
iShares Global Consumer Staples ETF
KXIDividend History
| Pay Date | Amount | Ex-Date | Record Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 18, 2026 | $0.82 | 2026-06-15 | 2026-06-15 |
| December 19, 2025 | $0.79 | 2025-12-16 | 2025-12-16 |
| June 20, 2025 | $0.70 | 2025-06-16 | 2025-06-16 |
| December 20, 2024 | $0.86 | 2024-12-17 | 2024-12-17 |
| June 17, 2024 | $0.66 | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 |
Dividends Summary
- Consistent Payer: iShares Global Consumer Staples ETF has rewarded shareholders with 39 dividend payments over the past 18 years.
- Total Returned Value: Investors who held KXI shares during this period received a total of $30.33 per share in dividend income.
- Latest Payout: The most recent dividend of $0.82/share was paid 30 days ago, on June 18, 2026.
- Dividend Growth: Since 2008, the dividend payout has grown by 125.0%, from $0.36 to $0.82.
Company News
The article warns of elevated market correction risk heading into summer 2026, citing four converging factors: collapsing market breadth with the S&P 500 at record highs while median stocks lag 13% below their peaks, stretched positioning with concentrated leadership in mega-cap tech stocks, unfavorable seasonal patterns (May-October historically...
The S&P 500 faces headwinds despite Wednesday's gains as volatility dynamics and liquidity constraints suggest a challenging path forward. With the VIX struggling to fall further, Treasury settlement days showing negative historical bias, and technical resistance at the 20-day moving average, the market may struggle to sustain rallies. Oil prices...
The Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF (VDC) and iShares Global Consumer Staples ETF (KXI) both provide exposure to essential consumer goods companies. VDC offers lower costs (0.09% vs 0.39%), stronger long-term performance, and larger assets, while KXI provides global diversification with 40% non-U.S. holdings. The author recommends VDC primarily due...
Warren Buffett is holding significant cash, signaling potential economic stress due to rising student loan defaults, credit delinquencies, and white-collar job cuts, suggesting a looming consumer spending slowdown.
The article discusses the relative relationship between Consumer Discretionary (XLY) and Staples (XLP) sectors, which has entered a head-and-shoulder-like pattern, suggesting a potential period of weakness for Discretionary that could translate into weakness for the broader market. However, supporting technicals have emerged from an oversold peri...


