Vanguard High-Yield Active ETF (VGHY) charges 0.22% and holds 7.6% Treasury sleeve for liquidity protection.
VGHY’s 476-bond portfolio underweights index’s worst names, positioning active managers to capitalize when credit spreads widen.
High-yield spreads currently sit 200 basis points below long-run average, creating thin margin for error across all HY ETFs.
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State Street's own 2026 ETF outlook called active fixed income the "global product center of gravity", which is a striking concession from the firm that built the largest passive high-yield ETF on the market. That backdrop frames the case for Vanguard High-Yield Active ETF (CBOE:VGHY), Vanguard's first actively managed high-yield bond ETF. Launched in September 2025, VGHY now sits at $224M in assets and arrives just as the active versus passive debate in junk credit is getting decided in real money. With the fund up 1.1% year to date, VGHY is performing roughly in line with passive peers, but the more interesting question is what happens when credit conditions stop being so calm.
The two passive benchmarks frame the comparison. SPDR Bloomberg High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA:JNK) charges 0.40% and tracks a liquid index across 1,219 bonds, while SPDR Portfolio High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA:SPHY) undercuts it dramatically at 0.05%. VGHY lands in the middle at 0.22%, which is unusually low for an actively managed credit product.
Where the funds diverge is credit composition. JNK holds 9.8% in CCC or lower and another 36% in single-B credits because index rules force ownership of every qualifying bond. VGHY's active team has set the portfolio at 49% BB, 33% B, and 9.3% CCC or lower, with a 7.6% Treasury sleeve for liquidity. That Treasury cushion is unique to VGHY among these three funds, and it is the single clearest mechanical difference between buying the index and buying Vanguard's read on the index.
The macro variable to monitor is the high-yield option-adjusted spread, and the cushion is thin. JNK's index currently shows an option-adjusted spread of about 306 basis points, well below the long-run average near 500 bps. With the Fed holding the funds rate at 3.75% after 75 basis points of cuts since October and the 10-year Treasury at about 4.4%, high-yield investors are getting historically modest compensation for default risk.
Watch the ICE BofA US High Yield Index OAS on the St. Louis Fed website (series BAMLH0A0HYM2), updated daily. A move from current levels back to the 450-500 bps zone would mechanically pressure NAV across all three funds given duration around 3 years. The 2022 spread blowout from 300 to 600 bps drove double-digit drawdowns in passive HY ETFs. Active managers like Vanguard's can lean into the dislocation by adding quality on the way down, an option index funds structurally lack.
The fund-specific factor is whether VGHY's credit selection actually delivers when spreads widen. The structural pitch is straightforward: index funds must own the heaviest issuers, including stressed names that often migrate toward downgrade. VGHY's 476-bond portfolio versus JNK's 1,219 lets the team concentrate where they have conviction and skip the rest. The 73% industrial weighting reflects active sector tilts the index simply mirrors.
Monitor the monthly Vanguard fact sheet at investor.vanguard.com for changes in CCC exposure and the Treasury sleeve. A meaningful drop in CCC weight or an expansion of the Treasury position above 10% would signal Vanguard's team is positioning defensively, a tell that often precedes spread stress. With VIX near 17 after spiking to 31 in late March, that latest stress test is still fresh.
If the high-yield OAS pushes through 400 bps over the next two quarters, VGHY's active machinery is built precisely for that environment, and JNK and SPHY holders will absorb whatever the index serves them. Track the OAS weekly on FRED and check VGHY's quality breakdown at each Vanguard fact sheet update. A widening Treasury sleeve will tell you Vanguard sees what the spread chart is starting to show.
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