected with PPI up 0.5%, which didn't help sentiment either. Interestingly, defensive sectors like Healthcare and Energy actually gained - XLV up 1.8% and XLE up 1.7%. The VIX spiked 6.6% to 19.86, showing fear was definitely in the market. Decliners beat advancers by about 1.3-to-1 on the NYSE. For the week, the S&P 500 was down 0.4%, Nasdaq dropped around 1%, and the Dow fell 1.3%. February was even rougher - Nasdaq posted a 3.4% decline, steepest since March 2025. The market's definitely in a more cautious mode right now.
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