WBI Investments Dumps 82,000 VFLO Shares Worth $2.6 Million. Should This Cash Flow Yield ETF Have a Place in Your Portfolio?

  • WBI Investments sold 82,398 shares, reducing the position by about $2.6 million.

  • The firm still holds 160,664 shares valued at $6 million.

  • VFLO now accounts for 1.54% of assets under management (AUM), placing it just inside the fund’s top five holdings.

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According to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission updating Q3 holdings, WBI Investments, LLC reported selling 82,398 shares of Victory Portfolios II – VictoryShares Free Cash Flow ETF (NASDAQ:VFLO). The post-trade position stands at 160,664 shares, valued at $6.02 million, down from 1.77% to 1.54% of the fund’s AUM compared to the previous quarter.

This was a reduction; VFLO now represents 1.54% of WBI Investments, LLC’s 13F AUM, which places it inside the fund’s top five holdings.

Top holdings after the filing:

  • WBIY: $24.10 million (6.2% of AUM)

  • WBIL: $20.95 million (5.4% of AUM)

  • WBIG: $20.85 million (5.3% of AUM)

  • WBIF: $18.35 million (4.7% of AUM)

  • VFLO: $6 million (1.5% of AUM)

As of Dec. 28, 2025, shares were priced at $39.8, up 16.3% over the past year.

Metric

Value

Price (as of market close 2025-11-19)

$37.32

Dividend yield

1.57%

1-year total return (including dividends)

18.3%

  • The ETF’s investment strategy focuses on tracking an index of 50 U.S. large- and mid-cap companies selected for robust free cash flow characteristics.

  • The portfolio uses a free cash flow screen to seek out companies with high free cash flow yield without sacrificing growth potential.

  • The structure is an exchange-traded fund with a rules-based methodology; expense ratio details are available in regulatory filings.

VictoryShares Free Cash Flow ETF (VFLO) offers investors exposure to a curated basket of U.S. large- and mid-cap equities, emphasizing companies with strong free cash flow generation. The ETF employs a replication strategy to closely track its custom index, aiming to deliver performance before fees and expenses that mirrors the underlying holdings. This approach provides institutional investors with a transparent, rules-based vehicle for accessing quality U.S. equities with an income component.

WBI’s reduction is shares likely doesn’t represent any lack of confidence in future returns the ETF. Total returns, including dividends, have outpaced the S&P 500 index this year, and taking some of that gain could make sense.

Holding VFLO in any investor’s portfolio also makes sense, though. The fund’s composition is created by starting with the largest 400 profitable companies. A free cash flow screen then narrows it down to the 75 highest free cash flow yielding value stocks. It then eliminates companies with high free cash flow but with weak growth prospects to leave 50 stocks of growing companies with high free cash flow yield.

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