Soaring Oil Prices Could Push for Clean Energy Faster | ETF Trends

Oil prices have hit over $80 a barrel and a seven-year high, and with economies pushing through pandemic recovery and a good portion of the Northern Hemisphere facing natural gas price spikes already, it could spell disaster for economies, reports Financial Times.

The Biden administration, one that has been very vocally against oil reliance, has been trying to push for greater oil production recently as shortages are driving prices higher. The administration is purportedly considering releasing crude oil from its strategic stockpiles to help assuage prices, even if temporarily.

The price rally of oil has some worried that it will land the world squarely in triple digit territory with prices that haven’t been seen since the global financial crisis in 2008 when oil was nearly $150 a barrel. While some are viewing it as a last surge before the clean energy transition starts to firmly take hold, other analysts are viewing it with alarming concern.

The world needs to ready itself for “triple digit oil prices,” said Wil VanLoh, head of Quantum Energy Partners, one of the largest oil-focused private equity firms in America. “It’s going to financially cripple western economies.”

Most analysts and industry experts believe that the issues of the oil industry are simply too big for one price spike to rectify anything, and that the transition to lower-emission energy sources and practices will naturally overwhelm the industry in the long term. Short-term though, the world could be in trouble.

An upside to soaring oil costs is the attention and sense of urgency it could bring to the transition to renewable energy from fossil fuel dependency.

This is something that “will lead to a rethink of priorities and investment and timing,” says Daniel Yergin, vice-president of consultancy at IHS Markit. “It puts energy security and reliability back on the same agenda as energy transition.”

SPYX Invests With Reduced Fossil Fuel Exposure

Investors looking to reduce exposure to fossil fuels in their investments need only turn to the SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Reserves Free ETF (SPYX). The investment is a core allocation to the large-cap equities of the S&P 500, except with much-reduced carbon footprints.

The fund tracks the S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Free Index, a benchmark of companies within the S&P 500 that are “fossil fuel free,” defined as companies that don’t own fossil fuel reserves (thermal coal reserves and coal reserve byproducts, as well as oil or gas reserves).

That’s not the same as being devoid of all oil stocks. The fund still has minor allocations to fossil fuel companies, including Valero (VLO) and Halliburton (HAL). But without exposure to companies actually holding the physical oil, coal, or gas reserves, the fund’s energy allocation is much reduced. Energy comprises just 0.76% of the ETF’s sector make-up, as compared to 2.82% of the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY).

Top sector allocations of SPYX include information technology at 28.59%, consumer discretionary at 13.31%, and healthcare at 13.26%.

SPYX has an expense ratio of 0.20%.

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