If you had put the minimum $2500 investment in Fidelity Select Energy Portfolio (FSENX) on December 31, 2004, it would have been worth $4131 on October 31 of this year, meaning that you would have made $1600 or so profit over that roughly two year period.
If you were the average schmoe that drives 10,000 miles per year in a car that gets 20 miles per gallon (thus buying about 500 gallons of gas per year, or 1000 gallons total) you would have still come out ahead even if the price of gas had gone up more than $1.60 per gallon.
During that same time, with some peaks and valleys, gas went from 1.78 to $2.23, so you would have indeed fattened up. Even at over $3.25 for gas over that whole period, you would still neutralized any effects of the increased fuel prices on you. They also have a natural gas fund, so if you are a user of natural gas, there is an opportunity there too.
If the price of gas levels off, like it did in the last year, you are sad, you only made 8%. But, you did not have to pay as much for gas, so no harm done.
Most of the big mutual fund companies have funds that specialize in the energy industry, have no loads or sales commissions (which eat your lunch) and are managed by professionals who know what they are doing. This particular one has a $2500 minimum investment, plus a variety of other rules, but basically, this allows the average schmoe to go around at the Christmas Party this year and talk about how the energy issue has no effect on you, and how you fattened up this year on your oil investments, etc. etc.
Capitalism: The gift that keeps on giving. Too bad it's unsustainable.
Note: I am not selling Fidelity or any other investments. Never take investment advice from someone who has a job. Do not believe everything you see on the internet.
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Fidelity.com
Note/Disclaimer: I believe so strongly in this I did it myself right after I joined PO.com, and put about a year's pay into a similar fund. I will let you figure out what happened.