Consumer staples have been a long-term shelter for both Wall Street and Main Street. Dull, dividend-paying companies selling products households kept buying in both the good times and bad.
That logic helped turn funds such as the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE:XLP) and the Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF (NYSE:VDC) into default hiding places during bouts of macro stress.
But in 2026, the math has changed. A bear-steepening Treasury curve, renewed tariff pressure and a softer labor market are combining to undermine the very qualities that made staples look safe.
Thus, investors have to be wary of paying refuge-like prices for bundles of stocks whose dividend, margin, and consumer-demand profiles are deteriorating simultaneously.
XLP and VDC are particularly vulnerable because both are market-cap weighted. Both funds have top-10 holdings that account for more than 60% of each fund. Walmart Inc. (NASDAQ:WMT), Costco Wholesale Corporation (NASDAQ:COST), Procter & Gamble Company (NYSE:PG), and Coca-Cola Company (NYSE:KO) are among the biggest weights.
The Yield Threshold
With 30-year Treasury yields pushing above 5% in an aggressive bear steepening, the 2%-2.6% the ETFs offer look increasingly uncompetitive.
The traditional appeal of staples rests partly on getting paid to wait through volatility. But when risk-free government bonds offer about twice the income of defensive equities, the safe-haven premium becomes harder to justify.
Charles Schwab’s research noted that consumer staples can provide stability during downturns. Yet, the firm’s insight on rate-hike environments shows that inflationary conditions can shrink margins, hurting performance if companies struggle to offset higher costs.
Meanwhile, rate hike odds are rising. According to the latest CME FedWatch data, July hike odds are at 24.1% while September stands at 58.9%.
The July 24 Tariff Cliff
Costs are exactly where the second squeeze comes into the story.
Temporary 10% Section 122 global balance-of-payments tariffs are set to expire July 24, but that doesn’t mean relief is coming.
Replacement import surcharges of up to 15% on raw materials and packaging are looming as soon as August, creating a fresh inflation shock for companies already managing tight margins.
The National Retail Federation’s (NRF) port data suggests companies are bracing for it. Import volumes at major U.S. container ports are projected to reach a record 2.47 million twenty-foot equivalent units in July as retailers and importers front-load inventory ahead of expected tariff increases.
Tariffs on packaging, ingredients and imported inputs could hit the cost of goods sold directly. Walmart and Costco may have scale, while P&G and Coca-Cola have brand power, but scale doesn’t eliminate margin compression when input inflation outpaces consumer price increases.
The Weakening Consumer
The final problem is demand. June’s nonfarm payrolls gain of just 57,000 points to a sharp slowdown in employment momentum. When a staple’s defensive reputation depends on consumers absorbing price increases in essential goods, employment becomes a factor.
Yet, affordability is already shaping spending behavior, according to the NRF, and a weaker labor market further limits household tolerance for higher prices.
The situation creates an elasticity trap. Consumers may still buy detergent, soda, groceries and toiletries, but they can trade down, ration, switch brands or hunt for discounts. That chips away at the pricing power investors assume these companies possess.
For XLP and VDC holders, the risk is concentration disguised as safety. If the largest holdings lose the ability to pass tariff-driven costs onto a stretched consumer, the funds’ defensive label will not protect their earnings multiples.
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