5 ETFs Up More Than 35% in the First Nine Months

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Wall Street has been enjoying a strong rally this year, defying slowdown fears. The S&P 500 and the Dow Jones hit a series of new all-time highs and topped 5,700 and 42,000 milestones, respectively, for the first time last week. The Nasdaq Composite Index is hovering near the 18,000 level. Most of the optimism is driven by rate cuts.

The winners are broad-based across sectors, building up massive gains this year. We have presented a bunch of top-performing ETFs from various corners of the market that have gained more than 35% in the first nine months of 2024. These are Reaves Utilities ETF UTES, Themes Gold Miners ETF AUMI, Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF MAGS, Invesco S&P 500 Momentum ETF SPMO and VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF SMH. These funds could also be winners in the remainder of 2024 if the current trends continue.

The Federal Reserve last week slashed key interest rates by 50 bps to 4.75%-5% after holding it at a 23-year high for 14 consecutive months since July 2023. This marked the first rate cut since 2020 to address slowing economic growth and showed greater confidence in the fact that inflation is moving sustainably toward the 2% target level (read: Fed Initiates Rate Cuts: Top-Ranked Growth ETFs to Buy).

The central bank projects two more rate cuts of another 50 bps in its final two meetings this year, due in November and December. It indicates another 100-bps rate cut next year and 50-bps in 2026, which means four rate cuts in 2025 and two in 2026.

Lower rates lead to reduced borrowing costs for mortgages, credit cards and other consumer and business loans. These help businesses expand their operations more easily, resulting in increased profitability. This, in turn, stimulates economic growth and boosts the stock market.

As the Fed has started cutting rates, cyclical sectors like consumer discretionary, industrials and financials will receive a boost. Reduced borrowing costs can lead to increased consumer and business spending. It will encourage lending at banks and potentially lead to increased consumer and business loan activity. High-yield sectors like utilities and real estate will also benefit significantly from rate cuts, given their sensitivity to interest rates (read: 5 Sector ETFs Scaling New Highs on Fed Rate Cuts).

Technology is also not behind. As the tech sector relies on borrowing for superior growth, borrowing more money for further initiatives is cheaper when interest rates are low. Additionally, securities in capital-intensive sectors like telecom will benefit from lower rates as businesses will face lower loan rates over time. Further, gold becomes more appealing when interest rates fall compared to fixed-income assets such as bonds, which would yield weaker returns in a low-interest-rate environment.