Financials (XLF)
Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund.
The Financials (XLF) is currently $51.51, last updated .
What XLF Tracks and Why It Matters
XLF is the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund, which tracks the S&P 500 financials sector. The fund holds roughly 70 names spanning money-center banks (JPM, BAC, WFC, C), investment banks (GS, MS), insurance (BRK.B, CB, PGR, MET), and asset managers (BLK, SPGI). Berkshire Hathaway alone is roughly 13% of the fund, JPM another 10%, with the top 10 names totalling near 50% of weight.
Why it matters: XLF is the cleanest sector read on the yield curve, credit cycle, and bank net interest margins. Financials are roughly 13% of S&P 500 cap-weight, the third-largest sector after tech and healthcare, and they drive a meaningful share of S&P 500 EPS through bank earnings cycles. The KRE regional-bank ETF is the high-beta cousin of XLF; when KRE breaks down (as in March 2023 with SVB), XLF tends to underperform with a 1-2 week lag.
How to Read XLF Right Now
XLF has been a 2025-2026 outperformer as the 10Y-2Y curve re-steepened from a -108bp peak inversion to +52bp on April 24, 2026. Steepening lifts bank net interest margins because banks borrow short and lend long; the un-inversion is structurally bullish for XLF earnings even before any Fed cuts arrive. The April 29 Fed hold (8-4 dissent) keeps short rates elevated, supporting deposit-side margins.
The risk to XLF is credit deterioration. HY OAS at 284bp and IG OAS near 90-95bp signal benign credit; any move in HY OAS toward 600bp would reset XLF to the late-2022 lows. Commercial real estate exposure is the secondary risk for regional banks; the office segment continues to mark down. Watch JPM and BRK.B for individual swing factors and KRE for the leading-indicator regional-bank read.
Historical Range and Drivers
XLF has compounded approximately 8% annualized since 1998 launch, well below SPY's 9-10% over the same span, primarily because the 2008 GFC drawdown of -78% was the deepest of any major sector ETF in modern history. Other major drawdowns: -45% in dot-com (2000-2002), -36% in 2020 COVID, -27% in 2022. The three drivers are the yield curve (NIM), credit conditions (HY OAS as proxy for loan losses), and capital markets activity (M&A and IPO volume drives investment-bank revenue).
What to Watch in XLF
First, the 10Y-2Y spread. Continued steepening above +100bp historically lifts XLF by 10-15% over 6-12 months even before earnings respond.
Second, HY OAS and the SLOOS tightening reading. Both lead XLF earnings inflections; spreads above 500bp historically coincide with bank charge-off cycles.
Third, KRE relative to XLF. KRE leads regional-bank stress moves by 1-3 weeks, which then transmits to XLF and broader market through credit-channel sentiment.
Recent Data
Download CSV| Date | Value | Change |
|---|---|---|
| May 18, 2026 | $51.51 | +0.81% |
| May 17, 2026 | $51.1 | +0.00% |
| May 16, 2026 | $51.1 | +0.00% |
| May 15, 2026 | $51.1 | -0.37% |
| May 14, 2026 | $51.29 | +0.59% |
| May 13, 2026 | $50.99 | -1.14% |
| May 12, 2026 | $51.58 | +0.78% |
| May 11, 2026 | $51.18 | -0.12% |
| May 10, 2026 | $51.24 | +0.00% |
| May 9, 2026 | $51.24 | +0.00% |
| May 8, 2026 | $51.24 | -0.60% |
| May 7, 2026 | $51.55 | -0.56% |
| May 6, 2026 | $51.84 | +0.48% |
| May 5, 2026 | $51.59 | +0.02% |
| May 4, 2026 | $51.58 | -0.65% |
| May 3, 2026 | $51.92 | +0.00% |
| May 2, 2026 | $51.92 | +0.00% |
| May 1, 2026 | $51.92 | -0.40% |
| Apr 30, 2026 | $52.13 | +0.40% |
| Apr 29, 2026 | $51.92 | +0.14% |
| Apr 28, 2026 | $51.85 | +0.08% |
| Apr 27, 2026 | $51.81 | +0.76% |
| Apr 26, 2026 | $51.42 | +0.00% |
| Apr 25, 2026 | $51.42 | — |
Related Analysis
Related in Equity Sector
Explore Further
Frequently Asked Questions
▶What is Financials (XLF)?
▶How often is Financials (XLF) updated?
▶Where does Convex source Financials (XLF) data?
▶What can I do on the Financials (XLF) chart page?
Get daily macro analysis covering Financials (XLF) and related indicators delivered to your inbox.
Data sourced from FRED, CoinGecko, CBOE, CFTC, and EIA. Updated daily. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.