State Street SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF
Limited financial coverage for KRE.
Not enough data to compute a meaningful composite — typical for foreign-listed ADRs, recent IPOs, or thinly-covered small caps. Live quote, chart, and any available stats still render below.
About the company
SPDR Series Trust - State Street SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF is an exchange traded fund launched by State Street Global Advisors, Inc. The fund is managed by SSGA Funds Management, Inc. The fund invests in public equity markets of the United States.
- IPO
- 2006
- HQ
- Boston, MA, US
Price Chart
- Market Cap
- $3.80B
- Div Yield
- 2.13%
- 52W High
- $76.84
- 52W Low
- $57.55
- 50D MA
- $70.60
- 200D MA
- $66.71
- Beta
- 1.21
- Avg Volume
- 14.39M
Get TickerSpark's AI analysis on KRE
Create an account to generate AI analysis on any ticker — technical setup, analyst consensus, earnings watch, insider pulse, financial health, and peer context. Ready in about a minute.
Get Pro Access →Already have an account? Log in
Our KRE coverage
Recent articles, reports, and earnings notes.

Regional banks are not a clean value trade while the CRE refinancing wall is still ahead
Regional banks look cheap enough to tempt value buyers, but cheap is not the same as cleared. The 2023 funding panic may be behind the group, yet the next phase of risk is CRE refinancing pressure that can keep earnings and multiples stuck for longer just as investors rotate back into financials.

Small caps are still a rates trade, not a hidden value revival
The small-cap bull case keeps pointing to cheaper valuations, but a discount is not a catalyst when the Fed just leaned more hawkish and financing costs are still pressing higher. After the June 16-17 meeting, the smarter read is that any small-cap catch-up remains a tactical rates trade, not a durable handoff in market leadership.

The Fed-cut trade is too early and small caps are the wrong place to hide
The market is still trying to front-run a 2026 easing cycle, but oil and labor data are arguing for a longer hold. If cuts slip, the most rate-sensitive trades — especially small caps, regional banks, homebuilders, and long bonds — look a lot less like opportunity and a lot more like crowded exposure.
Want a deeper read on KRE?
Generate a full analyst-grade report — bull/bear case, price targets, valuation depth, and a complete financial breakdown.
Similar companies
Peers in the same neighborhood.