The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) wrapped up its highly anticipated September meeting yesterday, with the central bank hinting at a December rate hike, andunveiling plans to start unwinding its balance sheet. Ahead of the announcement, we decided to look at the best and worst stocks and sectors during Fed Week.
While gold and silver ETFs tend to do well, the VanEck Vectors Oil Services ETF (OIH) has historically struggled during weeks the FOMC meets, posting the lowest win rate among all other exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that we track, going back to 2015. Among energy stocks, one in particular could also be vulnerable to selling pressure in the short term, if past is prologue: Anadarko Petroleum Corporation (NYSE:APC).
Per data from Schaeffer's Senior Quantitative Analyst Rocky White, OIH has ended Fed Week higher just 29% of the time since 2015 -- the lowest win rate of all -- averaging a loss of 0.2%. Since finding support in the $22 region in mid-August, however, the ETF has been battling back -- closing Wednesday up 1.5% at $25.19. Plus, the shares are now on pace to to end north of their 10- and 20-week moving averages for the first time since January, when the fund was flirting with annual highs. Should OIH finish this week higher, it would buck its trend of poor Fed-Week performances.
Short sellers, meanwhile, have been piling on OIH amid its longer-term technical troubles. Short interest increased 14.3% in the last two reporting periods to 18.95 million shares, representing 4.4 times the ETF's average daily pace of trading.