With the holiday travel season in full swing, the U.S. Global Jets ETF (NYSEArca: JETS), the only dedicated airline industry ETF, could be poised to deliver for investors.
Despite rising fuel costs as crude oil prices steadily rise, airline stocks have strengthened in recent weeks. This transportation segment may be enjoying stronger growth on increased holiday traveling. According to Airlines for America, a record 28.5 million passengers were expected to take to the skies this year during the 12-day Thanksgiving period, or an additional 2.38 million passengers a day.
“Airline stocks have been soaring, but Ari Wald of Oppenheimer says there’s one name investors should absolutely look to buy now,” reports CNBC. “Spirit, Southwest, JetBlue, American and Delta have been on a tear over the last month, the stocks surging 21, 19, 15, 12 and 11 percent, respectively, in that time. According to the technician, Southwest’s charts look the best in terms of signaling a breakout to new highs.”
JETS follows the U.S. Global Jets Index, which uses fundamental screens to select airline companies, with an emphasis on domestic carriers, along with global aircraft manufacturers and airport companies. Top holdings include American Airlines Group (NYSE: AAL), United Continental (NYSE: UAL) , Delta Airlines (NYSE: DAL) and Southwest Airlines (NYSE: LUV). Those four airlines combine for nearly half of JETS’ roster.
“Crossing Wall Street blog editor Eddy Elfenbein says the airlines as a group have room to run even higher based on what looks to be a strong holiday season,” according to CNBC.
Related: Airline ETF Catches a Strong Tailwind
The industry is also supported by strong fundamentals with high barriers of entry that makes the sector capitalize on a wide economic moat that has attracted the attention of prominent value investor Warren Buffett. Additionally, airline stocks trade at significant discounts to the broader U.S. equity market.
Impressively, JETS is up 12% over the past month. Oil prices have traded higher over the same period, making the JETS move all the more noteworthy. Fuel is the largest input cost faced by airlines. JETS currently resides just 1.7% below its 52-week high.
For more information on airline ETFs, visit our Airline category.