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This summary was created by AI, based on 1 opinions in the last 12 months.
The Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio (VGRO-T) is characterized by a strategic allocation of 80% equities and 20% fixed income, catering to investors looking for growth while maintaining a level of stability through fixed income. Over the past year, VGRO-T has seen a notable increase of approximately 20%, showcasing its effective management and growth potential in a fluctuating market. In comparison, a similar portfolio, GRCC, which employs a covered call strategy, has yielded a lesser increase of around 13%, indicating that VGRO-T may have a more aggressive growth trajectory. This performance highlights VGRO-T's appeal for growth-oriented investors wanting a balanced approach without entirely foregoing fixed income. Overall, the ETF appears to be well-positioned in the market, merging growth potential with thoughtful risk management.
80% equity, 20% fixed income. Great for the average investor. The one you want when you're bullish on equities. When you're defensive, you go into the balanced or conservative version which brings you down to 60/40 or 40/60 equities to bonds.
Right now, way too early to be bullish on equities. At some point in the next 6 months (ballpark: below 5000 on the S&P 500, and maybe even below 4500), it will be time to be much more growth oriented. Now is not the time.
VGRO and XGRO are going to give you broad, market-cap-weighted exposures.
The Fidelity factor-investing ETFs are going to get rid of some of the companies that they believe are going to underperform. In theory, the Fidelity ETF should give you a better longer-term outcome. He likes factoring a lot.
The problem with all of them is the bond side. Helpful that interest rates have normalized. But, going forward, fixed income is just not going to give the average investor the best risk mitigation. He encourages people to look at the BMO line of buffered ETFs, which give you the potential of equities with the risk mitigation that most are looking for.
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.
Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio is a Canadian stock, trading under the symbol VGRO.TO (previously VGRO-T on Stockchase) on the Toronto Stock Exchange (VGRO-CT). It is usually referred to as TSX:VGRO or VGRO.TO
In the last year, 1 stock analyst issued a Buy, Sell, or Hold rating on VGRO.TO (previously VGRO-T on Stockchase). 1 analyst recommended to BUY and 0 analysts recommended to SELL the stock. The latest stock analyst rating is BUY. Read the latest stock experts' ratings for Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio.
Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio was recommended as a Top Pick by David Cockfield on 2019-08-23. Read the latest stock experts ratings for Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio.
Earnings reports or recent company news can cause the stock price to drop. Read stock experts' recommendations for Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio.
Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio is followed by 152 investors on Stockchase and is a trending stock that is worth watching.
On 2026-06-15, Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio (VGRO.TO) stock closed at a price of $47.67.
80% equity, 20% fixed income -- it's growth with a bit of FI.
Over the past year, up ~20%. A comparable portfolio is GRCC, which uses covered calls, but was up only ~13%.