|
|
Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Purchases
|
None
|
Purchase Fee
|
None
|
Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Reinvested Dividends
|
None
|
Redemption Fee
|
None
|
Account Service Fee Per Year
(for certain fund account balances below $5,000,000)
|
$25
|
|
|
Management Fees
|
[ ]
%
|
12b-1 Distribution Fee
|
None
|
Other Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
1 Year
|
3 Years
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Total Return
|
Quarter
|
Highest
|
[ ]
|
|
Lowest
|
[ ]
|
|
|
1 Year
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund Investor Shares
|
|
|
|
Return Before Taxes
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Standard & Poor's 500 Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Float Adjusted Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Plain Talk About Fund Expenses
|
All mutual funds have operating expenses. These expenses, which are
deducted from a fund’s gross income, are expressed as a percentage of the
net assets of the fund. Assuming that operating expenses remain as stated
in the Fees and Expenses section, Vanguard 500 Index Fund Investor Shares'
expense ratio would be 0.XX%, or $X.XX per $1,000 of average net assets.
The average expense ratio for large-cap core funds in 20XX was 0.XX%, or
$X.XX per $1,000 of average net assets (derived from data provided by
Lipper, a Thomson Reuters Company, which reports on the mutual
fund industry).
|
Plain Talk About Costs of Investing
|
Costs are an important consideration in choosing a mutual fund. That is
because you, as a shareholder, pay a proportionate share of the costs of
operating a fund and any transaction costs incurred when the fund buys or
sells securities. These costs can erode a substantial portion of the gross
income or the capital appreciation a fund achieves. Even seemingly small
differences in expenses can, over time, have a dramatic effect on a
fund’s performance.
|
Plain Talk About Vanguard’s Unique Corporate Structure
|
Vanguard is owned jointly by the funds it oversees and thus indirectly by the
shareholders in those funds. Most other mutual funds are operated by
management companies that are owned by third parties—either public or
private stockholders—and not by the funds they serve.
|
Plain Talk About Distributions
|
As a shareholder, you are entitled to your portion of a fund’s income from
interest and dividends as well as capital gains from the fund’s sale of
investments. Income consists of both the dividends that the fund earns from
any stock holdings and the interest it receives from any money market and
bond investments. Capital gains are realized whenever the fund sells
securities for higher prices than it paid for them. These capital gains are
either short-term or long-term, depending on whether the fund held the
securities for one year or less or for more than one year.
|
Plain Talk About Buying a Dividend
|
Unless you are a tax-exempt investor or investing through a tax-advantaged
account (such as an IRA or an employer-sponsored retirement or savings
plan), you should consider avoiding a purchase of fund shares shortly before
the fund makes a distribution, because doing so can cost you money in
taxes. This is known as “buying a dividend.” For example: On December 15,
you invest $5,000, buying 250 shares for $20 each. If the fund pays a
distribution of $1 per share on December 16, its share price will drop to $19
(not counting market change). You still have only $5,000 (250 shares x $19 =
$4,750 in share value, plus 250 shares x $1 = $250 in distributions), but you
owe tax on the $250 distribution you received—even if you reinvest it in
more shares. To avoid buying a dividend, check a fund’s distribution schedule
before you invest.
|
Web
|
|
Vanguard.com
|
For the most complete source of Vanguard news
For fund, account, and service information
For most account transactions
For literature requests
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
|
Vanguard Fund
|
Inception
Date1
|
Newspaper
Abbreviation
|
Vanguard
Fund Number
|
CUSIP
Number
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund
|
||||
Investor Shares
|
8/31/1976
|
500
|
40
|
XXXXXXXXX
|
|
|
Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Purchases
|
None
|
Purchase Fee
|
None
|
Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Reinvested Dividends
|
None
|
Redemption Fee
|
None
|
Account Service Fee Per Year
(for certain fund account balances below $5,000,000)
|
$25
|
|
|
Management Fees
|
[ ]
%
|
12b-1 Distribution Fee
|
None
|
Other Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
1 Year
|
3 Years
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Total Return
|
Quarter
|
Highest
|
[ ]
|
|
Lowest
|
[ ]
|
|
|
1 Year
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund Admiral Shares
|
|
|
|
Return Before Taxes
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Standard & Poor's 500 Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Float Adjusted Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Plain Talk About Fund Expenses
|
All mutual funds have operating expenses. These expenses, which are
deducted from a fund’s gross income, are expressed as a percentage of the
net assets of the fund. Assuming that operating expenses remain as stated
in the Fees and Expenses section, Vanguard 500 Index Fund Admiral Shares'
expense ratio would be 0.XX%, or $0.XX per $1,000 of average net assets.
The average expense ratio for large-cap core funds in 20XX was 0.XX%, or
$X.XX per $1,000 of average net assets (derived from data provided by
Lipper, a Thomson Reuters Company, which reports on the mutual
fund industry).
|
Plain Talk About Costs of Investing
|
Costs are an important consideration in choosing a mutual fund. That is
because you, as a shareholder, pay a proportionate share of the costs of
operating a fund and any transaction costs incurred when the fund buys or
sells securities. These costs can erode a substantial portion of the gross
income or the capital appreciation a fund achieves. Even seemingly small
differences in expenses can, over time, have a dramatic effect on a
fund’s performance.
|
Plain Talk About Vanguard’s Unique Corporate Structure
|
Vanguard is owned jointly by the funds it oversees and thus indirectly by the
shareholders in those funds. Most other mutual funds are operated by
management companies that are owned by third parties—either public or
private stockholders—and not by the funds they serve.
|
Plain Talk About Distributions
|
As a shareholder, you are entitled to your portion of a fund’s income from
interest and dividends as well as capital gains from the fund’s sale of
investments. Income consists of both the dividends that the fund earns from
any stock holdings and the interest it receives from any money market and
bond investments. Capital gains are realized whenever the fund sells
securities for higher prices than it paid for them. These capital gains are
either short-term or long-term, depending on whether the fund held the
securities for one year or less or for more than one year.
|
Plain Talk About Buying a Dividend
|
Unless you are a tax-exempt investor or investing through a tax-advantaged
account (such as an IRA or an employer-sponsored retirement or savings
plan), you should consider avoiding a purchase of fund shares shortly before
the fund makes a distribution, because doing so can cost you money in
taxes. This is known as “buying a dividend.” For example: On December 15,
you invest $5,000, buying 250 shares for $20 each. If the fund pays a
distribution of $1 per share on December 16, its share price will drop to $19
(not counting market change). You still have only $5,000 (250 shares x $19 =
$4,750 in share value, plus 250 shares x $1 = $250 in distributions), but you
owe tax on the $250 distribution you received—even if you reinvest it in
more shares. To avoid buying a dividend, check a fund’s distribution schedule
before you invest.
|
Web
|
|
Vanguard.com
|
For the most complete source of Vanguard news
For fund, account, and service information
For most account transactions
For literature requests
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
|
Vanguard Fund
|
Inception
Date1
|
Newspaper
Abbreviation
|
Vanguard
Fund Number
|
CUSIP
Number
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund
|
||||
Admiral Shares
|
11/13/2000
|
500Adml
|
540
|
XXXXXXXXX
|
|
|
Transaction Fee on Purchases and Sales
|
None*
|
Transaction Fee on Reinvested Dividends
|
None*
|
Transaction Fee on Conversion to ETF Shares
|
None*
|
|
|
Management Fees
|
[ ]
%
|
12b-1 Distribution Fee
|
None
|
Other Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
1 Year
|
3 Years
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
1 Year
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund ETF Shares
|
|
|
|
Based on NAV
|
|
|
|
Return Before Taxes
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Based on Market Price
|
|
|
|
Return Before Taxes
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Standard & Poor's 500 Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Float Adjusted Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses, or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Plain Talk About Fund Expenses
|
All funds have operating expenses. These expenses, which are deducted
from a fund’s gross income, are expressed as a percentage of the net assets
of the fund. Assuming that operating expenses remain as stated in the Fees
and Expenses section, Vanguard 500 Index Fund ETF Shares’ expense ratio
would be 0.XX%, or $0.XX per $1,000 of average net assets. The average
expense ratio for large-cap core funds in 20XX was 0.XX%, or $X.XX per
$1,000 of average net assets (derived from data provided by Lipper, a
Thomson Reuters Company, which reports on the fund industry).
|
Plain Talk About Costs of Investing
|
Costs are an important consideration in choosing an ETF. That is because
you, as a shareholder, pay a proportionate share of the costs of operating a
fund and any transaction costs incurred when the fund buys or sells
securities. These costs can erode a substantial portion of the gross income
or the capital appreciation a fund achieves. Even seemingly small differences
in expenses can, over time, have a dramatic effect on a fund’s performance.
|
Plain Talk About Vanguard’s Unique Corporate Structure
|
Vanguard is owned jointly by the funds it oversees and thus indirectly by the
shareholders in those funds. Most other mutual funds are operated by
management companies that are owned by third parties—either public or
private stockholders—and not by the funds they serve.
|
Plain Talk About Distributions
|
As a shareholder, you are entitled to your portion of a fund’s income from
interest and dividends as well as capital gains from the fund’s sale of
investments. Income consists of both the dividends that the fund earns from
any stock holdings and the interest it receives from any money market and
bond investments. Capital gains are realized whenever the fund sells
securities for higher prices than it paid for them. These capital gains are
either short-term or long-term, depending on whether the fund held the
securities for one year or less or for more than one year.
|
Vanguard Fund
|
Inception Date1
|
Vanguard
Fund Number
|
CUSIP
Number
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund
|
|||
ETF Shares
|
9/7/2010
(Investor Shares
8/31/1976)
|
968
|
XXXXXXXXX
|
|
|
Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Purchases
|
None
|
Purchase Fee
|
None
|
Sales Charge (Load) Imposed on Reinvested Dividends
|
None
|
Redemption Fee
|
None
|
|
|
Management Fees
|
[ ]
%
|
12b-1 Distribution Fee
|
None
|
Other Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
Total Annual Fund Operating Expenses
|
[ ]
%
|
1 Year
|
3 Years
|
5 Years
|
10 Years
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
1 Year
|
5 Years
|
Since
Fund
Inception
|
Fund
Inception
Date
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund Institutional
Select Shares
|
|
|
|
6/24/2016(1)
|
Return Before Taxes
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Return After Taxes on Distributions and Sale
of Fund Shares
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Standard & Poor's 500 Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses,
or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Dow Jones U.S. Total Stock Market Float
Adjusted Index
(reflects no deduction for fees, expenses,
or taxes)
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Plain Talk About Fund Expenses
|
All mutual funds have operating expenses. These expenses, which are
deducted from a fund’s gross income, are expressed as a percentage of the
net assets of the fund. Assuming that operating expenses remain as stated
in the Fees and Expenses section, Vanguard 500 Index Fund Institutional
Select Shares’ expense ratio would be 0.XX%, or $0.XX per $1,000 of
average net assets. The average expense ratio for large-cap core funds in
20XX was 0.XX%, or $X.XX per $1,000 of average net assets (derived from
data provided by Lipper, a Thomson Reuters Company, which reports on the
mutual fund industry).
|
Plain Talk About Costs of Investing
|
Costs are an important consideration in choosing a mutual fund. That is
because you, as a shareholder, pay a proportionate share of the costs of
operating a fund and any transaction costs incurred when the fund buys or
sells securities. These costs can erode a substantial portion of the gross
income or the capital appreciation a fund achieves. Even seemingly small
differences in expenses can, over time, have a dramatic effect on a
fund’s performance.
|
Plain Talk About Vanguard’s Unique Corporate Structure
|
Vanguard is owned jointly by the funds it oversees and thus indirectly by the
shareholders in those funds. Most other mutual funds are operated by
management companies that are owned by third parties—either public or
private stockholders—and not by the funds they serve.
|
Plain Talk About Distributions
|
As a shareholder, you are entitled to your portion of a fund’s income from
interest and dividends as well as capital gains from the fund’s sale of
investments. Income consists of both the dividends that the fund earns from
any stock holdings and the interest it receives from any money market and
bond investments. Capital gains are realized whenever the fund sells
securities for higher prices than it paid for them. These capital gains are
either short-term or long-term, depending on whether the fund held the
securities for one year or less or for more than one year.
|
Plain Talk About Buying a Dividend
|
Unless you are investing through a tax-advantaged account (such as a
401(k) plan), you should consider avoiding a purchase of fund shares shortly
before the fund makes a distribution, because doing so can cost you money
in taxes. This is known as “buying a dividend.” For example: On
December 15, you invest $5,000, buying 250 shares for $20 each. If the fund
pays a distribution of $1 per share on December 16, its share price will drop
to $19 (not counting market change). You still have only $5,000 (250 shares x
$19 = $4,750 in share value, plus 250 shares x $1 = $250 in distributions),
but you owe tax on the $250 distribution you received—even if you reinvest
it in more shares. To avoid buying a dividend, check a fund’s distribution
schedule before you invest.
|
Web
|
|
Vanguard.com
|
For the most complete source of Vanguard news
For fund, account, and service information
For most account transactions
For literature requests
24 hours a day, 7 days a week
|
Vanguard Fund
|
Inception
Date1
|
Newspaper
Abbreviation
|
Vanguard
Fund Number
|
CUSIP
Number
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund
|
||||
Institutional Select
Shares
|
6/24/2016
(Investor Shares
8/31/1976)
|
Van500IxInstSel
|
1940
|
XXXXXXXXX
|
B-1
|
|
B-4
|
|
B-5
|
|
B-21
|
|
B-22
|
|
B-23
|
|
B-36
|
|
B-37
|
|
B-38
|
|
B-39
|
|
B-46
|
|
B-46
|
|
|
Share Classes1
|
|||||
Vanguard Fund2
|
Investor
|
Admiral
|
Institutional
|
Institutional
Plus
|
Institutional
Select
|
ETF
|
|
Vanguard 500 Index Fund
|
VFINX
|
VFIAX
|
—
|
—
|
VFFSX
|
VOO4
|
|
Vanguard Developed Markets Index Fund
|
VDVIX
|
VTMGX
|
VTMNX
|
VDIPX
|
—
|
VEA3,4
|
|
Vanguard Tax-Managed Balanced Fund
|
—
|
VTMFX
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
Vanguard Tax-Managed Capital Appreciation Fund
|
—
|
VTCLX
|
VTCIX
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
|
Vanguard Tax-Managed Small-Cap Fund
|
—
|
VTMSX
|
VTSIX
|
—
|
—
|
—
|
Name, Year of Birth
|
Position(s)
Held With Fund
|
Vanguard
Funds’ Trustee/
Officer Since
|
Principal Occupation(s)
During the Past Five Years,
Outside Directorships,
and Other Experience
|
Number of
Vanguard Funds
Overseen by
Trustee/Officer
|
Interested Trustee1
|
|
|
|
|
Mortimer J. Buckley
(1969)
|
Chairman of the
Board, Chief
Executive
Officer, and
President
|
January 2018
|
Chairman of the board (2019–present) of Vanguard and
of each of the investment companies served by
Vanguard; chief executive officer (2018–present) of
Vanguard; chief executive officer, president, and
trustee (2018–present) of each of the investment
companies served by Vanguard; president and director
(2017–present) of Vanguard; and president
(2018–present) of Vanguard Marketing Corporation.
Chief investment officer (2013–2017), managing
director (2002–2017), head of the Retail Investor Group
(2006–2012), and chief information officer (2001–2006)
of Vanguard. Trustee and vice chair of The Shipley
School. Member of the board of governors of the
Investment Company Institute and of FINRA.
|
205
|
1 Mr. Buckley is considered an “interested person” as defined in the 1940 Act because he is an officer of the Trust.
|
||||
Independent Trustees
|
|
|
|
|
Tara Bunch
(1962)
|
Trustee
|
November 2021
|
Head of Global Operations at Airbnb (2020–present).
Vice President of AppleCare (2012–2020). Member of
the board of Out & Equal, the University of California,
Berkeley School of Engineering, and Santa Clara
University’s School of Business.
|
205
|
Emerson U. Fullwood
(1948)
|
Trustee
|
January 2008
|
Executive chief staff and marketing officer for North
America and corporate vice president (retired 2008) of
Xerox Corporation (document management products
and services). Former president of the Worldwide
Channels Group, Latin America, and Worldwide
Customer Service and executive chief staff officer of
Developing Markets of Xerox. Executive in residence
and 2009–2010 Distinguished Minett Professor at the
Rochester Institute of Technology. Member of the
board of directors of the University of Rochester
Medical Center, the Monroe Community College
Foundation, the United Way of Rochester, North
Carolina A&T University, Roberts Wesleyan College,
and the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. Trustee of
the University of Rochester.
|
205
|
F. Joseph Loughrey
(1949)
|
Trustee
|
October 2009
|
President and chief operating officer (retired 2009) and
vice chairman of the board (2008–2009) of Cummins
Inc. (industrial machinery). Director of the V
Foundation. Member of the advisory council for the
College of Arts and Letters at the University of Notre
Dame. Chairman of the board of Saint Anselm College.
|
205
|
Mark Loughridge
(1953)
|
Lead
Independent
Trustee
|
March 2012
|
Senior vice president and chief financial officer (retired
2013) of IBM (information technology services).
Fiduciary member of IBM’s Retirement Plan
Committee (2004–2013), senior vice president and
general manager (2002–2004) of IBM Global Financing,
vice president and controller (1998–2002) of IBM, and
a variety of other prior management roles at IBM.
Member of the Council on Chicago Booth.
|
205
|
Scott C. Malpass
(1962)
|
Trustee
|
March 2012
|
Chief investment officer and vice president of the
University of Notre Dame (retired 2020). Chair of the
board of Catholic Investment Services, Inc.
(investment advisors). Member of the board of
superintendence of the Institute for the Works of
Religion. Member of the Notre Dame 403(b)
Investment Committee and the board of directors of
Paxos Trust Company (finance).
|
205
|
Name, Year of Birth
|
Position(s)
Held With Fund
|
Vanguard
Funds’ Trustee/
Officer Since
|
Principal Occupation(s)
During the Past Five Years,
Outside Directorships,
and Other Experience
|
Number of
Vanguard Funds
Overseen by
Trustee/Officer
|
Deanna Mulligan
(1963)
|
Trustee
|
January 2018
|
Chief executive officer of Purposeful (2021–present).
Board chair (2020), chief executive officer (2011–2020),
and president (2010–2019) of The Guardian Life
Insurance Company of America. Chief operating officer
(2010–2011) and executive vice president (2008–2010)
of Individual Life and Disability of The Guardian Life
Insurance Company of America. Director of DuPont.
Member of the board of the Economic Club of New
York. Trustee of the Partnership for New York City
(business leadership), the Chief Executives for
Corporate Purpose, and the New York-Presbyterian
Hospital.
|
205
|
André F. Perold
(1952)
|
Trustee
|
December 2004
|
George Gund Professor of Finance and Banking,
Emeritus at the Harvard Business School (retired
2011). Chief investment officer and partner of
HighVista Strategies LLC (private investment firm).
Board member of RIT Capital Partners (investment
firm).
|
205
|
Sarah Bloom Raskin
(1961)
|
Trustee
|
January 2018
|
Deputy secretary (2014–2017) of the United States
Department of the Treasury. Governor (2010–2014) of
the Federal Reserve Board. Commissioner
(2007–2010) of financial regulation for the State of
Maryland. Colin W. Brown Distinguished Professor of
the Practice, Duke Law School (2021–present);
Rubenstein Fellow, Duke University (2017–2020);
Distinguished Fellow of the Global Financial Markets
Center, Duke Law School (2020–2022); and Senior
Fellow, Duke Center on Risk (2020–present). Partner of
Kaya Corporation Ltd. (climate policy advisory
services). Member of the board of directors of Arcadia
Corporation (energy solution technology).
|
205
|
Grant Reid
(1959)
|
Trustee
|
July 2023
|
Chief executive officer and president (2014–2022) and
member of the board of directors (2015–2022) of
Mars, Incorporated (multinational manufacturer).
Member of the board of directors of Marriott
International, Inc. Chair of Agribusiness Task Force,
Sustainable Markets Initiative.
|
205
|
David Thomas
(1956)
|
Trustee
|
July 2021
|
President of Morehouse College (2018–present).
Professor of Business Administration Emeritus at
Harvard University (2017–2018) and Dean (2011–2016)
and Professor of Management at Georgetown
University, McDonough School of Business
(2016–2017). Director of DTE Energy Company.
Trustee of Common Fund.
|
205
|
Peter F. Volanakis
(1955)
|
Trustee
|
July 2009
|
President and chief operating officer (retired 2010) of
Corning Incorporated (communications equipment)
and director of Corning Incorporated (2000–2010) and
Dow Corning (2001–2010). Director (2012) of SPX
Corporation (multi-industry manufacturing). Overseer
of the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration,
Dartmouth College (2001–2013). Member of the BMW
Group Mobility Council.
|
205
|
Executive Officers
|
|
|
|
|
Jacqueline Angell
(1974)
|
Chief
Compliance
Officer
|
November 2022
|
Principal of Vanguard. Chief compliance officer
(November 2022–present) of Vanguard and of each of
the investment companies served by Vanguard. Chief
compliance officer (2018–2022) and deputy chief
compliance officer (2017–2019) of State Street.
|
205
|
Name, Year of Birth
|
Position(s)
Held With Fund
|
Vanguard
Funds’ Trustee/
Officer Since
|
Principal Occupation(s)
During the Past Five Years,
Outside Directorships,
and Other Experience
|
Number of
Vanguard Funds
Overseen by
Trustee/Officer
|
Christine M. Buchanan
(1970)
|
Chief Financial
Officer
|
November 2017
|
Principal of Vanguard. Chief financial officer
(2021–present) and treasurer (2017–2021) of each of
the investment companies served by Vanguard.
Partner (2005–2017) at KPMG (audit, tax, and advisory
services).
|
205
|
John Galloway
(1973)
|
Investment
Stewardship
Officer
|
September 2020
|
Principal of Vanguard. Investment stewardship officer
(2020–present) of each of the investment companies
served by Vanguard. Head of Investor Advocacy
(2020–present) and head of Marketing Strategy and
Planning (2017–2020) at Vanguard. Special Assistant to
the President of the United States (2015).
|
205
|
Ashley Grim
(1984)
|
Treasurer
|
February 2022
|
Treasurer (February 2022–present) of each of the
investment companies served by Vanguard. Fund
transfer agent controller (2019–2022) and director of
Audit Services (2017–2019) at Vanguard. Senior
manager (2015–2017) at PriceWaterhouseCoopers
(audit and assurance, consulting, and tax services).
|
205
|
Jodi Miller
(1980)
|
Finance Director
|
September
2022
|
Principal of Vanguard. Finance director (2022–present)
of each of the investment companies served by
Vanguard. Head of Enterprise Investment Services
(2020–present), Head of Retail Client Services &
Operations (2020–2022), and Head of Retail Strategic
Support (2018–2020) at Vanguard.
|
205
|
Anne E. Robinson
(1970)
|
Secretary
|
September 2016
|
General counsel (2016–present) of Vanguard.
Secretary (2016–present) of Vanguard and of each of
the investment companies served by Vanguard.
Managing director (2016–present) of Vanguard.
Managing director and general counsel of Global Cards
and Consumer Services (2014–2016) at Citigroup.
Counsel (2003–2014) at American Express.
Non-executive director of the board of National Grid
(energy).
|
205
|
Michael Rollings
(1963)
|
Finance Director
|
February 2017
|
Finance director (2017–present) and treasurer (2017)
of each of the investment companies served by
Vanguard. Managing director (2016–present) of
Vanguard. Chief financial officer (2016–present) of
Vanguard. Director (2016–present) of Vanguard
Marketing Corporation. Executive vice president and
chief financial officer (2006–2016) of MassMutual
Financial Group.
|
205
|