FLOT
iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF
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yeah i was looking at FLOT, PAAA and JPST with some SGOV.
What about FLOT on bats market. It's around 4.5 to 4.8% yield. Won't always be but better than nothing, expense ratio is .15%
FLOT holds floating rate corporate notes. SGOV holds ultra short duration treasuries. Completely different
> Crypto.com and Underdog partner to offer sports prediction markets You know DKNG and FLOT havent exactly been doing as hot as they were like a year ago. maybe all these speculative sites offering gambling is cutting in?
iShares FLOT is essentially the same fund. I've used it from time to time. The downside, as you point out, is that the yield will drop if and when short-term rates decline. Becuase the duration is almost zero, these funds won't increase in value when that happens, unlike longer-duration bond funds.
Forgot to mention that I plan to gradually move the JBBB, CLOZ, and CLOI (40K total) into VOO. That's the "play" money. For now, I want to keep them somewhere with better yields than SGOV. I know you're not supposed to time the market but I want to have that 40K in hand in case the market tanks later this year due to tariffs, inflation, job losses, or Elon Musk sniffing a bad batch of ketamine. It's fine if I'm wrong and miss out on larger gains. Personally I'd rather risk having smaller gains if it means having a chance to buy at a big discount. Basically, 100K will remain in what I assume are reasonably safe options: SGOV, FLOT, and JAAA. I have both FLOT and JAAA in the mix because they are built differently and presumably would behave differently under a stress. A further "diversification", if you will. The other 40K in cash, which I would not need to withdraw immediately and could wait longer for their prices to bounce back, would remain in these higher-yield places and eventually invested into VOO when there is a dip or bear. TLDR: If I wasn't so greedy I'd just store the "need ASAP" money into SGOV and the rest into stock ETFs, but I *want* to time the market and I want to keep the standby cash into a higher yield place the risk of which is reasonably managed.
The goal is to balance between maximum yield, reduced volatility, and liquidity, so I will likely have access to 100K at any given time without having to sell the stocks. 60K will be in stocks. I won't touch them because there might be a bear market in a few years, who knows. The remaining 140K will be in fixed income assets, of which 40K (JBBB and CLOZ) will pay the highest rate but could default and I could theoretically permanently lose that 40K, leaving me with 100K. I suppose the JAAA and FLOT could also TEMPORARILY lose value but I believe they do not lose value drastically and they recover much faster, which is why I have this "ladder" of safety and risk. Is there a flaw in this logic? I don't want long duration bonds like BND because of how they got decimated in 2022. I cannot rule out another rate hike soon if we have a high inflation so I don't want long term treasuries, but I'm also too greedy to put everything in the "low yield" SGOV. I should also mention that I have taken into account the fact that SGOV is state tax exempt while the others are not. I've also looked up CDs but they seem to pay a lower rate and I'm not a fan of locking up the funds. But I'm open to suggestions.
What’s up with floating rate notes? The yield is better than treasuries right now, probably because interest rates are still higher. I’m thinking about putting most of my savings in FLOT and TFLO while i‘m saving for a house and then shifting to SGOV if interest rates are cut. Is this a good strategy?
ive been selling down. Id buy something like FLOT at the moment, depending on when you think youd deploy.
This is how it should be, but when checking YTD returns on iShares site, it states 1.15% for SGOV and 1.07% for FLOT, which perplexed me a bit. However, I swear earlier today the YTD for FLOT was near .2%. Wild. Your answer comforts me, as that's how it should be. Plugging in for YTD in an ETF calculator had FLOT annualized under 1% and SGOV at around 4% yesterday too. Thanks for the first knowledgeable response, haha.
30-day SEC yield on FLOT is 4.8%, SGOV is 4.18%, so you have it backwards
USFR or FLOT other short term T bill ETFs are not bad, \~4.25%, and if being very short, if rates do go up, they will hold value but pay the higher rate since the holdings mature in a days.
> a big cannon with a big shell is still king Is it though? Consider the heat signature created when firing a massive gun, and then how quickly they have to displace in order to survive. Is it worth taking out one drone operator, just to possibly lose that entire gun to counterfires or another drone operator? In most military operations, ground forces support the artillery. That is, those forces clear the way for artillery to advance, arty is set and reduces the next immediate engagement for the ground forces, rinse and repeat. However, drone warfare combined with fog of war and a blurry FLOT have done a great job at denying the enemy forward movement. At least, the last few years have proven that. All of that to say drones may not be out there rendering indirect fire capabilities ineffective...but they are defeating/denying those forces that would otherwise be enabling those effective fires.
I'm in a very similar situation. Saving up for a house. I have a Roth IRA and only one investment in there, FLOT. It's a bond ETF and it's doing very well historically speaking. It pays out a monthly dividend as well. You have a 2 year horizon, so taking into account the IRS contribution limits, you could you put in 7k for 2025 (do it as early as in a few weeks) and another 7k in 2026. So that's 14k invested in a bond etf that pays out a monthly dividend. So you could make out with 16k when it's all said and done and because you're using the money to buy a house, you can withdraw all of it tax and penalty free (provided that this is a first-time home purchase). But what works for me may not work for you.
In my Roth IRA account, I'm using FLOT as a savings account for my first home purchase. It pays a monthly dividend and my returns are much better than if I used a HYSA. Not saying it's right for you, only highlighting some of its positives.
4.2% is fine. Don’t forget with anything else you need to sell and then wait a market day to clear and only then do you get your money available to send on Jan 15. But if you must maybe FLOT for a few weeks will give you a little bit extra with minimal risk.
This is just a floating rate ETF, similar to FLOT. The 30 day SEC yield is what you're looking for to compare it to other types of fixed income. It is currently 4.87%. For a slightly lower yield, look at SGOV which is short term treasuries, and basically guaranteed not to fail.
SGOV is a good safe one that yields a 4.8% dividend (though this changes monthly). I personally like FLOT, and would recommend it if you have a little more risk tolerance. Yields closer to 5.5% (again, volatile but always higher than T-bill yield)
Ignore all the comments here about moving into 100% stock funds "and chill" or whatever that's even supposed to mean. That's just all they know - they've not been in the market long enough to experience the devastation of the 2000 tech wreck or even 08 when yet again you lost half your money. If you're coming out of a money fund and want yield without stock market risk, you may want to look at FLOT - that's as stable a share price as you're gonna get with yield and liquidity. Or something like Vanguard Wellesley, which over time has given you 80% of stock returns with a whole lot less volatility. If you spend fewer years losing money, you don't as desperately need the crazy up years to bail you out.
I believe that. I don’t think you should get rid of it, but I do believe that you need more than the S&P to get a head, and stay a head. I think, despite your age (in general), a well balanced portfolio is all you need. Personally, in my taxable I hold… SCHG, TSLA, USFR, and FLOT. My Roth consists of VONG, TSLA, MAIN, and a small allocation of FEPI. I also hold Bitcoin and Solana. And I have SPAXX in my CMA.
You can check funds like SGOV or FLOT on Morningstar to see their performance over the past 5-10 years. You can see they are essentially flat, only increasing as their yields increase. https://www.morningstar.com/etfs/arcx/sgov/chart
>FLOT The duration on that fund is 0.02 years, so essentially nil. It's value is unlikely to change with any market environment changes, but it's yield will go down if interest rates drop. Longer bonds with more duration would increase in value in situations like that, but very short term bills/notes won't move much if any in value. Very short term treasuries are treated like cash, with a yield, rather than as a true bond which can see capital gains (or losses) in value.
Most short term are 3 months treasuries, the one in question is SGOV and I have some FLOT
USFR slightly higher and just as safe (and no state income tax). FLOT a bit higher than that but marginally more risk.
Sell FLOT, buy SGOV Womp womp
Hey, I'm getting 0.01-0.03% per day on FLOT. Except when I don't.
I have like 50% of my port in FLOT and SGOV. Been slowly DCA'ing and buying small caps last few weeks. Lump some would have been better. I guess everyone else was right. Oh well, at least several of the small caps are up 20% in a few weeks. Too bad most of the positions are $1000 or less.
Goddam, my FLOT shares went up more than that today. Try being less poor. But harder.
FLOT has higher yield right now then both SGOV and USFR/TFLO. It would be an option if you wanted corp exposure in pretty short term . Its presently 5.7% or so. I personally don't like corp bond for an number of reason so I personally don't use it , I am using USFR right now for ultra short holdings.
FLOT Had bit of cash sitting in account, wasn't sure what to buy so parked it there. Gonna let that sit until we pull back from near ATHs. I know, timing the market, but I can't see the market going up non-stop through an election year, especially with various indicators of a slowdown and what seems to be the big boys collecting profits at earnings recently. Would explain all the recent stocks going down after good earnings reports. Largest stock holding is some VLO I bought during the covid sale. Probably selling half soon, collect some profits.
Risk free rate is accounted for in option premium. That’s why the 150 put has 1.85 in extrinsic value while the call has 3.20. If OP sold his shares, sold the put, and then placed the cash in something like FLOT, the interest plus premium would come out to about the same as just holding his shares and selling the call. It’s designed this way on purpose to avoid arbitrage scenarios.
Selling ITM calls is equivalent to selling cash secured puts with one caveat. Your cash is tied up in the stock. It’s much better to just sell a cash secured put and put your money in FLOT or something safe unless you cannot (like in an RSP in Canada).
I keep some of my cash in iShares Floating Rate Bond ETF (FLOT) and it gives a little more yield (5.77%) than USFR and SGOV, but FLOT does have a little more credit risk. FLOT is still mostly A and above (greater than 90%) though so I feel alright with it for some of my cash.
Yes I’d put some in high yield savings making 4.75-5% and the rest in bond ETFs that pay anywhere from 3-7% yield Things like JEPI FALN FLOT HYDB SHYG BINC
The 6-month CD is set for that period but an investment like SGOV, USFR, FLOT, or a Money Market Mutual Fund like SPAXX will likely start dropping its interest rate yield by early Summer.
Junk bonds with high risk of default often pay way less than 12%, like 7%. Any company that pays that much almost always means the market thinks it's unsustainable. PFLT looks like they focus primarily on floating rate debt. You might think, "wow market probably expects cuts soon and that's why they pay out so much! This is a great higher for longer play!" All I can say to that is investment grade floating rate ETFs like FLOT are paying around 5.8%. So you have to ask yourself why market allows a company to get away with paying double that unless there's serious risk. If you have a really good intel of some kind to determine with strong conviction that market is wrong you can bet on it though.
yep....agree. You could also look at floating rate bonds like FLOT - credit rating AAA-BBB only. FBND from Fidelity is also like AGG/BND.
That’s fine. But it depends where you are in life. Some older folks will need income. For me I like having some of my portfolio in FLOT earning 5.4% income and also trading cash secured puts on SPY with low delta on that money. Income is always good. If I have an unexpected expense/job loss etc it’s good to know I’ll have some income from my covered call funds and not have to sell my stocks/SPY in a down year.
You are correct. Retirees often need income. It’s easier for budgeting purposes. So telling a retiree to just dump everything into SPY isn’t doing them a favor when there is a risk SPY could go down and they need income. It’s why Bond funds exist. It’s why FLOT, SHV and JEPI exist. I get really tired justifying to people why I have some of my money in FLOT, some in SPY, some trading options, and some in covered call funds. For me, I’m 43. I want some income as it’s stable. Especially if I run into some unexpected expenses and dont wanna sell SPY in a down year. And yes I will sacrifice some potential total return for that. The point is people need to invest according to their own goals and own risk tolerance and where they are in life. It’s also why FAs exist (I’m not one).
BKLN is floating rate high yield debt. It is extremely exposed to credit markets and negligibly exposed to government rates because of the floating rates (income is variable due to Treasury curve shifts, but price is variable almost exclusively due to credit spreads). It is not "very safe." Funds that I generally like are VNLA, FLOT, MINT, and JAAA. JAAA is the riskiest of the group and comes with the highest yield, but it should still be safer than BKLN because it is made up of AAA CLO tranches instead of the underlying bank loans.
FLOT (It has returned about 6% in the last year, vs 5.3% for SGOV)
If you have additional 33k hold it in FLOT or something and just use it as a cash secured put.
FLOT is well protected from capital loss due to changes in interest rates, because its bonds float. The effective duration is something like a week.
FLOT is an investment-grade bond ETF that yields just over 6%.
There isn’t anything inherently wrong with this strategy. It’s the same as selling a CSP on SPY at 390 with September expiration. As someone stated your annualized return is 6% (5.8 to be exact). You have a 97% probability of profit. I sell ITM calls too but only on my retirement account because I can’t sell puts in Canada in my retirement account. What I would do is sell a 390 put and if you’re bullish buy a call with that credit to do a long combo. You will then still have some upside. Or just sell the cash secured out. Take the capital and put it in FLOT or SHV and collect an additional 4-5% of dividends. ITM calls can make sense but only in certain situations. Unless you can’t sell puts this isn’t one of them.
You have to hedge inflation and for what the Fed/government will do in response. If it's inflation, low growth, and stimulus/easing, you'll want multifamily real estate and possibly farmland, gold, and/or some other nontraditional tangible thing; possibly also short or intermediate term Treasuries, and possibly strong balance sheet moat equities with some cc for downside protection. If it's inflation with hawkishness and higher taxes to control the deficit, probably best would be Tbills and adjustable rate products not at risk of default (some preferreds, for instance). So an example blend might be: SGOV, VGIT; FLOT, ABR-F, LANDO VOO, VIG, SCHG, DIVO, JEPI
FLOT has higher return than USFR. One is 5.3% and the other is 4.8% according to the data from Yahoo. They seems to be the same thing.
I like **USFR and FLOT**. SLIGHTLY risky but better return.
Everyone talking about NVDA and here I am on my FLOT dividend drip thinking I am special
Bonds can be risky. TLT has tanked. That said there are some almost risk free ETFs like SHV and FLOT that yield 5%.
Well you said low risk....they are treasury ETFs. They move in a range over the course of the month, and pay the appreciation as monthly interest. USFR is yielding 5.38% and SGOV at 5.34%. There is also FLOT at 5.96%, but that has more (investment-grade and AAA) corporate bonds than treasuries.
Well said. I tried this with FLOT, a floating rate short term bond etf. Then March 2020 and it went down 7% each a couple of days. Just use a money market fund and keep things simple.
Make sure it's interest free and put the extra $1k into something like FLOT
Exactly, FLOT has almost no interest rate risk but holds an average credit rating of A, including some BBB.
That makes sense. I was trying to figure out why FLOT pulled down in March 2020, I was attributing it to interest rates falling but realized that made no sense, but I suppose credit risk makes more sense.
Dude. You're 29. You don't need to dealing with bonds and CD's at this point. Especially no need for CD's. As for savings, make sure it's a high-yield savings account. Must be 4% or higher or else you should pass. Really, a savings account isn't even necessary. Putting savings into a brokerage account in a safe ETF is even better. FLOT is a great choice to safely make 6% per year. You're on the right track!
The USFR (Floating Rate Treasury) ETF and FLOT (Floating Rate Corporate) both take advantage of rising interest rates. Both have yields over 5%.
They have a low *effective* duration since the rates adjust. That is, if interest rates shot up, the payments on the bonds would too, very shortly, so it's as if you're rolling them over in that short interval. The oage for [FLOT](https://www.ishares.com/us/products/239534/ishares-floating-rate-bond-etf) gives the effective duration as .04 years. I've had good experiences with that one, btw. Post fee yield of ~5.9% for the past three months, about the same credit quality spread as MMMFs. The one downside is that it temporarily lost about 2% . But otherwise, its very very much like a savings-account-as-stock. It's held its value since the time bought in (March 3), while throwing off good dividends.
FLOT is all corporate bonds, not Treasury.
If you have enough money to where 4% of your holdings per year is all you need to cover expenses, FLOT is a solid, safe play.
FLOT. Should give you a solid 5% annual return for the coming years. This gem is overlooked often. Better than VOO in my opinion with rates showing no signs of decreasing soon.
Yes. FLOT. You're welcome. Should yield about 4.5% this year safely.
TBIL ETFs are cool, but FLOT is the way.
FLOT is the way to go. Investment grade short term bonds. Should yield about 5% this year. It rises when interests rates rise.
WTF is up with the ETF [FLOT](https://www.ishares.com/us/products/239534/ishares-floating-rate-bond-etf)? They're showing its net asset value as being $50.54, but it's trading at $49.53? Has the true NAV not caught up with the reported figure, or is there some stupid, profitable-for-me reason why investors are dumping it?
Being that USFR and TFLO are identical, and that SGOV is also T-bills, I spread it across USFR (for the relatively risk-free, with the risk being the ETF itself) and FLOT (for the higher yield but with risk). You should look at the prospectus (or at least the fund page) of each, and look at their holdings. * https://www.wisdomtree.com/investments/etfs/fixed-income/usfr * https://www.ishares.com/us/products/239534/ishares-floating-rate-bond-etf
If you need liquidity, buy T-bills ETFs: * USFR for FRNs, which are a new (since 2014) product from the U.S. Treasury * TFLO also holds FRNs, yield is slightly lower than USFR * SGOV for fixed rate 0-3mo maturity T-bills, lowest yield * FLOT for corporate AAA flexible rate bonds, highest yield but not no-risk like the three above, which hold T-bills T-bills ETFs will be largely exempt from state and local taxes. Holding these ETFs gets monthly dividends, can sell anytime to buy anything else, same day.
If you are just looking to make yield from the FI then I would stay short on duration and do something like FLOT. If you want to speculate on future movements of bonds then the list gets much bigger.
>Does being a CEF matter? Yes. The fund is using leverage, which got more expensive (and potentially did so more / faster than the assets held). The price of the fund is subject to material changes in discount/premium to NAV. >Is it because AFT/BGT makes its returns from loans to companies while FLOT invests in bonds? Yes that also has had an impact. Bank loans are very credit heavy instruments, often below investment grade. Spreads have widened. Interest rate risk is small for floating rate securities, but spread risk is the same as it would be for a fixed rate bond. >If that's a case, should I be looking more into why corporate loans are doing poorly instead, rather than floating rate notes? Yes. And the answer to that is the health of the economy.
Does being a CEF matter? Why would AFT's security value be down 24% YTD but FLOT would be doing fine? Is it because AFT makes its returns from loans to below-investment grade companies while FLOT invests in bonds?
Floating rate notes are doing fine. You named 3 CEFs. FLOT is an ETF with a positive return -- maybe not a large one, but floating rate securities don't increase in value when rates rise. Most of the return is going to come from interest, and interest takes time to accrue.
>will they increase in coming months since the treasury yields are already close to 4%? You need to look at the 30-day yield. ​ >is there anything else that I may have overlooked? May sure you understand the effective duration of the ETF that you select. If you look at one of your examples like FLOT - [https://www.ishares.com/us/products/239534/ishares-floating-rate-bond-etf](https://www.ishares.com/us/products/239534/ishares-floating-rate-bond-etf) The 30-day yield as-of 12/15 is 4.6%. And it has an effective duration of about 0.06 years or about 21 days.
I would, but it would be a pain in the ass having to buy a new one every month. They can have my .05% a year Might switch to FLOT if I'm feeling adventurous Oh, those 30 year 7% yield TIPS though, I definitely will buy them individually.
FLOT would be better choice. Those ultra short bonds still have a year duration.
They're below investment grade loans. If they can't pay them back (as rates increase this is more likely) then the bonds crash anyway, just like they did in 2008. Also, the expense ratio is 1.12%. Gross! Put your money in either SGOV or FLOT.
Don't be afraid of crypto, but don't get carried away with an allocation you truly cannot afford to lose. Depends what you want to do, and how complicated you want to get. A simple portfolio of TLT VOO and BTC should theoretically do well in most environments (TLT for a hedge in a flight to safety scenario, VOO for beta, and BTC for alpha), unless literally what is happening right now is happening ("rising" interest rates). So maybe 20+ year treasuries are a little risky, and maybe should be split with something like FLOT (Floating Rate Notes are probably the only position I'm up on lol). Or maybe outright hedged with a position 1/3rd the size of some inverse triple leveraged fund like TMV. Maybe gold is at a good price around now too, maybe wait until December for $1,600. IAU is a good enough ticker for that.
I’ve always thought the same of $FLOT
TIPS funds are still subject to interest rate risk, so I use a mix. The duplication is a matter of convenience. VTAPX - Vanguard short term TIPS fund VTIP - Short-term TIPS ETF FLOT - Investment quality bank loan floating rate ETF VUBFX - Vanguard ultra-short term bond fund
High grade floating rate notes like those held by USFR are not down. Corporate floating rate notes like those held by FLOT are slightly down because they are affected by credit spreads which have widened.
We’re in a rising rate environment now. Looking backwards for historical performance and projecting forward really isn’t going to work when the current high inflation and rising rates hasn’t been seen since the 1970’s. You have to understand the strategy of what you’re picking and understand how it fits with the larger macroeconomic landscape. Also, you can pick BND which has an expense of 0.04% but lost 10% YTD, FLOT with expense of 0.15% down 0.4% YTD or HFRO up 7%+ YTD (after fees). Which is actually more expensive? You asked what isn’t bleeding, I gave you an idea, so arguing over its expense is a little irrelevant. If you’ve got a low cost alternative up 7% YTD please let me know. Other things up I own: GDXJ and WEAT. Gold might not do as well when the Fed raise rates unless inflation continues so I took some profit.
You aren't comparing apples to apples here at all. This is a type of bond fund not a stock fund. FLOT with an ER of .15%, HYZD with an ER of .43%. would be your cheap comparable fund. Floating rate funds have high ERs because they are a complex asset class. Active management can help a lot with low quality bonds (even Vanguard doesn't use passive in this space) and it is actively managed. .78% is not insane for one of these. SRLN which is a well known ETF that has good management has an ER of .7%. Victory likely has the same quality of management and less conflicts of interest. I don't think he's actually overpaying.
what you're looking for is Floating-rate bonds. quick google search yields these 4 tickers. market value is stable since, well, it's duration neutral ​ iShares Floating Rate Note Fund (ticker: FLOT) Van Eck Market Vectors Investment Grade Floating Rate Bond ETF (ticker: FLTR) SPDR Barclays Capital Investment Grade Floating Rate ETF (FLRN) Pacific Asset Enhanced Floating Rate ETF (FLRT)
Right now bond funds are going to lose as rates go up. Consider instead a floating rate bond fund like FLOT instead. You still get the hedge and get protected a bit as rates rise. You aren't gonna earn a lot, but the point is to hedge on a downturn.
Trying to time a top is a fools errand. There's almost always signs of impending doom in the markets but nobody can say when the hammer's really coming down. That said my money is on a short term pullback soon/correction and then higher highs. I mean, money printers are roaring right now and we're acting like we can just do that whenever we're in a pinch. We won't realize we can't until it stops working. Which could yes, easily be tomorrow, but just as easily in a few years in which time you could miss major gains (and most gains are made in just a few up days out of the year, so miss those and you're shooting yourself in the foot. Personally I'm going to continue to take partial profits in growth and tech every step up and hedge it with TIPS, FLOT, gold, crypto and materials stocks.
1: I hold 1% of my portfolio in a real estate etf (VNQ), but I'm skeptical of these prices. Just throwing this out there but, under this new administration what if inflation actually has the opposite effect on renters than what was surmised above (about forcing more people to rent and pressuring buyers) and ends up pushing government intervention programs in housing? I mean right now it's healthcare is a right, but soon the dialogue could easily shift to housing is a right if renters really are squeezed even harder than they are now. I do like Caretrust REIT in the space, and elderly care in general. But I think real estate/housing rights could easily become the next battleground in the political income inequality war... Which could crush future gains. Too many homeless people and too much of a social justice atmosphere, (along with high prices) for me to feel comfortable in real estate right now. Imagine: there's talk of regulating Big Pharma and government price negotiators already, but what if we pushed government to regulate housing prices. Investors beware. (Not trying to be political, just acknowledging that politics can drive or crush returns) 2: I personally try to hold TIPS and FLOT (floating rate/automatically rate adjusting bonds) over cash for safety. Between 10-20% 3: YES. This. If fiat printers are going to be left on overdrive, deflationary assets are essential. DEFI and Traditional finance are merging already. Idk how long BTC will be on top either. People like Charlie Munger argue that BTC is horrible for the planet (while he profits off Coca Cola bottles filling our oceans), but proof of work is already being switched over to greener proof of stake systems, I believe ETH's time is coming. Of course there will be pullbacks and volatility... But without risk there can be no real reward. That's what drives returns in all investing. Cryptos are taking on some incredible challenges in truly innovative ways, emphasizing group involvement and consensus and ignoring the authority structures that be. Over 25% in crypto, mostly large caps. 4: I think there's a strong argument to be made for materials prices being driven up by inflation and scarcity. I like AMAT to help tackle the covid chip shortage and I like MLM and CAT going into these huge infrastructure proposals. Thanks for the thought provoking post!
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$
On February 24, 2021, Vertro, Inc. (“Vertro”), a wholly-owned subsidiary of **INUVO, Inc**. (“Inuvo”) entered into a Google Services Agreement (the “Agreement”) with **Google LLC** (“Google”), INUVO TO THE MOON!! SHORT FLOT 6% MARKET CAP 159 MUS$