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Tariff Turmoil Got Your Portfolio Down? All It Takes Is $5,000 Invested in This Rock-Solid Vanguard ETF to Help Generate $150 in Passive Income Per Year.

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It’s been a rough start to 2025, with the S&P 500 having its worst quarter since 2022 followed by escalating trade tensions in April. Yet through it all, the utilities sector has been a passive-income powerhouse and a beacon of safety thanks to its low volatility.

Investors looking for broad-based exposure to the utilities sector might want to consider an exchange-traded fund (ETF) like the Vanguard Utilities ETF (NYSEMKT: VPU).

By investing $5,000 with the Vanguard Utilities ETF, you can expect to generate $150 in annual dividend income based on the fund’s 3% yield. Here’s why the ETF is worth a closer look.

Power lines at sunset.
Image source: Getty Images.

Utilities are the second-best-performing sector year to date and one of just two sectors that are up slightly compared to the S&P 500’s more than 8% drop.

^IXR Chart
^IXR data by YCharts.

The utility sector mainly comprises regulated electric utilities. These companies work with regulators and government agencies to set prices, which allows utilities to budget for necessary maintenance on existing infrastructure and plan for new investments without squeezing their customers.

Many utilities effectively act as regional monopolies. So, buying a utilities ETF is a simple way to get exposure to the national electric grid rather than investing in one single region.

For example, the largest holding in the Vanguard Utilities ETF is NextEra Energy, which owns Florida Power & Light, the state’s largest electric utility. It also has power generation assets across the country.

Southern Company serves customers in the southeastern U.S. But like NextEra, it also has nationwide power generation assets.

Electric and gas utilities operated by Duke Energy serve customers in North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Tennessee, Ohio, Kentucky, Florida, and Indiana. The company has a mix of fossil fuel and renewable energy power plants.

Utilities are a relatively safe sector during economic uncertainty, trade tensions, and even recessions because keeping the lights on and the water running are basic needs — similar to why the consumer staples sector is holding up so well despite the broader market sell-off.

If the U.S. economy were to dip into a recession because of a trade war, then utilities would be one of the best-positioned sectors. They aren’t exporting power overseas, they are producing it domestically and then transmitting and distributing it to consumers in the U.S. There isn’t the global trade component as there is for, say, the oil and gas industry.

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