The Vanguard Dividend Appreciation Index Fund ETF Shares (NYSEARCA:VIG | VIG Price Prediction) is having a quieter year than its big-cap dividend-growth reputation suggests, with shares around $229 and a 5% year-to-date gain trailing the broader market. The 12-month picture is stronger at almost 17%, but the recent flattening tells you something important: VIG’s dividend-growth playbook is being squeezed at exactly the moment Treasury yields are spiking. For an ETF that screens the S&P U.S. Dividend Growers Index (companies with 10-plus years of consecutive payout increases), the question for the next 12 months is whether investors keep paying up for that growth when cash is yielding more than it has in a year. The dividend hikes themselves will keep coming; demand for them is the variable.
The macro factor that matters most: the long end of the curve
The 10-year Treasury yield closed at 4.6%, a a near-top-of-range reading over the trailing 12 months and a jump of 35 basis points in a month. That is happening while the Fed has cut its target rate to 3.75%, a 75 basis-point easing cycle since September 2025. A steepening curve where the front end falls and the long end rises is the worst combination for dividend-growth ETFs. The short-end cuts do not help VIG’s valuations (these are large quality compounders, not floating-rate plays), and the long-end backup directly competes with their yields and discounts their future cash flows.
What to watch: the daily DGS10 series on FRED. A sustained move above 4.75% on the 10-year, especially if accompanied by rising real yields, has historically been the threshold where dividend-growth funds underperform the S&P 500 by 200 to 400 basis points over the following two quarters. Check it weekly. Pair it with the next CPI release for confirmation that the move is inflation-driven rather than a growth scare.
The fund-specific factor: AVGO is doing the heavy lifting
VIG’s index methodology is supposed to deliver diversified dividend growth, but in practice the fund’s returns are increasingly tethered to one name: Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO). Broadcom is up almost 80% over the past year on AI semiconductor revenue that hit $8.4 billion in Q1, up 106% year-over-year, with management guiding Q2 AI revenue to $10.7 billion. That growth has masked weakness elsewhere: JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) is down 7% year-to-date despite a 17% EPS jump to $5.94, and Eli Lilly (NYSE:LLY) is down nearly 5% year-to-date even after a 26% Q1 EPS beat.
The single most important event for VIG over the next 12 months is Broadcom’s Q2 earnings report on June 3, 2026. If Hock Tan’s $10.7 billion AI revenue guide holds and the path toward his $100 billion AI sales target by 2027 remains intact, VIG’s largest growth engine keeps the fund moving. If AI hyperscaler capex shows any sign of digestion, VIG loses the one holding doing most of the offensive work while the dividend-payer cohort underneath gets repriced by Treasury yields. Read the press release, then the call transcript on AVGO’s investor relations site within 24 hours.
What to do with this
The signal for the next 12 months is straightforward. If the 10-year Treasury yield holds above 4.5% and Broadcom’s June 3 report shows any AI revenue deceleration, VIG is structurally challenged regardless of how many dividend hikes the rest of the portfolio delivers, including Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) extending its 64-year increase streak. If yields roll over and AVGO guides higher again, the dividend-growth trade reaccelerates from here.