The following table describes the fees and expenses you may pay if you buy, hold, and sell Admiral Shares of the Fund. You may pay other fees, such as brokerage commissions and other fees to financial intermediaries, which are not reflected in the table and example below.
The Fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or “turns over” its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover rate may indicate higher transaction costs and may result in more taxes when Fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the previous expense example, reduce the Fund's performance. During the most recent fiscal year, the Fund's portfolio turnover rate was 6% of the average value of its portfolio.
The Fund seeks to track the performance of a benchmark index that measures the investment return of stocks of companies located in developed and emerging markets around the world.
The Fund employs an indexing investment approach designed to track the performance of the FTSE Global All Cap Index, a float-adjusted, market-capitalization-weighted index designed to measure the market performance of large-, mid-, and small-capitalization stocks of companies located around the world. As of October 31, 2020, the Index included 9,033 stocks of companies located in 49 markets, including both developed and emerging markets. As of October 31, 2020, the largest markets covered in the Index were the United States, Japan, and the United Kingdom (which made up approximately 57.1%, 7.4%, and 3.8%, respectively, of the Index’s market capitalization). The Fund attempts to sample the target index by investing all, or substantially all, of its assets in common stocks in the Index and by holding a representative sample of securities that resembles the full Index in terms of key risk factors and other characteristics. These factors include industry weightings, country weightings, market capitalization, and other financial characteristics of stocks.
Stock and bond allocation for US area
Portfolios focused on Fixed income
Portfolio ideas by Famous investors
In finance, “FAANG” is an acronym that refers to the stocks of five prominent American technology companies:
Some of the largest Chinese stocks listed in the US.
Some of the largest cryptocurrencies in the market.
Some of the largest European stocks listed in the UK: