This High-Yield Vanguard ETF Has 42.6% of Its Portfolio Invested in Just 3 Dividend Stocks. Here’s Why That’s a Good Thing.

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Investment management firm Vanguard offers low-cost exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that hold dozens if not hundreds of stocks. A key benefit of these ETFs is their diversification, which can be difficult to replicate through buying individual stocks alone.

But the Vanguard Energy ETF (NYSEMKT: VDE) is highly concentrated in just a handful of companies. It has a 22.8% weighting in ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM), a 13.3% weighting in Chevron (NYSE: CVX), and a 6.6% weighting in ConocoPhillips (NYSE: COP). Here’s why the top-heavy nature of the Vanguard Energy ETF could be a good thing and why the fund is worth buying now.

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The energy sector is unique because the competition is high, and it is sensitive to changes in oil and gas prices. Commodity-based industries are all about managing costs, staying financially disciplined, and achieving high margins, whereas other sectors have more product differentiation and an importance on brands.

Coca-Cola and PepsiCo are similar businesses, but they sell different products. Adobe and Salesforce offer completely different types of software. Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices both design chips, but they have different functions and specs.

Buying the Vanguard Information Technology ETF grants exposure to Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Salesforce, Adobe, AMD, and plenty of other companies that provide unique products and services.

But in the Vanguard Energy ETF, many companies have identical business models. For example, 26.6% of the fund is invested in oil and gas exploration and production (E&P) companies, like ConocoPhillips, EOG Resources, Diamondback Energy, Occidental Petroleum (NYSE: OXY), and Devon Energy. These companies aim to produce oil and gas for the cheapest price possible and sell it for the highest price possible. And they all have sizable operations in the Permian Basin of eastern New Mexico and West Texas. So, there’s a great deal of overlap.

Leveraged companies with low-quality assets can do very well when oil prices are high. But when oil prices fall, it’s the financially healthy companies with a low cost of production that can endure the downturn and even take market share by buying out competitors at low prices.

Many pure-play E&Ps have done an excellent job improving the quality of their assets so that they can thrive even during mediocre price environments. But they don’t have the financial flexibility of the bigger players. For example, Occidental Petroleum had a blowout quarter and is raking in high free cash flow thanks to its acquisition of CrownRock, but it still has a ton of debt, which puts pressure on its balance sheet.

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