Gradient Investments sold 301,283 shares of UYLD; the estimated transaction value was $15.4 million based on quarterly average pricing.
The trade represented a 0.24% change relative to the fund's 13F reportable assets under management.
Post-trade holding: 1,077,672 shares valued at $55.0 million.
UYLD now represents 0.85% of Gradient's 13F AUM, which places it outside the fund's top five holdings.
According to a recent SEC filing, Gradient Investments LLC reduced its position in Angel Oak UltraShort Income ETF (NASDAQ:UYLD) by 301,283 shares in the first quarter of 2026. The estimated transaction value was $15.4 million, calculated using the average closing price for the quarter. The quarter-end value of the holding decreased by $15.5 million -- reflecting both trading activity and price movements.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| AUM | $1.4 billion |
| Dividend yield | 4.90% |
| Expense ratio | 0.34% |
Angel Oak UltraShort Income ETF offers investors exposure to a diversified portfolio of short-term fixed income securities, targeting a competitive yield while maintaining a low duration profile. The fund's flexible mandate allows selective allocation to collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) and other investment companies, supporting income generation with prudent risk management. Its strategy is positioned to appeal to institutional and individual investors seeking capital preservation and steady income in a liquid ETF structure.
Gradient's decision to trim its UYLD stake by roughly $15.4 million is best understood as routine portfolio housekeeping rather than a vote of no-confidence in the ETF. The fund still holds more than 1 million shares -- a $55 million position. What's changed is the size of Gradient’s bet.
To understand why a firm like Gradient might lighten up on an ultrashort income ETF, context matters. UYLD is designed for capital preservation and income, not growth. It targets a duration of less than one year, which insulates it from large interest rate swings but also caps its upside. That trade-off would have been more attractive when rates were high and investors were hungry for low-risk yield. As the rate environment has shifted, some portfolio managers have been rebalancing away from ultrashort fixed income to redeploy into higher-return assets -- and UYLD's 5% one-year return, which trails the S&P 500 by more than 20 percentage points over that same stretch, illustrates the opportunity cost of staying conservative. That said, this kind of comparison isn't entirely fair to UYLD. A fund designed for capital preservation and steady income isn't competing with the S&P 500 -- it's serving a different purpose entirely.
For retail investors, this kind of institutional trim is rarely a red flag on its own. Gradient is a wealth management firm -- their top holdings include broad equity ETFs and large-cap names like Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) -- and a position reduction in a short-duration bond ETF is a textbook rebalancing move. If you hold UYLD or something like it for the reasons it was designed -- income, stability, and low duration risk -- one institution doing a little position-trimming doesn't change that calculus.
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Andy Gould has positions in Amazon and Nvidia and has the following options: long January 2027 $125 calls on Nvidia and short January 2027 $125 puts on Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.