Value stocks are drawing capital as investors rotate out of AI-linked equities, pushing the Vanguard Value Index Fund ETF Shares to a new 52-week high.
VTV rose to a 52-week high of about $215 on June 5, up 26 percent from its low of $170.95, as investors rotated from AI-growth into defensive value stocks.
"U.S. equities fell in the first quarter due to AI-driven disruption and geopolitical shocks, prompting a rotation from software and growth stocks to defensive, commodity and value segments," Baron Capital said in its first-quarter 2026 investor letter for the Baron Financials ETF.
The VTV fund, which tracks the CRSP US Large Cap Value Index, charges 3 basis points in annual fees. It carries a Zacks ETF Rank of No. 1, or Strong Buy, with a medium risk outlook. The fund's weighted alpha of 25.04, as measured by Barchart, suggests further upside momentum.
The rotation into value could pressure growth-heavy indices like the Nasdaq in the near term, as capital flows shift toward sectors that have historically offered lower volatility. VTV's next catalyst will be second-quarter earnings season, when investors will gauge whether value stocks can sustain their relative outperformance.
The shift marks a reversal from the AI-driven rally that dominated markets through late 2025 and early 2026. Small caps outperformed large caps during the first quarter, with value significantly surpassing growth across all categories, according to Baron Capital. The MSCI USA Financials Index fell 9.89 percent in the first quarter, while the FactSet Global FinTech Index dropped 20.15 percent.
Alternative asset managers have felt the rotation's impact. KKR & Co. fell 22.64 percent over the past 52 weeks as concerns over private credit quality and fundraising weighed on the sector, according to Baron Capital. The firm manages $744 billion in assets, including $135 billion in private credit.
The VTV fund's 52-week high comes as investors seek exposure to sectors such as financials, energy and consumer staples, which dominate value indices. The CRSP US Large Cap Value Index's composition tilts toward companies with lower price-to-book ratios and higher dividend yields than the broader market.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.