Stock price when the opinion was issued
The market loves these as they represent a one-stop ETF for market diversification. It is a balanced portfolio that holds 60% fixed income and 40% stocks. The stocks will be globally diversified as is the fixed income portion. It is an ETF of ETFs. It depends if this portfolio split fits your needs. The MER is approximately 0.25% -- incredibly low for a balanced fund even against the Robo-portfolio offerings.
A conservative balanced portfolio. Until you have a full year of dividends, it is hard to know what the full dividend payout is going to be over a year, It will be the trailing yield that is published with the ETF. You are getting diversified exposure, globally. Don’t look at the dividend yield. Try annualizing the last quarterly distribution over a year.
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.
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.
You need a higher return than a bond is going to give you today to keep up with inflation and grow your savings. Alternative ETFs such as ZWU, VCNS, ZWB, ZWC, and PJAN are what's needed to protect your portfolio, rather than conventional bonds.
These are what you need to generate the income you'll need for retirement, to get a real return on your investment, more than just protection of principal.