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:
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.