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This summary was created by AI, based on 1 opinions in the last 12 months.
The Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio (VBAL) is highly regarded by financial experts as an ideal investment vehicle for nervous young investors looking to begin their investment journey. It features a balanced allocation of approximately 60% equities and 40% fixed income, offering a cushion against market volatility. This conservative approach may help new investors avoid panic during market fluctuations, providing a safer entry point into investing. The experts emphasize the importance of ensuring that young investors have a positive initial experience, which VBAL can facilitate by mitigating aggressive losses associated with a higher equity concentration. While there is a risk of loss in adverse market conditions, the overall structure of VBAL is designed to provide a balanced and less intimidating investment experience for newcomers to the market.
It gives you a 60/40 portfolio and it rebalances for you every few quarters. It's exposed to Canadian and international bonds as well as stocks. It's not a nice vehicle for the average investor looking for a passive solution to markets. Though not the best solution, it is cheap. The problem is the balance; better are risk-managed ETFs that offer more growth without bonds in the mix.
VBAL and XBAL are great, one-stop shops for smaller accounts. Leave it and forget it. Typically has about 40% fixed income, which would have had a tough run up till about a year ago.
VBAL costs about 25 bps for the MER, XBAL costs about 20 bps. VBAL is 41% Canadian content, XBAL is about 45%. XBAL has outperformed for the last 3 and 5 years.
Investing time horizon is long, 10 years in this case. So that lets you take on a bit more risk. Though you'll find 10-year timeframes in the equity market that have delivered losses, that makes the balanced portfolio of stocks and bonds so important.
If you don't want fluctuations at all, there's always cash or a money market fund. But for this time horizon, consider using an ETF with growth potential. For a conservative investor, think about VGRO or VBAL. VGRO is more aggressive, at 80 stocks/20 bonds. VBAL is more balanced at 60/40.
VCNS is for the very conservative, mostly bonds with a bit of equity. It will still grow over time because of the equity allocation, but will be more stable. You could even mix in more bonds yourself. Consider working with a professional on this for a diversified portfolio.
VGRO-T vs. VBAL-T vs. VCNS-T. Would the three be enough for a retirement portfolio? VGRO-T is 80% equity, 20% bonds; VBAL-T is 60% equity, 40% bonds; and VCNS-T is 40% equity, 60% bonds. Don't hold them together. They hold the same thing at different proportions and equate to VBAL-T if all held equally. Move between them as market conditions dictate.
Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio is a Canadian stock, trading under the symbol VBAL.TO (previously VBAL-T on Stockchase) on the Toronto Stock Exchange (VBAL-CT). It is usually referred to as TSX:VBAL or VBAL.TO
In the last year, 1 stock analyst issued a Buy, Sell, or Hold rating on VBAL.TO (previously VBAL-T on Stockchase). 1 analyst recommended to BUY and 0 analysts recommended to SELL the stock. The latest stock analyst rating is DON'T BUY. Read the latest stock experts' ratings for Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio.
Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio was recommended as a Top Pick by Tyler Mordy on 2018-09-06. Read the latest stock experts ratings for Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio.
Earnings reports or recent company news can cause the stock price to drop. Read stock experts' recommendations for Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio.
Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio is followed by 77 investors on Stockchase and is a trending stock that is worth watching.
On 2026-06-17, Vanguard Balanced ETF Portfolio (VBAL.TO) stock closed at a price of $39.79.
With young investors, he wants them to get off to a good start and not get scared on their first endeavour ;)
Instead of building a portfolio of 5 or so ETFs, he'd start off with something like VBAL. It's a balanced portfolio by Vanguard, with about 60% equities and 40% fixed income. Probably too high in fixed income, traditionally, for a new investor. But because it's their first time out of the gate, the fixed income can help buffer some of the volatility from the equity side and give them potentially a positive experience.
Now if markets tank they're going to lose money, but it won't be as aggressive as for someone who's 80-100% in equities.