Allspring Global Investments disclosed a new $116.8 million stake in Vanguard Short-Term Corporate Bond ETF (VCSH) through its latest 13F filing, marking 1.76 million shares acquired in the quarter. The position represents a tactical shift into investment-grade debt with 1-to-5 year duration at a time when the Treasury curve is steepening and credit spreads remain compressed.
VCSH tracks Bloomberg's 1-5 Year Corporate Index, holding 2,100+ individual bonds with an average effective duration of 2.7 years and a weighted-average yield of 4.82%. The ETF trades at $67.12 with $52 billion in assets under management, making it the second-largest short-duration corporate bond vehicle in the U.S. market. Allspring's entry comes four months after VCSH saw $3.2 billion in net inflows during Q4 2024, the sharpest quarterly accumulation since March 2023.
The move matters because Allspring — which manages $621 billion across institutional and retail mandates — historically runs underweight credit in its multi-sector portfolios. A $117 million allocation to a single short-duration ETF suggests either client demand for defined-maturity exposure or anticipation that the Federal Reserve's pause will stretch longer than forward curves indicate. The 10-year Treasury sits at 4.51%, the 2-year at 4.23%, a 28-basis-point spread that has widened 15 bps since mid-March. If Allspring expects cuts delayed into Q4 2025, locking in 4.8% yields with minimal rate sensitivity becomes a carrying-cost trade, not a duration play.
Investment-grade corporate spreads are trading at 95 basis points over Treasuries, near the tightest levels since 2021. VCSH's portfolio is 96.4% BBB-and-above, with 41% in financials and 18% in industrials. If spreads widen 20 bps — historically modest in a slowdown — the ETF's short duration caps total-return damage to -0.6%, compared to -2.1% for intermediate corporates. Allspring's clients likely see that asymmetry as insurance against a no-landing scenario where core PCE stays above 2.5% and the Fed holds through year-end.
Allocators should track whether Allspring adds to this position in the next filing cycle, due mid-August. If the stake grows past $200 million, it signals a house view on credit over duration. Meanwhile, watch VCSH's daily flows on Bloomberg terminal — sustained $500M+ weekly inflows would confirm institutional repositioning. The 10-year breakeven inflation rate, currently 2.31%, is also worth monitoring; if it climbs past 2.45%, short-duration corporates become the only bond sleeve offering real yield without curve risk.
Allspring was spun out of Wells Fargo Asset Management in 2021 and remains one of the largest non-bank institutional managers in North America. The firm does not publicly telegraph macro views, which makes 13F disclosures the cleanest read on directional bets. A $116.8 million position in a 2.7-year duration ETF says exactly one thing: Allspring is paying clients to wait, not to predict.