Acquired 205,526 shares of VTC; estimated trade size was $15.96 million based on quarterly average price
Quarter-end position value rose by $14.89 million, reflecting both share addition and price movement
Transaction represented a 0.51% shift in 13F reportable AUM
Post-trade stake: 1,356,285 shares valued at $104.50 million
Position now accounts for 3.37% of 13F AUM, which places it outside the fund’s top five holdings
On April 9, 2026, Wedmont Private Capital reported buying 205,526 shares of Vanguard Total Corporate Bond ETF (NASDAQ:VTC), an estimated $15.96 million trade based on quarterly average pricing.
According to an SEC filing dated April 9, 2026, Wedmont Private Capital increased its holding in Vanguard Total Corporate Bond ETF by 205,526 shares. The estimated transaction value for the quarter was $15.96 million, based on mean unadjusted closing prices from January through March. The fund’s position value increased by $14.89 million over the period, reflecting both the additional shares and market price changes.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| AUM | N/A |
| Dividend Yield | 4.91% |
| Price (as of market close April 8, 2026) | $77.05 |
| 1-Year Total Return | 8.25% |
Vanguard Total Corporate Bond ETF delivers diversified exposure to the U.S. investment-grade corporate bond market through an indexed, rules-based approach. The fund emphasizes intermediate duration and high credit quality, balancing current income objectives with risk management. Its competitive expense structure and broad portfolio composition are designed to appeal to investors seeking efficient access to corporate debt markets.
When a diversified RIA adds to a broad investment-grade bond ETF, it's rarely a headline-grabbing move. Wedmont Private Capital's add to Vanguard Total Corporate Bond ETF is no exception — but it's a useful prompt to think about the asset class itself. VTC tracks the Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Bond Index, offering diversified exposure to investment-grade corporate debt across short, intermediate, and long maturities. It carries a 0.03% expense ratio — well below the 0.54% category average — and a trailing 12-month yield of 4.91%, making it one of the more cost-efficient ways to access corporate bond income right now. For investors weighing bonds at all, the ETF-versus-individual-bond question is worth sitting with. Buying individual bonds locks in a yield and guarantees return of principal at maturity — assuming no default. A bond ETF like VTC never matures, so your principal fluctuates with interest rates. The tradeoff is diversification and liquidity — VTC holds nearly 5,000 bonds, which no individual investor could replicate, and you can buy or sell a single share on any trading day. For some investors, that diversification and the low cost of entry outweigh the lack of a fixed maturity date. Investment-grade corporate bonds at current yields offer a return profile worth considering alongside equities, particularly for portfolios that need income.
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Seena Hassouna has positions in Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Vanguard FTSE Developed Markets ETF, Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF, Vanguard S&P 500 ETF, and Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF and is short shares of Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.