Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE) commands $38B in assets and is dominated by Exxon Mobil and Chevron (40% combined), offering low costs at 8 basis points but muted oil price sensitivity; SPDR S&P Oil & Gas E&P ETF (XOP) gained 41% year-to-date with equal-weighted exposure to 50 producers including ConocoPhillips and Occidental Petroleum, delivering higher beta to crude but amplified volatility; VanEck Oil Services ETF (OIH) gained 52% over 12 months by holding service providers like Schlumberger and Baker Hughes that benefit from drilling activity at sustained high prices.
WTI crude near $105 per barrel driven by Strait of Hormuz shipping disruptions has reshaped energy fund performance, with pure-play producers in XOP and service companies in OIH outpacing broad energy ETFs as investors choose between diversified exposure and directional leverage to sustained $100-plus oil.
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WTI crude oil is trading near $105 per barrel, a level that was unthinkable just a few months ago when prices bottomed near $57 late last year. The catalyst is geopolitical: disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz sent prices surging in early March, and the rally has held above the triple-digit threshold ever since. For energy investors, the question now is which ETF captures that move most effectively.
Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSEARCA:XLE) is the most widely held energy ETF in the U.S., with roughly $38 billion in net assets. Its portfolio spans the full energy value chain: integrated majors, independent producers, midstream pipelines, refiners, and oilfield services companies. Exxon Mobil and Chevron together represent about 40% of the fund, which makes XLE’s performance closely tied to how the two largest U.S. oil companies respond to elevated crude prices.
That concentration is both the fund’s strength and its limitation. When oil prices rise, Exxon and Chevron generate enormous free cash flow, which they return to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. The fund carries a dividend of around near 2.6% and an expense ratio of just 8 basis points, making it the lowest-cost option on this list. As of the first week in April 2026, XLE has gained about 33%.
If you’re focused on picking the right stocks and ETFs you may be missing the bigger picture: retirement income. That is exactly what The Definitive Guide to Retirement Income was created to solve, and it’s free today. Read more here