BIL vs VCSH

SPDR Bloomberg 1-3 Month T-Bill ETF vs Vanguard Short-Term Corporate Bond ETF

Quick take
  • VCSH has the lower expense ratio at 0.03% vs 0.14% for BIL.
  • VCSH pays a higher dividend yield (4.42%).

Side-by-side metrics

MetricBILVCSH
Expense ratio
Annual fee. Lower is better.
0.14%0.03%
Dividend yield
Trailing 12-month yield.
3.95%4.42%
AUM
Assets under management — bigger funds are typically more liquid.
$46.42B$49.18B
YTD return
1.20%0.67%
1-year return
3-year return
Annualized.
5-year return
Annualized.
10-year return
Annualized.
Beta (3Y)
Volatility relative to the market. Closer to 1 = market-like.
0.000.42
P/E ratio
Last price
$91.44$79.03
Inception
Issuer
State StreetVanguard

BIL top holdings

Holdings data unavailable for BIL.

VCSH top holdings

Holdings data unavailable for VCSH.

About BIL

BIL (SPDR Bloomberg 1-3 Month T-Bill ETF) is Ultra-short T-Bills, cash-equivalent. Managed by State Street, the fund carries $46.4B in assets under management, an expense ratio of 0.14%, a dividend yield of 3.95%.

About VCSH

VCSH (Vanguard Short-Term Corporate Bond ETF) is Short-term investment-grade corporate bonds. Managed by Vanguard, the fund carries $49.2B in assets under management, an expense ratio of 0.03%, a dividend yield of 4.42%.