Vanguard Lowers Expense Ratios on 52 Funds for Retirement Plans

The funds are part of a total of 84 share classes that received reductions. 

Vanguard announced on Monday that it lowered expense ratios on 52 funds represented in retirement plans, part of a cut on funds comprising 84 total share classes: 28 exchange-traded funds and 56 mutual fund classes.

Fee prices were lowered on February 1 by an overall average of 27%, amounting to an expected total savings of nearly $250 million this year. Over the past two years, the firm has reduced a total of $600 million in fees.

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“When investors keep more of what they earn, the benefits compound over the long term, helping our clients achieve their most important financial goals,” said Vanguard CEO Salim Ramji in a statement.

Vanguard’s product lineup across all asset classes now has an average expense ratio of 0.06%. The highest fee reduction on funds used in retirement plans was 8 basis points, which applied to the Total Stock Market Index Fund (VTSMX). Second-highest were the FTSE Social Index Fund’s admiral share class (VFTAX), LifeStrategy Growth Fund (VASGX), Tax-Managed Balanced Fund (VTMFX), Tax-Managed Capital Appreciation Fund (VTCLX) and Tax-Managed Small-Cap Fund (VTSIX), with reductions of 4 bps each.

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