AOR Has Returned 113.6% Over 10 Years With Built-In Rebalancing and a 2.6% Yield

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By Michael Williams Published

Quick Read

  • iShares Core Growth Allocation ETF (AOR) maintains a 60/40 equity-to-bonds allocation with a 0.15% expense ratio and $3.4B in assets, returning 13.5% over the past year and 35% over five years while paying a consistent 2.6% dividend yield. SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) returned 14.1% over the past year and 66% over five years, outpacing AOR by 31 percentage points over a decade as the bond allocation dampens equity upside.

  • A year of risk-on markets and rising Treasury yields now shifting to elevated volatility favors AOR’s automatic rebalancing and bond diversification, which is outperforming pure equity funds as the VIX sits at its 93rd percentile of the 12-month range.

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AOR Has Returned 113.6% Over 10 Years With Built-In Rebalancing and a 2.6% Yield

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Most investors know they should hold both stocks and bonds. Far fewer actually do it in a disciplined, low-cost way. iShares Core Growth Allocation ETF (NYSEARCA:AOR) is built for exactly that gap: a single fund that maintains a roughly 60% equity and 40% fixed income allocation, rebalances automatically, and charges almost nothing to do it.

What AOR Is Actually Trying to Do

AOR is a fund-of-funds. Rather than holding individual stocks or bonds directly, it owns a basket of other iShares ETFs covering global equities and investment-grade fixed income. The equity sleeve provides growth exposure across U.S. and international markets. The bond sleeve acts as a stabilizer, dampening volatility when stocks sell off.

The appeal is structural simplicity. An investor who buys AOR gets a globally diversified, automatically rebalanced portfolio in a single trade. The net expense ratio is 0.15%, which is remarkably low for a managed multi-asset solution. The fund carries net assets of $3.4 billion and has been running since November 2008, meaning it has a live track record through multiple market cycles.

The return engine here is straightforward: equities provide long-run capital appreciation and dividend income, while bonds generate interest income and reduce drawdowns. The 60/40 split is not arbitrary. Decades of portfolio research have shown this ratio historically balances growth and stability better than most alternatives for moderate-risk investors.

Does the Strategy Hold Up in Practice?

Over the past year, AOR has returned 13.5%, compared to 14.1% for the S&P 500 as tracked by the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust. That is a narrow gap, and it reflects the fact that the past year was largely a risk-on environment where equities led. The more instructive comparison is over five years, where AOR returned 35% against 66% for the S&P 500.

That gap is the honest cost of the bond allocation. Investors who held AOR accepted lower long-term returns in exchange for a smoother ride. Whether that tradeoff was worth it depends entirely on the investor, not on the fund’s execution.

AOR also pays a quarterly dividend. The current yield sits at 2.6%, and the fund has distributed income every quarter without interruption since inception. The four 2025 distributions totaled roughly $1.65 per share, consistent with prior years and reflecting the bond income flowing through the fund.

The Real Tradeoffs

Three constraints matter most for investors evaluating AOR:

  1. Capped upside in strong equity markets. The 40% bond allocation will always drag on returns when stocks are running. Over ten years, AOR returned 114% while the S&P 500 returned 223%. Investors with long time horizons and high risk tolerance are paying a meaningful opportunity cost for stability they may not need.
  2. Rate sensitivity in the bond sleeve. With the 10-year Treasury yield near 4.4% and sitting at the 83rd percentile of its 12-month range, the fixed income portion of AOR faces a less favorable valuation environment than it would at lower yields. Rising rates pressure existing bond prices. The Fed has held its rate steady at 3.75% for three months after cutting 75 basis points in late 2025, leaving the rate outlook genuinely uncertain.
  3. Year-to-date softness reflects the current environment. AOR is down 0.7% so far in 2026, modestly outperforming the S&P 500’s 3.7% decline over the same stretch. With the VIX near 27 and sitting at the 93rd percentile of its 12-month range, the diversification benefit is showing up exactly when it should. The bond sleeve is doing its job.

AOR is designed as a complete portfolio solution for investors who want global diversification, automatic rebalancing, and genuine simplicity at minimal cost. For investors whose primary goal is maximizing long-run equity returns, a lower-cost pure equity fund will consistently pull ahead over time.

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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