Using Energy ETFs To Offset Gas and Oil Prices | ETF Trends

Frenzy in the energy sector has reached a fever pitch, but are exchange traded funds (ETFs) that allow investors to hedge those prices necessarily a great idea?

The summer driving season is going to kick off soon, but with the way things are going, who can afford it? Oil passed $126 a barrel today, while gas rose to more than an average of $3.67, reports John Wilen for the Associated Press.

Oil’s price spike came after concerns about Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’s ties with rebels who are threatening to overthrow Colombia’s government. It may raise chances the the United States will impose sanctions on one of its largest oil suppliers, and Chavez might then cut off our supply.

Many investors have been looking at situations like this and wondering how they can lock in the lower prices and profit from the price hikes. ETFs that hold oil and gas futures are designed to rise in value at the same time their underlying commodities are going up in price, reports Rob Wherry for Smart Money.

Natural gas has benefited from the fear that supply and inventory issues will push crude-oil prices even higher as well, says John Spence for MarketWatch. ETFs like U.S. Natural Gas Fund (UNG),
up 50.1% year-to-date, has also served as a means for investors to hedge their
exposure to energy.

With all this good energy flowing around the markets, a new alternative energy ETF has been launched. The Claymore/Mac Global Solar Energy Index (TAN) debuted on April 15, and has lured plenty of interest. Steve Gelsi for MarketWatch says
this has been the second-fastest growing ETF from Claymore thus
far. The TAN index invests in 25 companies chosen under the MAC Global
Energy Index. The fund is up 0.2% since its launch.

The one hindrance to hedging is that the people who need the hedge most might be among the least likely to actually have the cash on hand to do it. And then there’s the matter of the tax bill if a profit is made.

You can’t forget the volatility of the energy market, either. It’s prone to wild swings in either directions, and some suspect it’s a bubble that’s ready to burst.