Vanguard Growth Index Fund ETF Shares (VUG)
- Previous Close
329.19 - Open
333.77 - Bid 335.20 x 800
- Ask 335.49 x 1000
- Day's Range
332.48 - 336.55 - 52 Week Range
246.28 - 348.88 - Volume
1,436,468 - Avg. Volume
1,078,847 - Net Assets 226.52B
- NAV 335.29
- PE Ratio (TTM) 40.34
- Yield 0.53%
- YTD Daily Total Return 7.96%
- Beta (5Y Monthly) 1.20
- Expense Ratio (net) 0.04%
The fund employs an indexing investment approach designed to track the performance of the index, a broadly diversified index predominantly made up of growth stocks of large U.S. companies. The advisor attempts to replicate the target index by investing all, or substantially all, of its assets in the stocks that make up the index, holding each stock in approximately the same proportion as its weighting in the index.
Vanguard
Fund Family
Large Growth
Fund Category
226.52B
Net Assets
2004-01-26
Inception Date
Performance Overview: VUG
Trailing returns as of 4/26/2024. Category is Large Growth.
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Holdings: VUG
Top 10 Holdings (56.96% of Total Assets)
Sector Weightings
Recent News: VUG
Research Reports: VUG
The Argus Innovation Model Portfolio
The United States economy is full of innovation. It has to be. Manufacturing industries that dominated the economy decades ago - textiles, televisions, even automobiles to a large degree - have moved overseas, where labor and materials costs are lower. Yet the U.S. economy, even during the pandemic and the current period of high inflation, has expanded to record levels. If U.S. corporations weren't innovating, creating new products (such as vaccines and AI) and services (such as Zoom calls) and moving into new markets, the domestic economy would not be growing, and capital would not be flooding into the country. The current high level of the U.S. dollar relative to currencies around the world attests to the confidence that global investors have in the durable and innovative U.S. economy.
Technical Assessment: Neutral in the Intermediate-Term
When the stock market is in a strong uptrend, pauses, and then finally threatens to pull back, what happens? When there has been institutional selling, better known as "distribution" in the Nasdaq 100, Technology often comes to the rescue after a short break and destroys the bears -- as well as a good number of technicians (hand raised) who expected more giveback.
Analyst Report: The Walt Disney Company
Disney operates in three global business segments: entertainment, sports, and experiences. Entertainment and experiences both benefit from franchises and characters the firm has created over the course of a century. Entertainment includes the ABC broadcast network, several cable television networks, and the Disney+ and Hulu streaming services. Within the segment, Disney also engages in movie and television production and distribution, with content licensed to movie theaters, other content providers, or, increasingly, kept in-house for use on Disney’s own streaming platform and television networks. The sports segment houses ESPN and the ESPN+ streaming service. Experiences contains Disney’s theme parks and vacation destinations, and also benefits from merchandise licensing.
RatingPrice TargetAnalyst Report: Paramount Global
Paramount Global operates in three global business segments: TV media, filmed entertainment, and direct to consumer. The TV media business includes television production studios and various broadcast and cable networks, including CBS, 15 owned CBS affiliates, Paramount, Nickelodeon, MTV, BET, and VH1. Filmed entertainment consists multiple film studios, most importantly Paramount Pictures. The film studios produce and distribute movies that they license to movie theaters and other media outlets. Direct to consumer includes multiple streaming platforms, including Paramount+, which now includes Showtime, Pluto TV, and BET+. Much of the content on Paramount’s streaming platforms is created by the production studios housed within the firm’s other two business segments.
RatingPrice Target