iShares Global Consumer Staples ETF

KXI
$69.26 -0.23 (-0.33%)
Dividend Yield 2.32%
Payout Frequency

Dividend History

Pay DateAmountEx-DateRecord Date
June 18, 2026$0.822026-06-152026-06-15
December 19, 2025$0.792025-12-162025-12-16
June 20, 2025$0.702025-06-162025-06-16
December 20, 2024$0.862024-12-172024-12-17
June 17, 2024$0.662024-06-112024-06-11

Dividends Summary

Company News

Market Correction Risk: Why Summer 2026 Looks Risky
Investing.com • Lance Roberts • May 4, 2026

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...

S&P 500: Volatility and Liquidity Dynamics Suggest a Tougher Path Higher
Investing.com • Michael Kramer • March 5, 2026

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...

Vanguad vs. iShares: Which Consumer Staples ETF Reigns Supreme, VDC or KXI?
The Motley Fool • Josh Kohn-Lindquist • January 20, 2026

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...

Buffett’s $382 Billion Bet Reveals the 1,753% Signal Every Investor Is Missing
Investing.com • Luis Flavio Nunes • November 14, 2025

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.

Consumer Discretionary, Staples Correlation Points to a Bullish Bias
Investing.com • Declan Fallon • October 8, 2024

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...

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