What happened
According to a recent SEC filing, Pennington Partners & Co., LLC increased its position in the Vanguard Russell 3000 ETF (VTHR +1.30%) by 17,870 shares during the first quarter of 2026. Based on the quarter's average closing price, the estimated transaction value was $5.4 million.
What else to know
- The VTHR position now represents 6.3% of Pennington's AUM as of March 31, 2026, placing it fourth among the fund's top holdings.
- Top holdings after the filing:
- NYSE: VTI: $59.2 million (20.3% of AUM)
- NYSE: BOXX: $49.9 million (17.1% of AUM)
- NYSE: IWV: $41.6 million (14.2% of AUM)
- NASDAQ: VTHR: $18.3 million (6.3% of AUM)
- NYSE: JAAA: $8.4 million (2.9% of AUM)
- As of May 20, 2026, shares of VTHR were trading at $325.94, up about 26% over the past year -- trailing the S&P 500 by roughly 1.5 percentage points, and underperforming its Large Blend category benchmark by roughly 1.7 percentage points.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| AUM | $5.8 billion |
| Expense ratio | 0.06% |
| Dividend yield | 1.05% |
| 1-year return (as of 5/20/26) | 25.98% |
ETF snapshot
The Vanguard Russell 3000 ETF seeks to track the performance of the Russell 3000 Index, giving investors diversified exposure to nearly the entire U.S. equity market through a low-cost, passively managed strategy.
- Its approximately 3,000 holdings represent roughly 98% of the investable U.S. equity universe, spanning large-, mid-, and small-cap companies.
- An ultra-low expense ratio of 0.06% makes VTHR one of the cheapest funds in its category.
- Designed for long-term, buy-and-hold investors seeking returns that mirror the overall U.S. equity market.
What this transaction means for investors
Pennington Partners' decision to add nearly $5.4 million in VTHR -- increasing its stake by 39% in a single quarter -- is the kind of move that speaks to quiet conviction in the broader U.S. market rather than a high-conviction bet on any single company or sector.
That makes sense given what VTHR is built to do. By tracking the Russell 3000 Index, it captures roughly 98% of the U.S. equity market in one fund -- from megacap names like Apple (AAPL 0.76%) and Microsoft (MSFT 1.13%) all the way down to small-cap companies most retail investors have never heard of. For a firm like Pennington, which already holds a diversified lineup of broad-market ETFs, VTHR functions as a complementary tool for additional market-wide exposure.
The first quarter of 2026 saw continued -- if uneven -- strength in U.S. equities, and institutional investors adding to broad-index positions during that period were largely expressing confidence in the durability of the current bull market. VTHR's 26% one-year gain, while slightly behind the S&P 500, reflects impressive performance across the full market-cap spectrum.
For everyday investors, a purchase like this is a reminder that sometimes the most thoughtful portfolio decision is also the most boring one: buying a low cost, broad-exposure index fund -- preferably with a long time horizon. VTHR's 0.06% expense ratio means investors keep nearly all of their returns -- which can be a meaningful edge when compounded over time.





