Without any fanfare, the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF reached $1 trillion in assets under management sometime in the middle of a Tuesday morning in early June. Financial experts had been watching this milestone for months. The first exchange-traded fund in history to accomplish that feat was VOO. Most people didn’t notice a press release from Vanguard’s Malvern, Pennsylvania headquarters or a bell being struck on the NYSE floor.
Since its founding in September 2010, the fund has simply continued to track the S&P 500 index at a rate of 0.03 percent annually, take contributions from retirement accounts, brokerage accounts, and 401(k) plans nationwide, and compound interest. The fund traded at $678 per share on June 6, 2026, with roughly 519 equities and $1.65 trillion in assets, following a 2.59 percent drop the day before. The cost changed. It didn’t move with the milestone.
At $678 on June 5, the VOO stock price is around 3% lower than the fund’s 52-week high of $699.15, which was reached a few weeks prior. During the tariff-driven equities volatility phase in April 2025, when the S&P 500 saw a severe but ultimately brief fall, the 52-week low was reached at $545.75. The trailing 12-month return as of early June 2026 is roughly 29.74 percent, and the recovery from that April 2025 low to the June 2026 high is 28 percent.
For an instrument that is sometimes referred to as the default dull option, these are hardly dull statistics. The S&P 500 companies have been producing earnings at a rate that the larger peer group of actively managed and blended funds hasn’t matched, which is why VOO’s 5-year annualized return is 22.60 percent compared to its Large Blend category average of 19.34 percent.
The sector composition data, which was updated through April 2026, is worth closely examining since it provides insight into the current meaning of owning VOO that may be obscured by the “S&P 500 index fund” framing. 35.67 percent of the fund is allocated to technology. An additional 11.24 percent is added by Communication Services, which comprises Alphabet, Meta, and Netflix. By itself, the top ten holdings—NVIDIA at 7.84 percent, Apple at 6.44 percent, and Microsoft at 4.89 percent—make up 38.37 percent of the fund.
They are “diversified” because they own VOO, which is accurate given that the fund owns 519 businesses in eleven different industries. The fact that about one-third of its wealth is concentrated in large-cap technology businesses whose fortunes are highly correlated with one another makes this somewhat less accurate. In VOO, a big antitrust action, a major disruption to the semiconductor supply, or a serious failure of an AI model would not be diversified away from as the word “diversification” usually suggests.
Most discussions on whether VOO is priced attractively in June 2026 revolve around the P/E ratio of 28.51. Over extended historical periods, the S&P 500 has traded at an average trailing P/E of around 15 to 17. However, this average covers several decades when interest rates, earnings growth rates, and the index’s composition were all significantly different from what they are today.
The index has traded at comparable or higher valuations during parts of the late 1990s tech bubble and the 2020–2021 pandemic recovery, so the 28.51 figure is not unprecedented in the modern era. However, it does suggest that future returns from today’s entry price are somewhat less dependent on valuation multiple expansion and somewhat more dependent on continued earnings growth than historical averages would suggest. By purchasing or holding VOO at current levels, every S&P 500 investor is indirectly responding to the question of whether those earnings materialize.

As a measure of emotion, the high volume on the June 5 decline—10.85 million shares compared to a daily average of 7.01 million—is noteworthy. Rather than a fundamental reevaluation of the underlying companies, elevated volume on down days in an index ETF sometimes indicates institutional rebalancing or retail panic-selling.
A 2.59 percent price decrease coincided with the $1 trillion AUM milestone, which is a very true description of how markets often function: milestones land when they land, not when the price is at its most flattering. When an instrument becomes the first trillion-dollar ETF in history and then loses three percent of its value four days later, it’s difficult to avoid looking for clarification. The dimensions are accurate. There is actual volatility as well. Owning VOO entails owning both.
