Energy (XLE) vs 10Y Treasury Yield
XLE (Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund) tracks the energy sector of S&P 500. April 2026 top weights: ExxonMobil (XOM) ~22 percent, Chevron (CVX) ~15 percent, ConocoPhillips (COP) ~7 percent, EOG ~4 percent, Williams (WMB) ~3 percent.
Also known as: Energy (XLE) (ETF_XLE, energy sector) · 10Y Treasury Yield (10Y yield, 10 year treasury, TNX)
Why This Comparison Matters
XLE (Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund) tracks the energy sector of S&P 500. April 2026 top weights: ExxonMobil (XOM) ~22 percent, Chevron (CVX) ~15 percent, ConocoPhillips (COP) ~7 percent, EOG ~4 percent, Williams (WMB) ~3 percent. WTI crude $95.85 (April 2026, +30 percent from January 2026 on Iran war). 10Y Treasury yield 4.31 percent. Energy stocks have unique rate sensitivity: not duration-driven but commodity-driven. Energy sector benefits from commodity supercycles regardless of rate environment. XLE rallied substantially in 2026 on Iran war; 10Y elevated in 2024-2026. Both correlated with inflation regime: rising commodity prices + rising 10Y reflect inflation expectations. Pair captures whether energy or rates dominates inflation cycle.
The April 2026 Configuration
WTI crude oil $95.85 (April 2026) vs $73 (January 2026), +30 percent on Iran war supply disruption. Iran war began February 2026; Strait of Hormuz closure concerns, Saudi production response, OPEC+ supply discipline. XLE has rallied substantially in 2026 (estimated +20-25 percent YTD).
10Y yield 4.31 percent (April 2026, stable in 4-4.5 percent range). Iran war + inflation expectations rise has pressured 10Y modestly higher.
XLE composition: integrated oil majors (XOM, CVX) ~37 percent; E&P (COP, EOG, OXY, PXD/Pioneer Natural Resources) ~25 percent; oil service (SLB, HAL, BKR) ~10 percent; refiners (MPC, VLO, PSX) ~12 percent; midstream (KMI, OKE, WMB) ~8 percent; integrated gas (LNG) and renewables ~8 percent.
The combined April 2026 reading: XLE near 52-week highs reflecting Iran war oil shock + sustained 10Y elevation reflecting inflation expectations. Both rising together (positive correlation). Configuration consistent with commodity-driven inflation regime.
Why XLE Has Different Rate Sensitivity
XLE rate sensitivity differs fundamentally from other sectors. Drivers.
Commodity dominance: XLE primarily driven by oil prices (WTI, Brent), natural gas prices (Henry Hub), and refining margins (3-2-1 crack spread). Rate environment secondary.
Not duration-sensitive: oil majors have current cash flows. Less sensitive to discount rate changes than tech/growth stocks. Pre-2024 empirical: 100bp 10Y rise associated with only 2-3 percent XLE decline (vs 8-12% XLU/XLRE; 8-15% SMH).
Inflation hedge: rising commodity prices benefit XLE. Inflation regime supports both XLE and 10Y (positively correlated to inflation expectations). XLE earnings rise with oil prices providing organic inflation hedge.
Fiscal-policy sensitivity: government spending on energy (Strategic Petroleum Reserve, energy security) affects XLE. Rate decisions less directly impactful.
The practical implication: XLE-vs-10Y pair captures inflation regime more than duration sensitivity. Both rise during inflation surges; both fall during disinflation/recession.
How XLE and 10Y Diverge
XLE and 10Y move together more often than expected (vs typical sector inverse correlation).
Conditional Forward Response (Tail Events)
How 10Y Treasury Yield has historically behaved in the 5 sessions following a top-decile or bottom-decile daily move in Energy (XLE). Computed from 1,237 aligned daily observations ending .
Following these triggers, 10Y Treasury Yield rises 0.74% on average over the next 5 sessions, versus an unconditional baseline of +0.61%. 123 qualifying events; 10Y Treasury Yield closed positive in 50% of them.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What are XLE and the 10Y Treasury yield?+
XLE (Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund) tracks energy sector of S&P 500. April 2026 top weights: ExxonMobil ~22%, Chevron ~15%, ConocoPhillips ~7%, EOG ~4%, Williams ~3%. WTI crude $95.85 April 2026 (+30% from January 2026 on Iran war). 10Y Treasury yield 4.31% April 2026. XLE near 52-week highs (estimated +20-25% YTD on Iran war). XLE composition: integrated majors (XOM, CVX) ~37%, E&P (COP, EOG, OXY, PXD) ~25%, oil service (SLB, HAL, BKR) ~10%, refiners (MPC, VLO, PSX) ~12%, midstream (KMI, OKE, WMB) ~8%, integrated gas (LNG) and renewables ~8%.
Why does XLE have different rate sensitivity?+
Commodity dominance: XLE primarily driven by oil/gas/refining margins. Rate environment secondary. Not duration-sensitive: oil majors have current cash flows. Less sensitive to discount rate changes than tech/growth. Pre-2024 100bp 10Y rise = only 2-3% XLE decline (vs 8-12% XLU/XLRE; 8-15% SMH). Inflation hedge: rising commodity prices benefit XLE. Inflation regime supports both XLE and 10Y (positively correlated). XLE earnings rise with oil providing organic inflation hedge. Fiscal-policy sensitivity: SPR, energy security spending. Rate decisions less directly impactful. XLE-vs-10Y captures inflation regime more than duration sensitivity.
How do XLE and 10Y diverge?+
XLE and 10Y move together more often than expected (vs typical sector inverse). Both rise: inflation regime (current 2026, 2021-2022). XLE on commodity prices; 10Y on inflation expectations. XLE rises + 10Y falls: oil-specific shock (supply disruption) without broader inflation. Rare. 2014-2016 oil collapse counterexample. 10Y rises + XLE flat: services inflation dominant (healthcare, education, financial services). Both fall: disinflation/recession (XLE on demand decline; 10Y on Fed cuts). Long-run correlation 0.30-0.55 (modestly positive, opposite to most sectors). 2024-2026: 0.40-0.55 (Iran war + tariffs supporting both). April 2026: confirmed inflation regime.
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