Quick Read
-
VanEck Natural Resources ETF (HAP) trades at $73 with a 52% one-year gain and 216% ten-year return, offering inflation-resilient exposure to six commodity themes (agriculture, energy, renewable energy, industrial metals, precious metals, forest products) through equities rather than futures contracts that require roll management and K-1 tax forms.
-
WTI crude’s big swings demonstrate the volatility that drives investors toward commodity-linked equities, where operating leverage in producers amplifies gains when prices rise but exposes investors to equity market sell-offs and cycle sensitivity.
-
The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and VanEck Natural Resources ETF wasn’t one of them. Get them here FREE.
WTI crude touched $114.58 a barrel on April 7, 2026 before sliding back to $99.89 by April 27, a roughly $29 swing inside three weeks. That is the kind of move that makes investors want commodity exposure, and also the kind that makes them remember why direct futures contracts are a headache. Roll yield, contango, K-1 tax forms in March, and the constant churn of expiring contracts can chew up returns before the underlying commodity does anything for you.
The VanEck Natural Resources ETF (NYSEARCA:HAP) takes a different route. It owns the companies that pull the stuff out of the ground, grow it, refine it, or generate power from it, and it does so across six sub-themes (agriculture, energy, renewable energy, industrial metals, precious metals, and forest and paper products). You get a 1099 instead of a K-1, no futures rolling, and a portfolio that behaves like equities with a commodity tilt rather than a pure spot-price tracker.
The Job HAP Is Hired To Do
HAP fills the “hard assets” slot in a diversified portfolio. The pitch is inflation resilience plus participation in the long structural demand story for energy, metals, and food, without the operational baggage of holding futures. With CPI sitting at 330.3 in March 2026, in the 90th percentile of its 12-month range, that pitch has more weight than it did two years ago.
The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and VanEck Natural Resources ETF wasn’t one of them. Get them here FREE.
HAP makes money when the underlying companies generate cash flow from selling commodities at favorable prices, when reserves get repriced higher, and when capital expenditure cycles tighten supply. Renewables sit alongside oil and copper miners, which means the fund captures both the legacy energy complex and the build-out of grid, storage, and electrification. Because it holds equities, you also get operating leverage. A producer with $40 lifting costs earns far more profit per barrel at $100 oil than at $70, and that nonlinearity is exactly what drives the equity beta to commodity prices.
