Why VOE Belongs in More Portfolios: 50.8% Five-Year Returns With a 0.05% Fee

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By Michael Williams Published
Why VOE Belongs in More Portfolios: 50.8% Five-Year Returns With a 0.05% Fee

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Most investors tilting toward value instinctively reach for large-cap names. The mid-cap value space gets less attention, which is part of why Vanguard Mid-Cap Value Index Fund ETF (NYSEARCA:VOE) has quietly built a compelling long-term case without much fanfare.

What VOE Is Actually Designed to Do

VOE tracks the CRSP US Mid Cap Value Index, targeting companies in the middle of the market capitalization spectrum that screen as undervalued relative to their fundamentals. Think lower price-to-book, higher dividend yield, and slower but steadier earnings profiles than their growth counterparts. The fund launched August 17, 2006 and has grown to $36.5 billion in assets, a scale that ensures tight bid-ask spreads and institutional-grade liquidity for everyday investors.

The return engine here is straightforward: dividend income from mature businesses, plus capital appreciation as the market re-rates undervalued companies over time. There are no options overlays, no leverage, no derivatives complexity. VOE is a pure-play on the value factor within mid-cap stocks, and its 0.05% expense ratio means almost none of that return leaks to fees.

Where the Portfolio Weight Falls

The sector mix tells the value story clearly. Financials (18.3%), Industrials (13.9%), and Utilities (11.2%) together represent over 43% of the portfolio. These are classic value sectors: businesses with tangible assets, predictable cash flows, and dividends rather than growth premiums baked into the price. Energy adds another 10.3%, reinforcing the fund’s tilt toward asset-heavy, cash-generative businesses.

The top holdings reinforce this. Newmont Corp leads at 2.19%, followed by Western Digital at 1.53% and CRH at 1.47%. Energy names like Phillips 66 and Valero also appear in the top 25. No single position dominates: the top 10 holdings represent roughly 13% of total assets, keeping individual company risk well contained across 200-plus holdings.

Does the Strategy Deliver in Practice?

The numbers are honest. VOE has returned 16% over the past year and 50.8% over five years. For context, Vanguard Mid-Cap ETF (NYSEARCA:VO) returned 11% over the past year and 39% over five years. VOE’s value tilt has outperformed the broader mid-cap universe across both timeframes, which runs counter to the narrative that value has permanently lagged growth.

Income consistency adds another layer. VOE pays quarterly dividends, and the trailing 1.98% yield comes from underlying business cash flows rather than options premium or manufactured distributions. The four 2025 quarterly payments totaled $3.7214 per share, with individual payments ranging from $0.8643 to $1.0536. That variability is normal for an equity fund and reflects the underlying portfolio’s earnings cycle rather than any structural income problem.

The Real Tradeoffs

  1. Rate sensitivity in the portfolio’s core sectors. Financials and Utilities, which anchor VOE’s sector mix, are meaningfully affected by interest rate direction. With the Fed Funds Rate at 3.75% and the 10-year Treasury at 4.33%, VOE’s 1.98% dividend yield sits well below what a risk-free bond offers. Investors holding VOE for income are accepting equity risk for a yield that bonds currently exceed.
  2. Cyclical concentration means it moves with the economy. Energy, Industrials, and Financials together make up the majority of the fund. In a genuine economic slowdown, these sectors typically underperform. The yield curve spread has compressed to 0.46% from 0.62% just a month ago, a signal worth watching for investors relying on continued economic expansion to drive VOE’s cyclical holdings.
  3. Value can lag for extended periods. VOE’s five-year return of 50.8% is solid, but investors who held large-cap growth funds over the same period often saw higher absolute returns. The value premium is real but inconsistent year to year, and investors need patience to let the factor work.

VOE fits best as a core mid-cap allocation for investors who want diversified equity exposure without paying growth premiums, but anyone expecting it to outperform in a tech-driven bull market will find the value tilt a persistent drag during those specific environments.

Photo of Michael Williams
About the Author Michael Williams →

I am a long time investor and student of business, and believe finding good companies that can become great investments is the best game on earth. After 20 years of writing and researching the public markets it is clear that individuals have never had more tools and information to take control of their financial lives. From ETFs and $0 commissions to cryptos and prediction markets there has never been a greater democratization of access to investing. 

I write to help people understand the investments available to them so they can make the best choice for their portfolio, whether they're starting out or looking for income in retirement. 

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