SGOV
SGOV
SGOV — iShares 0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF
ETF Position Review · Bore Family Office · April 8, 2026
1. ETF Overview — What SGOV Is and Isn't
The iShares 0-3 Month Treasury Bond ETF (SGOV) is not an equity investment — it is a cash-equivalent wrapper holding US Treasury bills with maturities of 0 to 3 months. It is the functional equivalent of a money market fund with the liquidity of a stock, tracking the ICE 0-3 Month US Treasury Securities Index. The fund continuously rolls its Treasury bill portfolio as bonds mature, ensuring near-constant NAV around $100.
Key characteristics:
- NAV stability: NAV fluctuates only by fractions of a cent — effectively a $100 floor instrument. Total return = interest income only.
- Credit quality: 100% US Treasuries — the highest credit quality available. Zero credit risk.
- Liquidity: Exchange-traded; intraday liquidity. No redemption gate risk.
- Duration: ~45-day average duration. Extremely low interest rate sensitivity (near-zero duration risk).
- Tax: Interest income is taxable at federal level; generally exempt from state/local tax.
- Expense ratio: 0.09% — minimal drag on yield.
- Distribution: Monthly income distributions at prevailing T-bill rates.
Note: Because SGOV is a fixed-income ETF (not an equity), standard DCF/DDM valuation models do not apply. This report covers the position economics, income analysis, and strategic allocation recommendation.
2. Rate Environment & Yield Context
| Metric | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Current NAV | $100.445 | Extremely stable — NAV moves in cents only |
| 30-Day SEC Yield | 3.55% | Most current income rate as of Apr 2, 2026 |
| 12-Month Trailing Yield | 3.95% | Includes higher-rate 2025 environment |
| Fed Funds Target Range | 4.25%–4.50% | Current as of April 2026 (stable since Dec 2024) |
| Expense Ratio | 0.09% | Net yield ≈ SEC yield (minimal drag) |
| AUM (approx) | ~$33B | One of the largest T-bill ETFs — deep liquidity |
| Avg Duration | ~45 days | Rolls continuously; reprices monthly to current rates |
The Fed has held rates steady at 4.25–4.50% since December 2024 following its 100bps of cuts in H2 2024. The 30-Day SEC yield of 3.55% reflects the current T-bill market — modestly below the Fed Funds midpoint (4.375%) due to the T-bill term structure and market expectations of future rate cuts. SGOV's yield will decline if the Fed cuts further, and will rise if rates stay higher for longer.
3. Position Analysis
| Account | Shares | Avg Cost | Market Value | Unrealized P&L | Est. Annual Income | Yield on Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Main Portfolio (Cash) | 10,000 | $100.39 | $1,004,450 | +$550 | $39,676 | 3.95% |
| Najee's Brokerage | 3,000 | $100.39 | $301,335 | +$165 | $11,903 | 3.95% |
| Total | 13,000 | $100.39 | $1,305,785 | +$715 | $51,579 | 3.95% |
The combined SGOV allocation of 13,000 shares (~$1,306K) represents a meaningful cash/near-cash reserve. At the trailing yield of 3.95%, this position generates approximately $52K/year in interest income with essentially zero principal risk. This is significantly better than leaving cash idle or in low-yield savings accounts.
4. Rate Cut Scenario Analysis
The key risk for SGOV is rate cuts — each cut reduces the yield earned on the rolling T-bill portfolio. Here is the income sensitivity at different Fed Funds rate levels:
| Scenario | Fed Funds Rate | Est. SGOV Yield | Annual Income (13K shares) | Income Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current (Hold) | 4.375% | 3.55% | $46,355 | Baseline |
| 1 Cut (−25bps) | 4.125% | 3.25% | $42,438 | −$3,917 |
| 2 Cuts (−50bps) | 3.875% | 3.00% | $39,174 | −$7,182 |
| 3 Cuts (−75bps) | 3.625% | 2.75% | $35,909 | −$10,446 |
| 4 Cuts (−100bps) | 3.375% | 2.50% | $32,645 | −$13,711 |
Rate cut sensitivity: Each 25bps Fed cut reduces annual income by ~$3,264 across the full SGOV position. Even with 4 cuts (to 3.375% Fed Funds), SGOV still earns $32,645/year — far better than a savings account. NAV remains essentially unchanged through rate cycles.
2026 Rate Outlook: Market futures (as of April 2026) are pricing 2–3 Fed cuts in 2026, potentially bringing the Fed Funds rate to 3.50–3.75% by year-end. Under this scenario, SGOV yield would decline from 3.55% to approximately 2.75–3.00%. Still meaningfully positive, but the opportunity cost of staying in cash vs. deployed capital increases if equities continue to recover.
5. Strategic Allocation: Opportunity Cost of Cash
The primary question is not whether SGOV is a good cash instrument (it is) — it is whether $1.3M in cash is the right allocation given the current market environment.
| Allocation Option | Expected Return | Risk | vs. SGOV at 3.55% | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SGOV (status quo) | 3.55% (declining) | Minimal | — | Safe but rate-sensitive |
| High-yield dividend stocks (e.g. KO, VZ) | 5-8% total return | Moderate | +1.5-4.5% | Attractive if market recovers |
| Dividend growth (e.g. MDLZ, MA) | 7-12% total return | Moderate | +3.5-8.5% | Outperform on 3-5yr horizon |
| Investment-grade bonds (5yr Treasury) | 4.1-4.3% | Low | +0.5-0.75% | Better if rates decline |
| Remain all-cash | 3.55% and falling | Minimal | Same | Drag if market rallies |
Analysis: The $1,306K SGOV position earns a respectable 3.55% today but faces headwinds from potential Fed cuts. The portfolio already has significant equity exposure; maintaining some cash reserve is prudent (especially for Najee's account which has a conservative allocation). However, a gradual rotation of 20-30% of the SGOV position into higher-returning assets over the next 6-12 months makes sense if the portfolio's equity positions continue to recover.
Key consideration: With $4M in PRCXX (money market) also on the books, the combined cash/near-cash allocation is approximately $5.3M — a very large cash position relative to the portfolio. SGOV specifically is appropriate as a parked-cash vehicle; the question of deployment is primarily about the overall cash allocation strategy.
Recommendation — Hold / Monitor for Rotation
Verdict: HOLD — maintain current SGOV allocation with a 6-month review trigger.
- Main Portfolio (10,000 shares / $1.00M): Hold as cash reserve. Current 3.55% yield is productive. Consider rotating $200-300K into equities on any significant market pullback (further 10%+ decline from here).
- Najee's Brokerage (3,000 shares / $301K): Hold. Najee's account has a conservative allocation by design — cash reserve is appropriate here. Only rotate if expanding the equity allocation with new money.
- Rate trigger: If the Fed cuts rates 2+ times (Fed Funds below 3.75%), reassess whether SGOV yield still justifies the cash position vs. near-term equity deployment.
- PRCXX note: With $4M in the money market fund, total cash allocation across the portfolio is ~$5.3M. If market opportunities emerge, PRCXX is the primary deployment source before SGOV.
SGOV is not a valuation call — it is a cash management tool. The recommendation to Hold reflects the appropriateness of maintaining a liquid reserve at current yields, not a conviction that SGOV will outperform equities.
Bore Family Office · Research Analyst · Generated by Lurch · April 8, 2026
For informational purposes only. Not investment advice. All figures approximate.