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Vanguard Real Estate ETF
As of June 6, 2026 at 04:13 UTC
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About Vanguard Real Estate ETF
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Latest News
5 articlesThe article compares two real estate ETFs: Vanguard's VNQ, which focuses on domestic U.S. real estate with a low 0.13% expense ratio and $64.6B in AUM, and State Street's RWX, which provides international real estate exposure but charges a higher 0.59% expense ratio with only $276.9M in AUM. Both offer identical 3.6% dividend yields, but VNQ has outperformed RWX over the past year (13.44% vs 12.40%). The choice depends on whether investors prefer domestic focus with lower costs or international diversification.
The Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) offers broad exposure across 158 U.S. REITs with a lower expense ratio (0.13%) and higher dividend yield (3.63%), while the iShares Select U.S. REIT ETF (ICF) concentrates on 30 large-cap REITs with a higher expense ratio (0.32%) and lower yield (2.6%). Despite higher costs, ICF has outperformed VNQ over five years, with $1,117 vs. $1,003 growth on a $1,000 investment, driven by its focus on sector leaders in data centers, cell towers, and healthcare properties.
FlexShares Global Quality Real Estate Index Fund (GQRE) and Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) offer different approaches to real estate investing. GQRE charges higher fees (0.45% vs 0.13%) but provides greater global diversification, higher dividend yield (4.3% vs 3.6%), and outperformed VNQ over the past year (7.6% vs 1.6% return). VNQ offers lower costs, superior liquidity, and focuses on U.S.-listed REITs. The choice depends on investor priorities: cost-conscious investors favor VNQ, while income-focused investors seeking global exposure may prefer GQRE.
Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) and iShares Global REIT ETF (REET) are compared as diversified real estate investment options. VNQ offers larger assets under management ($69.6B), slightly lower fees, and higher dividend yield (3.7%), making it ideal for income-focused investors. REET provides broader global diversification with 325 holdings across developed and emerging markets, delivering superior one-year returns (6.5% vs 1.3%), appealing to growth-oriented investors seeking international exposure.
International developed market stocks and REITs outperformed U.S. equities in February 2026, with VEA rising 6.1% and REITs gaining 5-5.8%, while the S&P 500 fell 0.9% and Nasdaq-100 dropped 2.3%. The rotation away from mega-cap tech stocks toward international markets and real estate is expected to continue due to lower interest rate prospects, better valuations abroad, and investor diversification away from U.S. stocks.