The Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) is nearing a historic milestone, with the fund on track to become the first exchange traded fund to surpass $1 trillion in assets under management.
This persistent growth highlights how central low-cost core index products remain to advisor and retail portfolios alike. Even as asset managers roll out specialized strategies, capital continues to flow within broad-market beta.
Crossing the $1 trillion mark would represent a major milestone for the ETF industry and further highlight the strong investor demand for broad, low-cost index funds like VOO.
Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas recently wrote on LinkedIn that this could be the year “when its GOAT status will be secured.” Much of that momentum has come from the fund’s rapid growth over the past year, with VOO adding roughly $250 billion in assets in 2025 — or close to $1 billion per trading day.
The fund also surpassed the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) in assets less than a year ago and has continued to widen the gap, now holding roughly $100 billion more than any other ETF. At the same time, it has remained one of the industry leaders in investor inflows. VOO also has a lower expense ratio than SPY at 0.03% compared to 0.09%.
See more: Are There Too Many ETFs?
VOO is designed to track the performance of the S&P 500 by holding shares of the index’s 500 U.S. equities. Because the fund is market-cap weighted, companies with larger market values make up a bigger portion of the portfolio, meaning that the fund naturally increases its exposure to firms that continue to grow in size and influence.
According to the latest Vanguard data, information technology (IT) represents the largest sector allocation at approximately 35%, followed by financials at 12% and Communication Services at 11.0%.
| Sector | Allocation |
| Information Technology | 35.00% |
| Financials | 12.02% |
| Communication Services | 11.03% |
| Consumer Discretionary | 9.98% |
| Industrials | 8.81% |
| Health Care | 8.50% |
| Consumer Staples | 4.94% |
| Energy | 3.51% |
| Utilities | 2.35% |
| Materials | 1.94% |
| Real Estate | 1.92% |
VOO’s largest holdings are concentrated in some of the market’s biggest technology companies, including NVIDIA Corp. at 7.84%, Apple at 6.44%, and Microsoft at 4.89%.
| Holding | Ticker | Fund Weight | Sub-Industry |
| NVIDIA Corp. | NVDA | 7.84% | Semiconductors |
| Apple Inc. | AAPL | 6.44% | Technology Hardware, Storage & Peripherals |
| Microsoft Corp. | MSFT | 4.89% | Systems Software |
| Amazon.com Inc. | AMZN | 4.18% | Broadline Retail |
| Alphabet Inc. (Class A) | GOOGL | 3.62% | Interactive Media & Services |
| Broadcom Inc. | AVGO | 3.20% | Semiconductors |
| Alphabet Inc. (Class C) | GOOG | 2.89% | Interactive Media & Services |
| Meta Platforms Inc. | META | 2.16% | Interactive Media & Services |
| Tesla Inc. | TSLA | 1.73% | Automobile Manufacturers |
| Berkshire Hathaway Inc. | BRK/B | 1.40% | Multi-Sector Holdings |
| JPMorgan Chase & Co. | JPM | 1.27% | Diversified Banks |
Even as the ETF industry continues to launch increasingly specialized and innovative products tied to everything from artificial intelligence (AI) to leveraged trading strategies, VOO’s continued rise suggests that many investors still prefer simplicity over complexity. While newer funds often attract attention for their themes or opportunities, broad-market index funds have remained the foundation of many long-term portfolios.
For many investors, the appeal lies in owning a low-cost fund that offers diversified exposure without the need to constantly trade or manage allocations. In a market filled with endless investment options, that simplicity has become part of the appeal.
At the same time, the strategy is not without criticism. Some market participants argue that the growing concentration of assets in passive index funds could distort broader market dynamics, particularly as mega-cap technology companies continue to dominate the S&P 500. Others caution that the approach may leave investors overly exposed to U.S. large-cap equities while limiting diversification across sectors, asset classes, or international markets. Nevertheless, VOO’s massive asset gathering proves that the structural appetite for low-cost, broad-market beta remains the dominant force in asset management.
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