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Schwab Long-Term U.S. Treasury ETF offers a significantly lower expense ratio and a higher dividend yield than iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF. The iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond ETF has provided stronger total returns over the last year while experiencing much less price volatility.

The Schwab Long-Term US Treasury ETF (SCHQ) faces heightened sensitivity to YTM changes due to its 13.7-year duration. Recent declines in SCHQ reflect reinflation risks and show the costs of suboptimal duration allocations in times when inflation is a key economic question. A potential Hormuz resolution could benefit duration bets, but structural risk premia and inflation momentum may persist.

Cwm LLC lifted its holdings in Schwab Long-Term U.S. Treasury ETF (NYSEARCA:SCHQ) by 171.5% in the fourth quarter, according to its most recent disclosure with the SEC. The institutional investor owned 40,206 shares of the company's stock after purchasing an additional 25,398 shares during the period. Cwm LLC owned approximately 0.13% of

SPLB and SCHQ both offer ultra-low fees, but SPLB delivers a higher dividend yield and stronger recent total returns. SCHQ holds fewer bonds and tilts entirely toward Treasuries, while SPLB focuses on investment-grade corporate bonds with much broader diversification.

SCHQ charges a much lower expense ratio and offers a slightly higher yield than TLT. SCHQ has outperformed TLT on recent 1-year and 5-year returns, while also showing a smaller maximum drawdown.
