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Schwab Short-Term U.S. Treasury ETF
As of May 30, 2026 at 08:52 UTC
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About Schwab Short-Term U.S. Treasury ETF
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Latest News
5 articlesVanguard Short-Term Treasury ETF (VGSH) and Schwab Short-Term U.S. Treasury ETF (SCHO) are nearly identical Treasury bond ETFs with matching 0.03% expense ratios, 4.0% yields, and -0.2% one-year returns. The main difference is VGSH's larger asset base of $32.7 billion versus SCHO's $11.9 billion, giving VGSH a slight liquidity advantage for investors.
SCHO and ISTB are both short-term bond ETFs targeting lower-risk, income-focused investors, but they differ significantly. SCHO offers pure Treasury exposure with a lower 0.03% expense ratio and minimal credit risk, while ISTB provides broader diversification across 6,977 bonds including corporate and securitized debt with a slightly higher 4.1% yield but double the expense ratio at 0.06%. ISTB has experienced deeper drawdowns (-9.34% vs -5.73%) over five years, making SCHO the safer choice for capital preservation and ISTB better for those prioritizing additional income.
The article compares two short-term bond ETFs: IGSB (iShares 1-5 Year Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF) and SCHO (Schwab Short-Term U.S. Treasury ETF). Both offer low costs and stable income, but differ in approach. SCHO focuses exclusively on government Treasuries with a 0.03% expense ratio, while IGSB diversifies into 4,512 investment-grade corporate bonds with a 0.04% expense ratio. IGSB offers higher yields (4.5% vs 4.0%) and better 1-year returns (6.9% vs 5.1%), but experienced deeper drawdowns. The choice depends on investor preference: SCHO for maximum safety during recessions, or IGSB for higher returns if economic conditions improve.
A comparison of two short-term bond ETFs: Vanguard's BSV and Schwab's SCHO. Both offer low-cost exposure with 0.03% expense ratios. BSV provides greater diversification with 3,117 holdings across multiple bond types and higher one-year returns (1.68%), while SCHO focuses exclusively on U.S. Treasury bonds maturing in 1-3 years, offering greater stability and lower volatility. BSV is better for diverse exposure; SCHO is ideal for those seeking maximum stability.