Today: 29 June 2026
$95 Billion Dividend ETF May Not Be As Safe As It Looks

$95 Billion Dividend ETF May Not Be As Safe As It Looks

New York, June 8, 2026, 11:04 (EDT)

  • SCHD is back in focus as a defensive play after a tech selloff, but its top 10 holdings make up roughly 43.5% of assets.
  • Chip names bounced back Monday, lifting Wall Street after the S&P 500 lost a nine-week run on rate worries and a sharp semiconductor selloff.
  • The fund pays income. Schwab puts the 30-day SEC yield at 3.24%, with an expense ratio of 0.06%. Assets stood at $95.17 billion as of June 5.

Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF is seeing heavier flows as investors rotate into income plays and cheaper stocks after tech’s pullback. The fund, with the SCHD ticker and $95 billion in assets, has become a go-to for this defensive trade. Still, SCHD’s top holdings carry more weight than you’d expect from a 103-stock portfolio.

S&P 500 dropped 2.64% on Friday. Nasdaq shed 4.18%. Semiconductors had their worst day since March 2020. Stronger-than-expected jobs data unnerved investors again, raising fears that the Fed might tighten policy.

Market opened higher Monday as chips rallied and Middle East tensions eased. With trading just underway in New York, Reuters showed the Dow up 0.29%, S&P 500 rising 0.68%, Nasdaq advancing 1.09%. The Philadelphia semiconductor index jumped 4.6%.

“Sometimes these moves get too far too fast and you need a bit of a pullback,” Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth, told Reuters. He said any pullback would probably push money into other sectors. Reuters

SCHD is another sector play in ETF form. ETFs trade on exchanges, acting like stocks but holding a group of securities. SCHD tries to follow the Dow Jones U.S. Dividend 100 Index. Schwab says the index includes dividend payers picked for fundamental strength.

SCHD looks interesting in a market correction, David Dierking wrote for The Motley Fool via Yahoo Finance. He cited SCHD’s process targeting balance-sheet strength, dividend track record, and solid yield. In 2022, the S&P 500 fell 18%, while SCHD dropped just 3%, Dierking said.

Big names drive SCHD. As of June 4, Qualcomm made up 6.51% of the fund, while Texas Instruments and UnitedHealth weighed in at 5.89% and 5.31%. Chevron, Merck, Coca-Cola, ConocoPhillips, Amgen, Procter & Gamble and Verizon were next. All together, these top 10 stocks made up about 43.5% of assets.

24/7 Wall St. on Saturday pointed out that SCHD now has more than 40% of its assets in its biggest holdings, with energy and healthcare names in the portfolio making the fund sensitive to moves in oil and drug policy, plus swings in single stocks. The article also noted that SCHD’s five-year total return is behind SPY, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, despite a recent run in the dividend fund.

Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF, or VYM, is the closest peer. Schwab’s data lists VYM with 620 holdings, a 0.04% expense ratio and top positions in Broadcom, JPMorgan Chase, Exxon Mobil and Johnson & Johnson. VYM owns a wider range of dividend stocks but pays less income than SCHD.

Investors after “higher yield and higher dividend growth” might look at SCHD, but that comes with more concentration risk, Samuel Smith’s High Yield Investor group said in a Seeking Alpha note. They wrote that VYM makes the stronger case when diversification is a bigger priority for the investor. Seeking Alpha

Markets were steady late in the morning. SCHD was at $32.44, up roughly 0.4%. VYM also added about 0.4% to $158.92. SPY advanced 0.9%. The bounce from Monday stayed broad, with gains coming from the main market, not just dividend names.

The risk is growth stocks could take the lead again. If chip names bounce and AI spending keeps lifting profits, dividend funds might fall behind—just like in stretches of the 2023-2025 rally. Higher oil prices or rougher healthcare headlines could also work against SCHD, given its heavy bets on energy and pharma.

Citigroup raised its year-end S&P 500 target to 8,100 from 7,700 on Monday, pointing to earnings strength and an AI “supercycle.” The bank said it has “high confidence in continued earnings beats through year-end.” But Citigroup also flagged doubts about how long AI-driven growth will last past 2027. Reuters

SCHD isn’t a pure safety play or a hidden tech bet at the moment. The ETF sticks to a cheap dividend strategy and offers steady income, but where it goes next could hang on a handful of big U.S. stocks.

Iwona Majkowska is a financial markets journalist at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, artificial intelligence and technology. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics, she previously worked in equity research and financial analysis before focusing on market reporting. Her daily coverage helps investors follow major developments across U.S. and global markets.

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