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Inflation relentlessly erodes purchasing power, making dividend growth essential for income investors to maintain real income. A barbell strategy—combining moderate-yielding dividend growth stocks/ETFs and 6.5%+ yielding investment grade preferreds—offers both growth and current income. AI-driven capex by large-cap S&P 500 firms is powering economic growth and masking weakness among lower-income consumers.

Growth continues to be a standout performer, though elevated interest rates and geopolitical friction continue to add a dose of uncertainty. With that, value exposure is still a vital component for constructing a balanced portfolio.

Free cash flow (FCF) is a critical measure for identifying high-quality companies, particularly in a market environment marked by ongoing uncertainty. Companies that consistently generate strong cash flow often have the financial flexibility to strengthen their businesses, return capital to shareholders, and create long-term value.

The VictoryShares Free Cash Flow ETF (VFLO) has outpaced the broader U.S. equity market, year-to-date and since inception, by tracking the Victory U.S. Large Cap Free Cash Flow Index (the Index) which targets companies with high free cash flow (FCF) yields and strong growth prospects.

“Quality” has become a pervasive buzzword in the ETF landscape, but separating marketing jargon from meaningful financial health is harder than it sounds.

Timothy Plan launched three exchange-traded funds (ETFs) today, effectively merging the worlds of values-based and fundamental investing. In partnership with sub-advisor Victory Capital, the pioneer of Biblically Responsible Investing (BRI) expanded its suite with the Timothy Plan Free Cash Flow ETF (TPFC) and Timothy Plan Free Cash Flow Growth ETF (TPFG).

Lance Humphrey, head of portfolio management at Victory Capital, and Dom Rizzo, portfolio manager at T. Rowe Price, joined Nate Geraci on this week's ETF Prime to discuss quality investing and active technology strategies.

VictoryShares Free Cash Flow ETF (NASDAQ: VFLO - Get Free Report) was the recipient of a large increase in short interest during the month of April. As of April 15th, there was short interest totaling 466,521 shares, an increase of 140.6% from the March 31st total of 193,891 shares. Based on an average daily volume of

In a market where the Magnificent Seven (Mag 7)1 account for more than 30% of the S&P 500 Index, The VictoryShares free cash flow (FCF) suite of ETFs takes a different road.

VictoryShares Free Cash Flow ETF (VFLO) delivers high FCF yields without sacrificing growth or falling into value traps, with a modest 0.39% expense ratio. VFLO's unique methodology blends trailing and forward FCF, indirectly screens for quality via enterprise value, and overlays growth filters to balance yield and expansion. From inception, VFLO has outperformed peer FCF ETFs and offers a compelling buy-and-hold strategy, poised to outperform unless AI-driven rallies dominate.

Investors have no shortage of metrics to evaluate equities, but not all measures capture the same economic reality. In an environment defined by elevated capital spending and market concentration, earnings-based measures may not fully reflect how efficiently companies convert investment into cash.
