What happened
According to its SEC filing dated January 21, 2026, SJS Investment Consulting bought 84,687 shares of Vanguard Institutional Index Fund - 0-3 Months Treasury Bill ETF (VBIL +0.03%). The transaction’s estimated value is $6.39 million, based on the average closing price during the fourth quarter of 2025. The fund’s VBIL position ended the quarter with a total value of $9.07 million, up $6.38 million from the previous period.
What else to know
- This buy increased the fund’s VBIL stake to 1.15% of its 13F reportable assets under management.
- Top holdings after the filing:
- NYSEMKT:DFAC: $360.73 million (45.6% of AUM)
- NYSEMKT:DFIC: $65.15 million (8.2% of AUM)
- NYSEMKT:DUSB: $32.56 million (4.1% of AUM)
- NASDAQ:VCRB: $30.00 million (3.8% of AUM)
- NYSEMKT:DFSD: $21.18 million (2.7% of AUM)
- As of January 20, 2026, VBIL shares were priced at $75.56, up 3.9% over the past year; the fund’s annualized dividend yield is 3.11%.
- VBIL closed 0.11% below its 52-week high as of January 20, 2026.
- SJS Investment Consulting Inc. reported 2,087 positions and total 13F reportable AUM of $790.38 million as of December 31, 2025.

NASDAQ: VBIL
Key Data Points
Company Overview
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Price (as of market close 2026-01-20) | $75.56 |
| Expense Ratio | 0.07% |
| Dividend Yield | 3.56% |
Company Snapshot
- Offers exposure to short-term U.S. Treasury bills with maturities of three months or less, primarily through a passively managed exchange-traded fund structure.
- Operates by tracking a market value-weighted index, employing a sampling strategy to replicate the risk and return characteristics of the underlying benchmark.
- Serves institutional and individual investors seeking low-cost, liquid access to high-quality government securities.
Vanguard Institutional Index Fund - 0-3 Months Treasury Bill ETF provides investors with efficient access to the U.S. Treasury bill market, focusing on securities with ultra-short maturities to minimize interest rate risk and maintain high liquidity. The fund's disciplined, index-tracking approach is designed to deliver consistent returns that closely mirror its benchmark, appealing to those seeking low-cost, stable fixed income exposure. Its competitive advantage lies in its transparent structure and commitment to tracking high-quality, short-duration government debt instruments.
What this transaction means for investors
SJS Investment Consulting's move to more than double its Treasury bill position signals a defensive shift in cash management strategy. The firm, which concentrates heavily in actively managed ETFs with over $360 million in its largest equity holding, could be building up its shortest-duration holdings as a safe harbor.
VBIL holds Treasury bills maturing in one to three months, providing government-backed safety with yields that track short-term rates. The fund essentially functions as a higher-yielding alternative to money market funds, with the same zero credit risk and daily liquidity. Vanguard's rock-bottom fees and government backing have made VBIL a popular choice for advisors rotating out of riskier cash alternatives.
The fund currently yields around 3.6%, better than most savings accounts, and has pulled in billions from investors treating it as a cash alternative. VBIL works best for conservative investors who need capital preservation and quick access to funds, such as emergency reserves or money earmarked for near-term expenses. The ultra-short duration means virtually no interest rate risk, though yields will fall when the Fed cuts rates.




