By Doug Busch
The consumer staples sector has been storming higher, and part of its appeal may lie in its relatively modest weighting within the broader S&P 500, at roughly 5%.
As capital rotates into defensive havens, even small inflows can have an outsized impact on stock prices. The result has been unusually strong rallies for a traditionally conservative segment of the market. Incredibly, the State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector ETF has outperformed the iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF by 47% year to date.
Looking at the weekly chart of the State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector ETF, the fund is riding a rare six-week winning streak, supported by robust volume. In the first week of February, it broke out above a cup base pivot at $84, surging 5.3%, its strongest weekly performance since the final week of October 2022.
However, several technical indicators suggest the advance may be becoming stretched and vulnerable to at least a near-term pullback. The rate of change $(ROC)$, which measures the velocity of a trend and often highlights potential inflection points, is running at its fastest pace in at least five years. Meanwhile, the Relative Strength Index $(RSI)$, a momentum gauge that signals when price action may be overextended, is hovering near a white-hot 75, its second-strongest reading in more than a decade.
Within the sector, alcohol stocks have shown surprising resilience, even as consumers increasingly gravitate toward healthier lifestyles. The group's ability to hold gains in the face of shifting preferences is impressive, but the run may be starting to show signs of fatigue. Extended advances rarely persist indefinitely, and traders should monitor for classic bearish candlestick formations as potential early warnings that upside momentum is beginning to fade. Two examples stand out.
Anheuser-Busch InBev, a Belgian brewer, is off to a fast start in 2026, up 26%. The stock has advanced in 21 of the past 26 sessions, double the gain of domestic peer Molson Coors.
Looking at the daily chart of Anheuser-Busch InBev, the stock has been a relative standout within the group, as reflected by its uptrend on the ratio chart versus the XLP since last August. On February 12, shares surged 4% on their strongest daily volume in nine months following earnings, though the session produced a doji candle, a pattern often associated with potential shifts in direction. Friday's spinning-top further underscored that concern.
While the stock remains comfortably above its February 2 cup base breakout pivot at $72.23, the recent candlestick signals suggest momentum may be cooling. A pullback of roughly 10% from current levels would be constructive and could set up a retest of that former breakout area.
Anheuser-Busch InBev was trading around $79 on Tuesday.
Boston Beer Company, a pioneer of the craft beer movement, is already higher by 27% in 2026. However, last week the stock stalled, finishing flat, showing relative weakness as the overall staples space advanced 2%. The formation of a spinning top candle suggests a degree of near-term indecision and possible fatigue following the prior week's powerful 15.5% surge.
A look at the daily chart of Boston Beer Company suggests the stock may be carving out a third consecutive lower high on its ratio chart versus the XLP, a sign of waning relative strength. Shares are also stalling near the round $250 level, an area of resistance between March and May 2025.
Last week opened with back-to-back spinning top candles, indicative of near term fatigue, followed by a bearish engulfing candle on Thursday that reinforces the possibility of a reversal. From here, a move back toward a retest of the February 4 cup with handle breakout pivot at $224.99 would not be surprising, representing roughly 11% downside from current levels.
Boston Beer was trading around $245 on Tuesday.
Even in a flight to safety, if spirits start to stumble, the message from staples could quickly turn sobering.
Doug Busch is the senior technical analyst at Barron's Investor Circle . His technical view is added to stock picks, including those published exclusively for Investor Circle readers. A glossary of technical terms is updated regularly with new entries.
This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 17, 2026 10:35 ET (15:35 GMT)
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