On April 9, 2026, Red Spruce Capital disclosed a buy of 178,108 shares of the Invesco BulletShares 2029 Corporate Bond ETF (BSCT +0.01%), an estimated $3.35 million trade based on quarterly average pricing.
What happened
According to an SEC filing dated April 9, 2026, Red Spruce Capital, LLC purchased 178,108 additional shares of the Invesco BulletShares 2029 Corporate Bond ETF (BSCT +0.01%). The estimated transaction value is $3.35 million, calculated using the average unadjusted closing price for the first quarter of 2026. The fund’s quarter-end BSCT position rose to 260,030 shares, with the position value increasing by $3.47 million due to both trading and price changes.
What else to know
- The fund’s buy increased its BSCT allocation to 1.99% of 13F reportable AUM as of March 31, 2026.
- Top holdings after the filing:
- NASDAQ: GOOGL: $17.52 million (7.2% of AUM)
- NASDAQ: AMAT: $10.49 million (4.3% of AUM)
- NASDAQ: BSCR: $10.25 million (4.2% of AUM)
- NYSE: ABBV: $9.67 million (4.0% of AUM)
- NASDAQ: BSCS: $8.93 million (3.7% of AUM)
- As of April 8, 2026, BSCT shares were priced at $18.72.
- BSCT offered a trailing 12-month dividend yield of 4.5% as of April 9, 2026.
ETF overview
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| AUM | $2.8 billion |
| Dividend Yield | 4.5% |
| Price (as of market close April 8, 2026) | $18.72 |
| 1-Year Total Return | 5% |
ETF snapshot
- Investment strategy: The ETF seeks to track the performance of the Invesco BulletShares Corporate Bond 2029 Index, investing primarily in U.S. dollar-denominated, investment-grade corporate bonds with maturities in 2029.
- Portfolio composition: The fund employs a sampling methodology to hold a diversified basket of investment-grade corporate bonds, rebalancing monthly to align with the index's maturity profile.
- Fund structure: The ETF is structured with a designated maturity date in December 2029 and offers a transparent, passively managed approach with a focus on predictable cash flows.
The Invesco BulletShares 2029 Corporate Bond ETF provides investors with targeted exposure to investment-grade U.S. corporate bonds maturing in 2029, combining a defined maturity structure with monthly rebalancing for index alignment. The fund's strategy allows investors to plan for specific cash flow needs while benefiting from the diversification and liquidity of an exchange-traded product. Its competitive yield and transparent methodology make it a compelling option for those seeking to match fixed income allocations to future liabilities or defined time horizons.
What this transaction means for investors
This purchase seems like a deliberate extension of a bond ladder strategy given other buys in the same quarter, signaling a continued shift toward predictable income and defined-duration exposure. The fact that the fund has also been adding adjacent BulletShares ETFs for 2027 and 2028 reinforces that this is about building a staggered maturity profile, not chasing yield in isolation.
That matters for long-term investors because it reflects a portfolio increasingly anchored in cash flow visibility. The 2029 ETF holds investment-grade corporate bonds with a defined maturity structure, meaning capital is expected to be returned around December 2029 while generating steady income along the way. The fund’s yield profile supports that positioning, with a roughly 4.5% trailing yield and a similar yield to maturity, paired with a relatively short duration of about 2.8 years, which helps limit rate sensitivity. At the same time, performance has been modest, with shares up just 6.9% over the past year and materially lagging equities.
In other words, this is less about upside and more about certainty. For investors, the signal is a pivot toward capital preservation and income stability, especially in a portfolio otherwise still holding growth names like Alphabet and Applied Materials.





