ETFdb Logo
  • ETF Database
  • Content Hubs
    • Themes
      • Active ETF
      • Alternatives
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • China Insights
      • Core Strategies
      • Crypto
      • Disruptive Technology
      • Energy Infrastructure
      • ETF Building Blocks
      • ETF Investing
      • ETF Strategist
      • Financial Literacy
      • Fixed Income
      • Free Cash Flow
      • Future ETFs
      • Innovative ETFs
      • Institutional Income Strategies
      • Leveraged & Inverse
      • Market Insights
      • Market Outlooks
      • Modern Alpha
      • Nuclear Energy
      • Portfolio Strategies
      • Sector Investing
      • Tax Efficient Income
      • Thematic Investing
    • Asset Class
      • Equity
        • U.S. Equity
        • Int'l Developed
        • Emerging Market Equities
      • Alternatives
        • Gold/Silver/Critical Materials
        • Cryptocurrency
        • Currency
        • Volatility
      • Fixed Income
        • Investment Grade Corporates
        • US Treasuries & TIPS
        • High Yield Corporates
        • Int'l Fixed Income
    • ETF Ecosystem
    • ETFs in Canada
    • Market Outlook
    • Crypto ETF Hub
  • Tools
    • ETF Screener
    • ETF Country Exposure Tool
    • ETF Database Categories
    • Indexes
    • Scenario Analysis
    • Watchlists
    • Head-To-Head ETF Comparison Tool
    • Mutual Fund To ETF Converter
    • ETF Stock Exposure Tool
    • ETF Issuer Fund Flows
  • Research
    • ETF Education
    • Equity Investing
    • Dividend ETFs
    • Leveraged ETFs
    • Inverse ETFs
    • Index Education
    • Index Insights
    • Top ETF Sectors
    • Top ETF Issuers
    • Top ETF Industries
  • Webcasts
  • Sectors
    • Sector Investing Content Hub
    • XLK
    • XLI
    • XLU
    • XLY
    • XLP
    • XLRE
    • Sector Power Rankings
    • XLE
    • XLC
    • XLF
    • XLV
    • XLB
  • Multimedia
    • ETF 360 Video Series
    • ETF of the Week Podcast
    • Gaining Perspective Podcast
    • ETF Prime Podcast
    • Video
  • Company
    • About VettaFi
  • PRO
    • Pro Content
    • Pro Tools
    • Advanced
    • FAQ
    • Free sign up
    • Login
  1. Multi-Asset Content Hub
  2. A Guide to Investing in Volatile Energy Markets
Multi-Asset Content Hub
Share

A Guide to Investing in Volatile Energy Markets

Elle Caruso FitzgeraldJun 02, 2022
2022-06-02

Surging oil prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in late February sparked broad-based stock sell-offs around the world. Investors reacted immediately, concerned that limited energy supplies and higher costs could exacerbate inflation, then jumped back into stocks just as quickly when oil prices began ticking down, FlexShares wrote in a recent insight

Volatility driven by short-term swings in oil prices has continued since the start of the conflict, demonstrating the impact of oil prices on investment portfolios; however, investors with more direct exposure to energy-related sectors through commodities and infrastructure strategies likely have experienced a smoother ride.

Recent performance by natural resources and infrastructure investments, including the FlexShares Morningstar Global Upstream Natural Resources Index Fund (GUNR A+) and the FlexShares STOXX Global Broad Infrastructure Index Fund (NFRA A), have illustrated the important role these strategies can play in a diversified portfolio. 

Infrastructure strategies can provide protection in volatile markets because their returns typically aren’t directly connected to the prices of those commodities, according to FlexShares. That’s why infrastructure funds often serve as defensive strategies in a portfolio.

Although they include investments related to the oil and gas industries, oil and gas pipelines are paid based on the volume of product moving through their networks, regardless of commodity prices. Utilities that face higher prices for the fuels they use to generate electricity generally are allowed to pass those costs onto their rate payers, keeping their cash flow more predictable in volatile energy markets, according to FlexShares.

Investors largely add real asset exposure to their portfolios to act as a hedge against inflation. Unlike infrastructure, companies directly involved in extracting commodities like oil and gas from the ground — as well as agricultural products, metals, timber, and water — should benefit when the price of these economic building blocks rises dramatically, according to FlexShares.

A commodities strategy heavily concentrated in oil and gas producers that may have delivered higher returns during February and March of 2022 is subject to higher risk of losses when demand for energy declines. A well-diversified natural resources strategy that includes exposure to other important sectors can provide the inflation hedging and return potential that investors seek, without taking additional risks related to an energy sector that’s still in the midst of a long-term transition, according to FlexShares.

Likewise, infrastructure strategies should balance investments across sectors to avoid concentration in energy-related industries like pipelines and utilities, according to FlexShares. Geographic diversification can also reduce risks related to regulations, political activity, and natural disasters.

For more news, information, and strategy, visit the Multi-Asset Channel.

Loading Articles...

Advertisement

Is Your Portfolio Positioned With Enough Global Exposure?

ETF Education Channel

How to Allocate Commodities in Portfolios

Tom LydonApr 26, 2022
2022-04-26

A long-running debate in asset allocation circles is how much of a portfolio an investor should...

Core Strategies Channel

Why ETFs Experience Limit Up/Down Protections

Karrie GordonMay 13, 2022
2022-05-13

In a digital age where information moves in milliseconds and millions of participants can transact...

}
X