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SCHD's Dividend Dominance Is Slipping as Rivals Pull Ahead and Trump Takes Aim at Defense Payouts

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Once the gold standard for dividend investors, SCHD is watching billions flow to competitors VIG and VYM instead. A new Trump policy targeting defense company dividends isn't helping matters.

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For years, the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD) has been the darling of income investors looking for cheap, reliable exposure to quality dividend-paying stocks. Low fees, solid track record, consistent payouts. What's not to love?

Apparently, quite a bit lately. Over the past six months, SCHD has pulled in a modest $317.3 million in net inflows. Meanwhile, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) grabbed $2.38 billion, and Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM) scooped up $3.14 billion, according to data from Etfdb. That's not just a gap, it's a chasm.

What's going on here? Part of it is the usual market stuff: rising rate expectations, a rotation back into growth stocks, and a general sense that maybe chasing dividends isn't as sexy when tech is roaring. But SCHD's value-heavy tilt and relatively concentrated sector exposure might be working against it. In a market still obsessed with growth and flexibility, SCHD's approach feels a bit rigid.

Then came the political curveball. Last week, President Donald Trump dropped an executive order that sent shockwaves through the dividend world. The policy bans U.S. defense companies from paying dividends or buying back stock until they improve their weapons production and delivery performance. It's targeted at "underperforming" contractors, and it's all about realigning how defense firms allocate capital.

Now, defense stocks aren't a huge chunk of SCHD's portfolio, but the announcement still rattled income investors. If the government can step in and shut down dividends for defense companies, what's stopping similar moves elsewhere? That kind of regulatory uncertainty is kryptonite for dividend-focused strategies, and it's adding another layer of worry to an already challenging environment for SCHD.

So where does that leave SCHD? At a crossroads, basically. Political risk is real, investor preferences are shifting, and the competition is eating its lunch. For advisors and income-focused investors, the next few months will be telling. Will SCHD adapt and regain its footing, or will it settle into life as just another dividend ETF in a crowded field? The answer likely depends on how Washington behaves and where the market decides to park its money next.

SCHD's Dividend Dominance Is Slipping as Rivals Pull Ahead and Trump Takes Aim at Defense Payouts

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Once the gold standard for dividend investors, SCHD is watching billions flow to competitors VIG and VYM instead. A new Trump policy targeting defense company dividends isn't helping matters.

Get Market Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

For years, the Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF (SCHD) has been the darling of income investors looking for cheap, reliable exposure to quality dividend-paying stocks. Low fees, solid track record, consistent payouts. What's not to love?

Apparently, quite a bit lately. Over the past six months, SCHD has pulled in a modest $317.3 million in net inflows. Meanwhile, Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) grabbed $2.38 billion, and Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM) scooped up $3.14 billion, according to data from Etfdb. That's not just a gap, it's a chasm.

What's going on here? Part of it is the usual market stuff: rising rate expectations, a rotation back into growth stocks, and a general sense that maybe chasing dividends isn't as sexy when tech is roaring. But SCHD's value-heavy tilt and relatively concentrated sector exposure might be working against it. In a market still obsessed with growth and flexibility, SCHD's approach feels a bit rigid.

Then came the political curveball. Last week, President Donald Trump dropped an executive order that sent shockwaves through the dividend world. The policy bans U.S. defense companies from paying dividends or buying back stock until they improve their weapons production and delivery performance. It's targeted at "underperforming" contractors, and it's all about realigning how defense firms allocate capital.

Now, defense stocks aren't a huge chunk of SCHD's portfolio, but the announcement still rattled income investors. If the government can step in and shut down dividends for defense companies, what's stopping similar moves elsewhere? That kind of regulatory uncertainty is kryptonite for dividend-focused strategies, and it's adding another layer of worry to an already challenging environment for SCHD.

So where does that leave SCHD? At a crossroads, basically. Political risk is real, investor preferences are shifting, and the competition is eating its lunch. For advisors and income-focused investors, the next few months will be telling. Will SCHD adapt and regain its footing, or will it settle into life as just another dividend ETF in a crowded field? The answer likely depends on how Washington behaves and where the market decides to park its money next.