Vanguard Expands Fixed Income Lineup With New High Yield ETF

On June 4, Vanguard launched the Vanguard U.S. High-Yield Corporate Bond Index ETF (VCHY) on the Cboe BZX. VCHY provides ultra-low-cost exposure to higher-yield U.S. corporate bonds. It comes with an expense ratio of just five basis points.

Higher-risk corporate credit has long been perceived as a monolithic asset class where active, fundamental security selection is indispensable for managing default risks. However, as yields stabilize at structurally higher levels and transactional frictions decompress, the impact of management fees on total returns has become a critical consideration, particularly when credit spreads are narrow.

VCHY tracks the Bloomberg US High Yield $250 Million 2% Issuer Capped Index, a rules-based benchmark focusing on corporate bonds rated BB+ or below with a minimum outstanding value of $250 million. The fund invests primarily in securities that make up the benchmark while using a sampling approach to closely match the index’s overall risk and return characteristics. To address concentration risk, the 2% issuer cap provides investors with a diversified and simplified means of accessing the high-yield segment of the fixed-income market.

Strategic Role of Lower Grade Credit

The risk-reward profile of high-yield corporate bonds has made them an increasingly attractive option, as they provide higher yields to offset the elevated default risk relative to higher rated debt. These securities have historically demonstrated resilience throughout different economic cycles, frequently surpassing safer fixed-income instruments during periods of economic expansion and strong corporate profitability.