
Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Consumer Staples ETF
RSPSDividend History
| Pay Date | Amount | Ex-Date | Record Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 26, 2026 | $0.24 | 2026-06-22 | 2026-06-22 |
| March 27, 2026 | $0.22 | 2026-03-23 | 2026-03-23 |
| December 26, 2025 | $0.23 | 2025-12-22 | 2025-12-22 |
| September 26, 2025 | $0.20 | 2025-09-22 | 2025-09-22 |
| June 27, 2025 | $0.19 | 2025-06-23 | 2025-06-23 |
Dividends Summary
- Consistent Payer: Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Consumer Staples ETF has rewarded shareholders with 33 dividend payments over the past 8 years.
- Total Returned Value: Investors who held RSPS shares during this period received a total of $20.62 per share in dividend income.
- Latest Payout: The most recent dividend of $0.24/share was paid 22 days ago, on June 26, 2026.
- Yield & Schedule: RSPS currently pays dividends quarterly with an annual yield of 2.88%.
- Dividend Growth: Since 2018, the dividend payout has decreased by 65.5%, from $0.69 to $0.24.
Company News
The article compares two consumer staples ETFs: State Street's XLP and Invesco's RSPS. XLP offers lower costs (0.08% expense ratio), stronger 1-year returns (6.40%), and better liquidity with $14.6B AUM, making it ideal for investors seeking mega-cap exposure. RSPS uses equal-weighting across 37 holdings with a higher expense ratio (0.40%) and sl...
FSTA and RSPS offer different approaches to consumer staples ETF investing. FSTA charges a lower expense ratio (0.08% vs 0.40%), has significantly larger assets under management ($1.5B vs $253.2M), and concentrates heavily in mega-cap stocks like Walmart and Costco. RSPS equally weights 35 stocks, offering higher dividend yield (2.9% vs 2.2%) and...
Bunge Global announced ambitious growth targets during its 2026 Investor Day, including mid-cycle EPS guidance of $15 by 2030 (up from $13 baseline) and a commitment to return at least 50% of discretionary cash flow to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. The company authorized $3 billion in share repurchases. However, fiscal 2026 adjuste...
Two consumer staples ETFs—XLP (market-cap weighted) and RSPS (equal weighted)—offer different investment approaches. XLP has lower fees (0.08% vs 0.40%), larger assets ($16B vs $250M), and concentrates 28% in top three holdings. RSPS provides more balanced exposure across 36 holdings with slightly better 1-year returns (11.75% vs 9.94%). The ...
Vanguard's VDC and Invesco's RSPS both offer consumer staples exposure but differ significantly in approach. VDC is larger ($9.05B AUM), cheaper (0.09% expense ratio), and cap-weighted with 100+ holdings, delivering better 5-year returns ($1,375 on $1,000). RSPS is smaller ($249.67M AUM), more expensive (0.40% ratio), equally-weighted with 37 hol...



