State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF
Limited financial coverage for XLE.
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
The State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLE) is engineered to mirror the overall return (both price appreciation and dividend income) of the Energy Select Sector Index, prior to any operational costs. This underlying index is specifically constructed to accurately reflect the performance of the energy companies within the S&P 500. The ETF grants investors precise access to businesses engaged in core energy industries, including oil, natural gas, other consumable fuels, and the associated equipment and services sectors.
- IPO
- 1998
- HQ
- Boston, MA, US
Price Chart
- Market Cap
- $35.72B
- Div Yield
- 2.85%
- 52W High
- $63.46
- 52W Low
- $42.05
- 50D MA
- $56.99
- 200D MA
- $51.34
- Beta
- 0.44
- Avg Volume
- 39.16M
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Our XLE coverage
Recent articles, reports, and earnings notes.

Lower oil is helping stocks for the right reason, not warning of a demand crack
The market is probably reading falling oil correctly: this looks more like inflation relief than a fresh signal that growth is rolling over. That matters because easier energy prices and lower yields should favor semis and margin-sensitive cyclicals more than a reflex rotation back into energy defensives.

Oil's war premium is fading faster than energy bulls want to admit
The cleaner post-Iran-shock read is that oil has become a headline trade, not the start of a durable new energy bull cycle. If ceasefire extensions keep knocking crude back down, broad energy equities can lag even with fundamentals that still look decent on paper.

Energy is more than a hedge now — it’s the market’s cleanest leadership test
Energy’s strength should not be waved away as a temporary oil-headline trade. With tech leadership wobbling and inflation risk creeping back into the tape ahead of the Fed, the sector is starting to look like a real relative-strength leader rather than a geopolitical parking spot.
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