***Numbers updated November 30, 2025****
As mentioned elsewhere, I rely heavily on all-in-one ETFs in my retirement portolio. New to all-in-ones? Read a bit about them here. While it may seem unwise to have (seemingly) so little diversification, when you buy an all-in-one like XGRO, you are actually getting a piece of THOUSANDS of different assets.
The main all-in-one Canadian ETF that I hold is an 80/20 fund1 called XGRO. There’s nothing special about XGRO other than it being free to trade on the platform I use — there are other 80/20 funds out there (e.g. ZGRO, HGRW). There’s also other all-in-ones with different equity percentages; there’s something for everyone!2
I thought it would be interesting to see what, exactly, is underneath every $100 you invest in XGRO. So by reading XGRO’s ETF description, following the ETF descriptions of what’s inside XGRO, and doing a little math, I came up with the following breakdown:
| Fund | What is it? | How much? | Colour Commentary |
|---|---|---|---|
| ITOT | Broad US stock coverage that tracks the S&P Total Market Index, about 2508 companies (top holdings: Alphabet, Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Broadcom) | $36.42 of your $100 investment (of which ~2$ is in each of Alphabet, Apple, Nvidia, and Microsoft, and another $1 is in each of Amazon and Broadcom) | The Magnificent 7 and 2501 other companies |
| XIC | Broad Canadian stock coverage that tracks the S&P/TSX Capped Composite Index, about 223 companies (top holdings: RBC, Shopify, TD, Enbridge, Brookfield) | $20.68 of your $100 investment (of which RBC gets $1.40, Shopify gets $1.26, TD gets 93 cents) | You want banks? We got banks! |
| XEF | Broad international (Europe, Asia, Australia) stock coverage that tracks the MSCI EAFE Investable Market Index, about 2500 holdings | $19.49 of your $100 investment (of which 24 cents goes to AstraZeneca, 34 cents goes to ASML…) | One of these years, MSCI EAFE is going to have another year like 2017… |
| XBB | 1400 or so investment-grade Canadian bonds that comprise the FTSE Canada Universe Bond Index | $12.26 of your $100 investment (of which $3.89 is in federal bonds, $1.50 is in Ontario bonds, 91 cents is in Canada Housing Trust #, 85 cents is in Quebec bonds | Bonds got a lot of hate in 2023/4, but staying the course has been nice of late |
| XEC | 3000+ emerging market stocks that track the MSCI Emerging Markets Investable Market Index | $4.18 of your $100 investment (of which 41 cents is in Taiwan Semi, 18 cents is in Tencent3…) | “But honey, buying a case of power banks from Alibaba is helping our retirement portfolio” |
| XSH | About 540 short term Canadian Corporate Bonds that track the FTSE Canada Universe + Maple Short Term Corporate Bond Index | $2.96 of your $100 investment (of which 24 cents is in Royal Bank debt, 23 cents is in TD debt, 18 cents is in BMO debt) | You want bank debt? We got bank debt! |
| USIG | Over 10000 (!) US corporate bonds | $1.95 of your $100 investment (of which 4 cents is JP Morgan debt, 3 cents is BoA debt) | No idea how they track 10,000 bonds, but look at the yield4! |
| GOVT | Exposure to 191 US T-Bills | $1.94 of your $100 investment | They say “No pain, no gain”. I guess there’s only minuscule pain in T-Bills5. |
If you were so inclined to run the numbers yourself, I’m pretty sure you’d get something similar to my numbers. It does change daily, mind you. And the percentages are routinely rebalanced, of course.
The big takeaway is that investing in an all-in-one like XGRO provides you with exposure to a bunch of different asset types across many different geographies in one product, including all of the “hot” stocks you read about ad nauseam. No FOMO here!
- A spirited discussion on the wisdom of 80/20 over here: https://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=210178 ↩︎
- More equity=more risk=higher returns. No free lunch. ↩︎
- I desperately wanted the math to work out to “10 cents in Tencent”, but alas ↩︎
- https://stockanalysis.com/etf/usig/dividend/ ↩︎
- No gain. I feel much pain: https://www.google.com/finance/quote/GOVT:BATS?sa=X&window=MAX ↩︎
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