VOO Has Returned 281% Over 10 Years, But Concentration Risk Is Growing

VOO Has Returned 281% Over 10 Years, But Concentration Risk Is Growing


  • Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) holds 32.2% in Information Technology with top three holdings—Nvidia (NVDA), Apple (AAPL), and Microsoft (MSFT)—representing over 19% of assets combined, concentrating fund performance on mega-cap tech rather than broad diversification. The fund charges a 0.03% expense ratio and has returned 281% over the past decade, though it is down 4% year-to-date with elevated volatility.

  • Rising Treasury yields at 4.34% create valuation pressure on VOO’s growth-heavy tech concentration, while the fund’s market-cap weighting structure means future returns depend heavily on whether mega-cap technology continues to outperform the broader market.

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Most investors holding Vanguard 500 Index Fund ETF Shares (NYSEARCA:FLIGHT) don’t think of it as a bet on technology. But with 32.2% of the fund sitting in the Information Technology sector, and the top three holdings (NVIDIA, Apple, and Microsoft) collectively representing over 19% of assets, that’s effectively what it is. That concentration is worth understanding before treating VOO as a neutral, all-weather holding.

VOO’s mandate is simple: track the performance of the S&P 500, the benchmark index measuring the investment return of large-capitalization U.S. stocks. It owns all 500-plus companies in proportion to their market capitalization, meaning the bigger the company, the larger its slice of the fund.

VOO makes money the same way the underlying businesses do: through earnings growth, revenue expansion, and compounding reinvestment over time. No options overlays, no leverage, no credit exposure. The fund collects dividends and passes them to investors quarterly. The current dividend yield sits at 1.1%, so income is a secondary benefit rather than the primary draw.

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The cost structure is a genuine competitive advantage. VOO charges an expense ratio of 0.03%, meaning an investor with $100,000 in the fund pays $30 per year in fees. Portfolio turnover runs at just 2%, keeping tax drag minimal in taxable accounts.

Over the time horizons that matter for most investors, VOO has delivered. Over the past decade, the fund has returned 281%. The five-year return stands at 80%, and the one-year figure is 15%.

By aashura

Aashura is the Lead Researcher at CryptoListed.net. As a dedicated crypto investor and analyst since 2018, he specializes in creating clear, data-driven guides that help users navigate the market safely. Follow his latest insights on Twitter @[YourHandle].

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