XME
SPDR S&P Metals & Mining ETF
Equal-weighted US metals and mining ETF. Covers steel, aluminum, gold, copper and specialty miners. Cyclical play that benefits from infrastructure spending and commodity super-cycles.
EquityTER 0.35%Dist.
TER
0.35%
AUM
$2B
Holdings
~35
Data Range
— → —
Key Facts
ISIN
US78464A8699
Issuer
State Street
Benchmark
S&P Metals & Mining Select Industry Index
Total Expense Ratio (TER)
0.35%
Assets Under Management
$2B approx.
Inception Date
2006-06-19
Domicile
United States
Legal Structure
Open-End Fund
Dividend Policy
Distributing (pays dividends)
Replication Method
Physical (Full Replication)
UCITS Status
✗ Not UCITS
Fund Currency
USD
Primary Exchange
NYSE Arca
Number of Holdings
~35
Who Is This ETF For?
✓General portfolio building block for the asset class it covers.
Key Risks to Consider
• Market risk: equity values can drop 30-50% in severe bear markets.
• Non-UCITS: may have unfavorable tax treatment for non-US investors (US estate tax, withholding tax).
Similar ETFs
Continue Your Analysis
Data & Methodology
Metadata sourced from official issuer documentation. Price data from Yahoo Finance (monthly adjusted close, includes reinvested dividends and splits). AUM figures are approximate and updated quarterly.
Data source: Yahoo Finance (adjusted close), State Street (metadata)Last verified: 2026-05-11
Related Guides from FinClaro Chile
How to Invest in S&P 500 from Chile
Compare Chilean, US, and UCITS ETF routes with tax analysis
finclaro.cl
What Is an ETF? Complete Guide
Learn the basics of ETFs, how they work, and why they matter
finclaro.cl
ETF Chile vs International Broker
Compare buying ETFs locally vs through international brokers
finclaro.cl
Related ETFs
Similar ETFs
💬 Frequently Asked Questions
Equal-weighted US metals and mining ETF. Covers steel, aluminum, gold, copper and specialty miners. Cyclical play that benefits from infrastructure spending and commodity super-cycles.
XME has a total expense ratio (TER) of 0.35%, which means you pay $35 per year for every $10,000 invested.
Yes, XME is a distributing ETF that pays dividends to shareholders. The frequency depends on the fund's schedule.
XME is a US-domiciled ETF (not UCITS). Non-US investors should consider the US estate tax implications (40% on US assets above $60,000) and the 30% dividend withholding tax (reduced by treaty in some countries).
XME uses full physical replication, meaning it holds all (or nearly all) securities in the S&P Metals & Mining Select Industry Index index directly.