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International Conservative/Balanced Allocation

International conservative/balanced allocation mutual funds and ETFs are diversified funds that own... International conservative/balanced allocation mutual funds and ETFs are diversified funds that own a basket of non-U.S. blue chip stocks and Bonds. The aim of these funds is to deliver both consistent income and capital appreciation to investors while maintaining a broadly diversified portfolio on non-U.S. based securities. These funds, which can be actively or passively managed, may, depending on their mandate, invest in developed market government bonds (in Canada, Europe, Japan, Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand) corporate bonds, corporate debentures, bonds of government-sponsored enterprises, preferred shares, or common shares. Investors buy these funds because of the income potential they offer, as well as the possibility for capital gains. These funds can be designed with different risk tolerances in mind, although due to their nature they are all fairly risk-averse. A very conservative fund may be heavily tilted towards non-U.S. developed market government bonds, while a less conservative fund may own some non-U.S. developed market mid-cap equity securities. Whether a particular fund is appropriate for an individual will depend on their given risk tolerance and investment objectives. Last Updated: 12/23/2024 View more View less

International conservative/balanced allocation mutual funds and ETFs are diversified funds that own a basket of non-U.S. blue chip stocks and Bonds. The aim of these funds is to deliver both consistent income and... International conservative/balanced allocation mutual funds and ETFs are diversified funds that own a basket of non-U.S. blue chip stocks and Bonds. The aim of these funds is to deliver both consistent income and capital appreciation to investors while maintaining a broadly diversified portfolio on non-U.S. based securities. These funds, which can be actively or passively managed, may, depending on their mandate, invest in developed market government bonds (in Canada, Europe, Japan, Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand) corporate bonds, corporate debentures, bonds of government-sponsored enterprises, preferred shares, or common shares. Investors buy these funds because of the income potential they offer, as well as the possibility for capital gains. These funds can be designed with different risk tolerances in mind, although due to their nature they are all fairly risk-averse. A very conservative fund may be heavily tilted towards non-U.S. developed market government bonds, while a less conservative fund may own some non-U.S. developed market mid-cap equity securities. Whether a particular fund is appropriate for an individual will depend on their given risk tolerance and investment objectives. Last Updated: 12/23/2024 View more View less

Overview

Returns

Income

Allocations

Fees

About

Security Type
Management Style
Share Class Type
Share Class Account
As of 12/20/24

$22.89

+1.24%

$239.90 M

0.00%

-

7.57%

-14.11%

-1.39%

-

2.55%

$10.81

+0.46%

$178.93 M

1.29%

$0.14

4.64%

0.03%

2.88%

3.27%

1.32%

$7.10

+0.28%

$143.40 M

0.00%

-

-4.70%

-6.69%

-6.05%

-0.67%

1.57%

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