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iShares Russell 2000 Growth ETF
As of May 30, 2026 at 08:52 UTC
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About iShares Russell 2000 Growth ETF
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Latest News
5 articlesThe Vanguard Russell 1000 Growth ETF (VONG) has significantly outperformed the iShares Russell 2000 Growth ETF (IWO) over the past five years, delivering 102% total returns versus 32% for IWO. VONG's 0.06% expense ratio is substantially lower than IWO's 0.24%, and it offers exposure to large-cap tech giants like Apple, Nvidia, and Microsoft. While VONG is recommended for most investors due to superior performance and lower costs, IWO may appeal to those seeking small-cap diversification.
Vanguard's VOO ETF and iShares' IWO ETF offer distinct investment approaches: VOO tracks the S&P 500's 500 largest companies with lower fees (0.03% expense ratio), higher dividend yield (1.08%), and greater stability, while IWO targets smaller companies with aggressive growth potential but higher volatility and fees (0.24% expense ratio). Over five years, VOO delivered $1,876 on a $1,000 investment versus IWO's $1,277, though IWO showed higher recent returns (43.20% vs 32.12% over one year).
With the Magnificent Seven tech stocks valued at nearly $23 trillion and the tech sector trading at a P/E ratio of 37 compared to the S&P 500's 26, the article warns of potential overvaluation and volatility risks. The author recommends considering diversification into lower-valued sectors such as small-cap growth stocks and dividend-paying equities to reduce portfolio risk.
The article compares two growth ETFs: Vanguard's Mega Cap Growth ETF (MGK) and iShares Russell 2000 Growth ETF (IWO). MGK offers lower costs (0.05% expense ratio), greater stability, and concentration in mega-cap tech stocks like Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft, making it suitable for conservative long-term investors. IWO provides broader diversification across 1,100+ small-cap growth stocks with higher potential returns but greater volatility, higher fees (0.24%), and steeper drawdowns, appealing to risk-tolerant investors seeking explosive growth.
QQQ and IWO represent two distinct growth investment approaches: QQQ focuses on large-cap technology leaders with 102 holdings and lower volatility, while IWO targets small-cap growth stocks with over 1,100 holdings and higher risk-reward potential. Despite IWO's slightly higher expense ratio (0.24% vs 0.18%), both funds delivered similar one-year returns (~45-46%), though QQQ significantly outperformed over five years. The choice depends on investor risk tolerance and conviction in megacap tech versus diversified small-cap growth.