ETF research

Vanguard FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield ETF: August 2025 update

In this update, Passive Investment Analyst Danielle Farley shares our analysis on the manager, process, culture, ESG Integration, cost and performance of the Vanguard FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield Exchange Traded Fund (ETF).
Vanguard

Important information - This article isn’t personal advice. If you’re not sure whether an investment is right for you please seek advice. If you choose to invest the value of your investment will rise and fall, so you could get back less than you put in.

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  • Vanguard is a pioneer in index investing and launched its first ETF in 2001

  • This ETF provides exposure to companies across the world that generally pay higher than average dividends

  • It’s a low-cost way to track the FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield Index

How it fits in a portfolio

An ETF is a basket of investments that often includes company shares or bonds. They tend to track the performance of an index such as the FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield Index and trade on stock exchanges, like shares. This means their price fluctuates throughout the day.

The Vanguard FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield ETF invests in large and medium-sized companies, excluding real estate investment trusts, in developed and emerging markets that pay dividends that are generally higher than average. Emerging markets offer investors greater potential for growth, but they can be subject to more price volatility and are higher risk than their more developed counterparts.

An ETF is one of the simplest ways to invest and can be a low-cost starting point for an investment portfolio aiming to deliver a combination of income and long-term growth. This ETF could diversify an income portfolio focused on bonds and offer an alternative way to invest for income, although investing in shares is higher risk.

Manager

Vanguard is a pioneer when it comes to passive investing, having created the first retail index fund over 45 years ago. It now runs some of the largest index funds and ETFs in the world. Given its size, it has a big investment team with the expertise and resources to help its ETFs track indices and markets as closely as possible, while having scale to keep costs down.

Vanguard ETFs are run by a large, global team. They’re spread across three investment hubs around the world – the US, UK and Australia. This team-based approach means there’s no named manager on the ETF. As a collective team, Vanguard has run this ETF for 12 years.

Vanguard also has a trading analytics team, which is responsible for ensuring the ETFs buy and sell investments efficiently and at a competitive cost. This involves analysing data from different brokers and banks. Lower costs should help the ETFs track their benchmarks as tightly as possible.

Process

This ETF aims to track the performance of the FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield Index by investing in most of the companies in the benchmark. At the end of July 2025, there were 2,193 companies in the ETF versus 2,378 in the index. This is known as partial replication and can help the ETF track the index closely without the need to buy all the smaller companies in the index which can be more difficult and costly to trade.

The index selects the companies from the FTSE All-World Index that have higher than average dividend yields. Real estate investment trusts are removed from the index, as are companies that are not forecast to pay a dividend over the next 12 months. The remaining companies are ranked by annual dividend yield and added to the index until they make up 50% of the total market value.

The ETF invests a large amount in the US, which made up 41.3% of the fund at the end of June, followed by Japan and the UK. The focus on income steers the ETF towards sectors like financials which account for 29.9% of the fund. Other important sectors include industrials, consumer staples and healthcare.

Reducing costs is a key part of keeping the tracking difference between the ETF and the benchmark to a minimum. In any ETF, factors like taxes, dealing commissions and spreads, and the cost of running the ETF all drag on performance. To help keep these costs down, the team aims to make large investments in companies instead of lots of small transactions.

Vanguard will also lend some of the investments in the ETF to other providers in exchange for a fee, which can be used to offset some of the costs. It will only lend securities to a limited number of high-quality approved dealers. Vanguard indemnifies the fund against any loss from this process, meaning there should be no negative impact on investors. However, stock lending adds risk.

As this ETF is listed offshore investors are not usually entitled to compensation from the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme.

Culture

Vanguard is currently the second largest asset manager in the world and manages around $10trn of assets globally as of March 2025. The group aims to put the client at the forefront of everything it does, which drives its focus on quality, low-cost index products.

John Bogle founded Vanguard in 1975, and it’s owned by investors. This allows Vanguard to redirect its profits back to investors in the form of lower fees, instead of paying dividends to external shareholders. Bogle believed in creating products that simply track the performance of a market rather than taking a shot at picking individual companies which may beat them.

The team running this ETF works closely with other equity research and risk departments across the business. They have daily and weekly meetings to discuss ongoing strategy which could add good support and challenge on how to run the ETF effectively.

ESG Integration

Vanguard is predominantly a passive fund house. While it’s offered exclusions-based passive funds for many years, it’s lagged peers in offering passive funds that explicitly integrate Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) criteria by tracking indices that tilt towards companies with positive ESG characteristics, and away from those that don’t.

Vanguard’s Investment Stewardship team carries out most of the firm’s voting and engagement activity. Its stewardship activity is grounded in the firm’s four principles of good governance: board composition and effectiveness, board oversight of strategy and risk, executive pay and shareholder rights.

The Investment Stewardship team produces frequent insights on their engagement activity at both a corporate and governmental level. Investors can also access fund-by-fund proxy voting records, although voting rationales are not provided. That said, voting and engagement case studies can be found in the firm’s annual Investment Stewardship report and quarterly Engagement and Voting reports.

Vanguard courted controversy in 2022 when it left the Net Zero Asset Managers’ Initiative, a group of asset managers that have committed to achieving net zero carbon emissions by 2050. It claimed its decision would improve clarity for investors and allow it to speak independently. We view this as a disappointing backward step. Furthermore, in 2024 it was reported that Vanguard failed to support a single shareholder proposal requiring more action from investee companies on environmental and social matters.

The Vanguard FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield ETF tracks an index that does not specifically integrate ESG considerations into its process. The ETF can therefore invest in shares issued by companies in any sector in line with the benchmark.

Cost

The ETF currently has an ongoing annual fund charge of 0.29%. Ensuring an ETF has a low charge is an important part of tracking the underlying index closely.

The annual charge to hold ETFs in the HL ISA or SIPP is 0.45% and in the HL LISA is 0.25% (capped at £45 in the ISAs and £200 in the SIPP). There are no charges from HL to hold ETFs within the HL Fund and Share Account or HL Junior ISA.

As ETFs trade like shares, both a buy and sell instruction will be subject to the HL share dealing charges.

Performance

Since launch in May 2013, the ETF has done a good job of tracking the FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield Index, gaining 154.73%*. The tools used by the managers have helped to keep performance tight to the index over the long term.

Over the past 12 months, the ETF has tracked its benchmark closely and risen 9.79%. Remember, past performance isn’t a guide to future returns.

Financials was the best performing global sector, which benefitted the ETF as it has a large amount invested there. Banks have profited from the increased cost of borrowing due to higher interest rates. JPMorgan Chase, the largest bank in the US and the ETF’s biggest holding, reported record profits in 2024.

Dividends globally reached a record high in 2024. Nearly half of the dividend growth came from the financials sector, with particularly strong growth from banks.

The ETF’s yield was 3.05% as of the end of June 2025. Yields aren’t guaranteed and shouldn’t be considered a reliable indicator of future income.

Given Vanguard’s size, experience and expertise running ETFs, this ETF should continue to track the index well in future, though there are no guarantees.

Annual performance growth

Jul 20 – Jul 21

Jul 21 – Jul 22

Jul 22 – Jul 23

Jul 23 – Jul 24

Jul 24 – Jul 25

Vanguard FTSE All-World High Dividend Yield ETF

23.83%

10.05%

5.13%

13.17%

9.79%

Past performance isn't a guide to future returns.
Source: *Lipper IM to 31/07/2025.
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Written by
Danielle Farley
Danielle Farley
Passive Investment Analyst

Danielle is a member of our Fund Research team and is responsible for analysing passive funds and ETFs across all sectors. She has worked at HL since 2018 and draws experience from different areas of the business.

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Article history
Published: 8th August 2025