Vanguard World Fund - Certified annual shareholder report for management investment companies

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM N-CSR

 

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT

OF

REGISTERED MANAGEMENT INVESTMENT COMPANIES

 

Investment Company Act file number : 811-1027

 

Name of Registrant: Vanguard World Funds

 

Address of Registrant:

P.O. Box 2600

 

Valley Forge, PA 19482

 

Name and address of agent for service:

Heidi Stam, Esquire

 

P.O. Box 876

 

Valley Forge, PA 19482

 

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (610) 669-1000

 

Date of fiscal year end: August 31

 

Date of reporting period: September 1, 2006–August 31, 2007

 

Item 1: Reports to Shareholders

 



 

 


 

 


>

Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund returned 14.5% for Investor Shares and 14.8% for Admiral Shares for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007.

 

>

The fund’s gain, though significant, fell short of returns for its comparative standards.

 

>

Every sector represented in the fund contributed to its return, with the most substantial boost coming from information technology holdings.

 

Contents

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

1

Chairman’s Letter

2

Advisors’ Report

6

Fund Profile

10

Performance Summary

11

Financial Statements

13

Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

25

About Your Fund’s Expenses

26

Glossary

28

 

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.

 

 


Your Fund’s Total Returns

 

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

Ticker

Total

 

Symbol

Returns

Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund

 

 

Investor Shares

VWUSX

14.5%

Admiral™ Shares 1

VWUAX

14.8   

Russell 1000 Growth Index

 

17.7   

Average Large-Cap Growth Fund 2

 

17.0   

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

 

15.6   

 

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance

August 31, 2006–August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Distributions Per Share

 

Starting

Ending

Income

Capital

 

Share Price

Share Price

Dividends

Gains

Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$17.06

$19.44

$0.087

$0.000

Admiral Shares

44.24

50.42

0.343

0.000

 

 

1   A lower-cost class of shares available to many longtime shareholders and to those with significant investments in the fund.

2   Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

1

 



 

Chairman’s Letter

 

Dear Shareholder,

Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund posted a fiscal-year return that was excellent on an absolute basis but fell a bit short of its comparative benchmarks. For the 12 months ended August 31, 2007, the fund returned 14.5% for Investor Shares and 14.8% for Admiral Shares, compared with 1.9% and 2.2%, respectively, in the prior fiscal year.

Every sector in which the fund invested contributed to the upswing, with information technology stocks playing a particularly prominent role. Although the fund’s return was certainly strong, it did lag the returns of growth stocks in general.

For the U.S. stock market, a nervous finish to the year

U.S. stocks produced a solid return for the fiscal year, despite a midsummer pullback. The market retreated as problems with low-quality mortgage loans rippled through investment portfolios. Financial stocks, which account for a big share of the U.S. market’s value, were the hardest hit as investment banking and consumer lending businesses throttled back.

The broad U.S. stock market returned 15.6% for the year, after hitting a high-water mark in July. Large-capitalization stocks bested small-caps, and growth-oriented stocks outperformed their value-oriented counterparts during the fiscal period, which ended amid a growing aversion to risk. Though not immune from the turmoil in U.S. credit markets, international stocks handily outperformed U.S. stocks for the full 12 months.

Bond market rebounded as investors sought safety

As investors sought refuge from the rough and tumble of stock and corporate bond markets, U.S. Treasury bond prices rose, and yields fell. The declines in yield were most pronounced among Treasury securities with the shortest maturities.

Falling short-term yields helped restore the yield curve—which illustrates the relationship between short- and long-term bond yields—to its typical, upward-sloping pattern. At the start of the period, the curve had been mildly inverted. The broad taxable bond market returned 5.3% for the year. Lacking the boost from the late-summer rally in Treasuries, tax-exempt municipal securities returned less.

Turnaround in tech stocks helped boost the fund’s return

Underpinning the fund’s return during the fiscal year was a strong stock market, despite the subprime mortgages stress toward the end of the period. Within this generally favorable environment, market trends favored large-cap growth stocks, and every sector of the fund’s holdings contributed to its gain.

As has been true for some time, information technology stocks represented the fund’s largest industry weighting during the period, and they contributed significantly to U.S. Growth’s return.

 

 

2

 


 

Market Barometer

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

One Year

Three Years

Five Years

Stocks

 

 

 

Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps)

15.3%

12.8%

12.5%

Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps)

11.4   

14.5   

16.6   

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index (Entire market)

15.6   

13.4   

13.3   

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International)

23.0   

25.2   

22.0   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bonds

 

 

 

Lehman U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market)

5.3%

3.7%

4.3%

Lehman Municipal Bond Index

2.3   

3.5   

4.2   

Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index

5.1   

3.9   

2.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CPI

 

 

 

Consumer Price Index

2.0%

3.1%

2.8%

 

Standouts included Apple (with a 104% return), Google, Cisco Systems, and NVIDIA. The performance of these holdings offset the disappointing returns for some other tech stocks, such as Yahoo, Advanced Micro Devices, and Network Appliances. The overall results from this sector represent a turnaround over the last two years.

Industrial and energy stocks were also significant sources of return for the fund. Its relatively modest holdings in industrials returned more than 20%, while its even smaller position in the surging energy sector returned almost 50%.

In this generally robust environment for growth stocks, the fund’s holdings in the financials sector qualified as a disappointment. Its significantly above-benchmark weighting in investment banks, brokerages, and other financial-services companies helped keep the fund a few steps behind its comparative standards during the past 12 months.

 

Total Returns

 

Ten Years Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

Average

 

Annual Return

U.S. Growth Fund Investor Shares

0.5%

Russell 1000 Growth Index

4.1    

Average Large-Cap Growth Fund 1

4.5    

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

7.1    

 

The figures shown represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor's shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost.

 

1   Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

3

 


A long-term outlook continues to be key

The U.S. Growth Fund invests in quality growth-oriented companies, and the market has certainly rewarded the strategy this past year. The longer-term result shown in the table on page 4 is, obviously, not as appealing. This figure continues to reflect the hangover from the severe bear market of 2000–2002. By contrast, during the past five years, the fund has earned an average of 8.9% despite substantial ups and downs in annual returns.

But I don’t want to dwell on the short term, something we typically urge investors to avoid doing. Good investing is a long-term business that requires us to deliberately ignore short-term results—because the markets can change overnight— and the chatter of “experts” expounding on the latest market trends, over which they have no control and no certain future knowledge.

Long-term investing also means developing a portfolio that’s balanced among asset classes, diversified among investment styles and capitalizations within asset classes, and based on low-cost investment choices. Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund can deliver concentrated exposure to large-cap growth stocks as part of a well-diversified portfolio.

Thank you for entrusting your assets

to Vanguard.

 

Sincerely,

 


John J. Brennan

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

September 14, 2007

 

 

Expense Ratios 1

 

 

 

Your fund compared with its peer group

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average

 

Investor

Admiral

Large-Cap

 

Shares

Shares

Growth Fund

U.S. Growth Fund

0.50%

0.27%

1.43%

 

 

1   Fund expense ratios reflect the 12 months ended August 31, 2007. Peer-group expense ratio is derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and captures information through year-end 2006.

 

4

 


Advisors’ Report

During the fiscal year ended

August 31, 2007, the Investor Shares of Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund returned 14.5%, and the lower-cost Admiral Shares returned 14.8%. This performance reflects the combined efforts of your fund’s two independent advisors. The use of multiple advisors provides exposure to distinct, yet complementary, investment approaches, enhancing the fund’s diversification.

The advisors, the amount and percentage of fund assets each manages, and a brief description of their investment strategies are presented in the table below. Each advisor has also prepared a discussion of the investment environment that existed during the fiscal year and of how the portfolio’s positioning reflects this assessment.

 

AllianceBernstein L.P.

Portfolio Manager:

Alan Levi, Senior Vice President

In the 12 months ended August 31, 2007, the investment performance of the AllianceBernstein-managed portion of Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund, while respectable in absolute terms, lagged that of the growth benchmark. This primarily reflected the underperformance of the fund’s holdings in financials and, to a lesser extent, health care over the period.

As anticipated, the domestic economy was characterized by moderate, albeit slower, growth. This largely reflected decelerating consumption, particularly within the residential and auto sectors. In contrast,

 

Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund Investment Advisors

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fund Assets Managed

 

 

Investment Advisor

%

$ Million

 

Investment Strategy

AllianceBernstein L.P.

68

3,830

 

Uses a fundamentally based, research-driven

 

 

 

 

approach to large-cap growth investing. The

 

 

 

 

advisor seeks to build a diversified portfolio

 

 

 

 

of successful, well- managed companies with

 

 

 

 

sustainable competitive advantages and

 

 

 

 

superior prospects for growth not fully

 

 

 

 

reflected in relative valuation.

 

 

 

 

 

William Blair & Company, L.L.C.

29

1,637

 

Uses a fundamental investment approach

 

 

 

 

in pursuit of superior long-term investment

 

 

 

 

results from growth-oriented companies with

 

 

 

 

leadership positions and strong market presence.

Cash Investments 1

3

166

 

 

1   These short-term reserves are invested by Vanguard in equity index products to simulate investment in stocks. Each advisor may also maintain a modest cash position.

 

5

 


a number of important international economies exhibited surprisingly robust rates of expansion. The combination of slowing domestic consumption, stronger overseas growth, and a weaker U.S. dollar led to accelerating exports and an improving trade balance.

Corporate profits have also decelerated, with year-to-year growth dropping below 10% for the past two quarters—the slowest growth over the past five years. However, within these results there has been an increasingly striking divergence: A number of leading multinational companies exhibited accelerating overseas revenues, margins, and profits, which in some cases produced better-than-anticipated earnings growth overall.

This trend is significant because of the growing international exposure of many U.S. multinationals over the past five years, occurring in tandem with the most striking differential between overseas and domestic economic growth seen in many years. This environment has benefited a number of our holdings, many of which are preeminent global competitors that derive significant and increasing proportions of their revenues from international markets.

While disappointed with our portfolio’s relative performance for the period, we continue to be encouraged by the fundamental strength and earnings growth of the vast majority of our holdings. Accordingly, we have not repositioned the portfolio to any great degree, aside from reducing our exposure to the financial services sector earlier in the year and increasing our exposure to industrials and capital goods.

Of our ten largest sales during the 12 months, only three were undertaken to eliminate positions, and of those, only one reflected fundamental concerns. Five of the ten moves reflected profit-taking to manage the size of our positions in strongly performing stocks that still remain among our ten largest holdings.

The portfolio has continued to exhibit strong and encouraging fundamental success, consistent with the pattern of the past several years. With second-quarter results behind us, the portfolio has continued to achieve strong absolute and relative earnings growth, with generally rising consensus earnings forecasts.

The protracted and largely indiscriminate underperformance of growth stocks over the past seven years has produced an extraordinary compression in valuations. Given the developing cyclical deceleration of overall corporate profits, we have anticipated that relative earnings growth—and its perceived sustainability—would increasingly be prized by investors. Moreover, in an environment of heightened uncertainty, it seems reasonable to expect that an increased valuation premium will be accorded to companies with leading global positions and superior competitive attributes.

 

In this environment, factors such as earnings growth, rising consensus estimates, and demonstrated capital strength have become a more pronounced determinant of relative investment performance than has been the case over recent years. Accordingly, our focus continues to be on individual company fundamentals, as we seek to own a portfolio of companies with strong business franchises, sustainable competitive advantages, and, we believe, discernibly superior growth prospects.

William Blair & Company, L.L.C.

Portfolio Manager:

John F. Jostrand, CFA, Principal

A dramatic change occurred during the fiscal year not only in sector leadership but also in capitalization and style. For the first time in several years, growth stocks dominated value stocks, and large-caps outperformed smaller-caps.

 

6

 


The global economy continued to show moderating growth, and global inflation remained low. Investors reacted by favoring companies that can consistently increase earnings in a slower economic environment.

 

Although energy prices remained very volatile during the past year, the energy sector was one of the stronger performers. Our holdings of Schlumberger, an oil services company, were one of the major contributors to performance. Schlumberger has been able to capitalize on the increasing demands of oil producers for servicing and equipment maintenance.

In the first part of the fiscal year, consumer spending was supported by appreciating real estate prices, low gasoline prices, and easy credit; in the latter part of the year, consumers were faced with declining real estate prices, higher gasoline prices, and tighter credit—but this did little to dampen their spending. Consumer stocks, particularly apparel and textile holdings such as Nike, were some of the strongest performers during the year.

The best-performing sector, information technology, had been lagging for some time. Technology came back strongly during the year because of a confluence of factors, including increasing demand for new technology to accommodate Internet demands; strong and unleveraged balance sheets, revealing a discipline that was lacking in the early 2000s; and strong cash flow. Our holdings in EMC, which makes storage devices, and Cisco Systems, a manufacturer of networking devices, were the two largest contributors to performance for the year.

The portfolio continues to be positioned to take advantage of valuation compressions between companies that are likely to increase earnings over the short term and those with truly sustainable long-term earnings growth rates. Although the immediate economic environment is changing because of tightening credit, declines in housing prices, and a slowing in corporate buyout activity, we believe that investors will begin to reward quality companies that can consistently increase earnings in various economic environments. We feel that our continued overweighting in high-quality stocks in information technology and energy will be rewarded as other investors seek out the strong earnings growth opportunities presented by these industries.

 

7

 


Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

70

701

4,898

Median Market Cap

$41.2B

$35.7B

$33.3B

Price/Earnings Ratio

22.7x

20.8x

17.5x

Price/Book Ratio

3.9x

4.3x

2.8x

Yield

 

1.1%

1.7%

Investor Shares

0.5%

 

 

Admiral Shares

0.7%

 

 

Return on Equity

20.0%

21.2%

18.7%

Earnings Growth Rate

27.5%

22.8%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

8.3%

0.0%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

51%

Expense Ratio

 

Investor Shares

0.50%

 

 

Admiral Shares

0.27%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

1%

 

Sector Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Consumer Discretionary

8%

13%

11%

Consumer Staples

5   

10   

8   

Energy

6   

8   

11   

Financials

17   

7   

20   

Health Care

20   

16   

11   

Industrials

12   

13   

12   

Information Technology

29   

28   

16   

Materials

2   

3   

4   

Telecommunication Services

0   

1   

3   

Utilities

0   

1   

4   

Short-Term Reserves

1%

—   

—   

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Comparative Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

0.86

0.79

Beta

1.08

1.06

 

 

8

 


Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

 

Schlumberger Ltd.

oil and gas equipment

 

and services

4.5%

Cisco Systems, Inc.

communications

 

 

equipment

4.1   

Danaher Corp.

industrial machinery

4.0   

Genentech, Inc.

biotechnology

3.3   

Google Inc.

internet software

 

 

and services

3.3   

Apple Inc.

computer hardware

3.3   

Teva Pharmaceutical

 

 

Industries Ltd.

pharmaceuticals

2.6   

Comcast Corp.

broadcasting and

 

 

cable television

2.6   

The Boeing Co.

aerospace and

 

 

defense

2.5   

American International

 

 

Group, Inc.

multi-line insurance

2.5   

Top Ten

 

32.7%

 

 

Investment Focus

 


 

1   Russell 1000 Growth Index.

2   Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index.

3   For an explanation of R-squared, beta, and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 28.

4   “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

9

 


Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: August 31, 1997–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Five Years

Ten Years

Investment

U.S. Growth Fund Investor Shares 1

14.50%

8.86%

0.53%

$10,541

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

15.59   

13.28   

7.09   

19,829

Russell 1000 Growth Index

17.70   

10.46   

4.14   

14,999

Average Large-Cap Growth Fund 2

16.96   

9.41   

4.51   

15,542

 

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

Since

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Five Years

Inception 3

Investment

U.S. Growth Fund Admiral Shares

14.80%

9.11%

0.61%

$103,751

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

15.59    

13.28    

6.78    

148,678

Russell 1000 Growth Index

17.70    

10.46    

3.07    

120,081

 

 

1   Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

2   Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

3   Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the inception date for Admiral Shares: August 13, 2001.

 

10

 


Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): August 31, 1997–August 31, 2007

 


 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

Inception Date

One Year

Five Years

Ten Years

Investor Shares 1

1/6/1959

15.50%

7.40%

0.45%

Admiral Shares

8/13/2001

15.78   

7.64   

0.57 2    

 

 

1   Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

2   Since inception.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on pages 18 and 19 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

11

 


Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (96.7%) 1

 

 

Consumer Discretionary (8.1%)

 

 

*

Comcast Corp. Class A

5,647,250

147,337

 

Johnson Controls, Inc.

922,685

104,355

*

Kohl’s Corp.

1,639,403

97,217

*

Coach, Inc.

1,079,850

48,086

 

Staples, Inc.

1,843,150

43,775

 

Omnicom Group Inc.

298,834

15,220

 

 

 

455,990

Consumer Staples (4.9%)

 

 

 

The Procter & Gamble Co.

2,064,020

134,801

 

PepsiCo, Inc.

883,986

60,138

 

Walgreen Co.

1,264,893

57,009

 

Wal-Mart de Mexico SA

 

 

 

de Cv

656,200

23,311

 

 

 

275,259

Energy (5.9%)

 

 

 

Schlumberger Ltd.

2,623,880

253,203

 

Apache Corp.

535,170

41,411

 

Suncor Energy, Inc.

449,835

40,211

 

 

 

334,825

Financials (16.0%)

 

 

 

American International

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

2,106,650

139,039

 

Legg Mason Inc.

1,218,920

105,827

 

CME Group, Inc.

170,865

94,796

 

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

1,950,510

86,837

 

Franklin Resources Corp.

658,760

86,805

 

Charles Schwab Corp.

4,188,025

82,923

 

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

1,105,968

81,510

*

CB Richard Ellis Group, Inc.

2,571,815

75,920

 

The Goldman Sachs

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

401,515

70,671

 

Lehman Brothers

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

536,690

29,427

*

IntercontinentalExchange Inc.

170,730

24,904

 

Morgan Stanley

386,680

24,117

 

 

12

 


 

 

 

 

902,776

 

Health Care (19.9%)

 

 

 

*

Genentech, Inc.

2,515,380

188,176

 

 

Teva Pharmaceutical

 

 

 

 

Industries Ltd.

 

 

 

 

Sponsored ADR

3,454,760

148,555

 

*

Gilead Sciences, Inc.

3,722,630

135,392

 

*

WellPoint Inc.

1,638,212

132,023

 

 

Alcon, Inc.

841,740

113,854

 

*

Medco Health

 

 

 

 

Solutions, Inc.

1,061,710

90,723

 

 

Merck & Co., Inc.

1,349,260

67,692

 

*

Celgene Corp.

933,370

59,932

 

 

C.R. Bard, Inc.

575,690

48,007

 

 

Schering-Plough Corp.

1,507,850

45,266

 

 

Allergan, Inc.

621,880

37,319

 

 

Aetna Inc.

398,940

20,310

 

 

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

259,250

19,947

 

*

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.

218,786

11,865

 

 

 

 

1,119,061

 

Industrials (12.0%)

 

 

 

 

Danaher Corp.

2,886,951

224,200

 

 

The Boeing Co.

1,449,435

140,160

 

 

Emerson Electric Co.

1,660,060

81,725

 

 

Rockwell Collins, Inc.

933,570

64,295

 

 

United Technologies Corp.

758,810

56,630

 

 

ABB Ltd. ADR

1,622,690

40,015

 

 

Rockwell Automation, Inc.

354,820

25,001

 

 

Expeditors International of

 

 

 

 

Washington, Inc.

544,850

24,066

 

 

General Electric Co.

517,390

20,111

 

 

 

 

676,203

 

Information Technology (28.6%)

 

 

 

Communications Equipment (7.0%)

 

*

Cisco Systems, Inc.

7,298,138

232,957

 

 

QUALCOMM Inc.

3,331,585

132,897

 

 

Corning, Inc.

1,312,405

30,671

 

 

Computers & Peripherals (6.1%)

 

 

*

Apple Inc.

1,333,920

184,721

*

Sun Microsystems, Inc.

12,861,965

68,940

*

EMC Corp.

2,814,830

55,340

*

Network Appliance, Inc.

1,285,180

35,805

 

 

 

 

 

Internet Software & Services (5.0%)

 

*

Google Inc.

359,925

185,451

*

eBay Inc.

1,979,150

67,489

*

VeriSign, Inc.

823,960

26,531

 

 

 

 

 

IT Services (2.8%)

 

 

 

Paychex, Inc.

1,227,776

54,550

 

Infosys Technologies

 

 

 

Ltd. ADR

1,079,080

51,483

*

Cognizant Technology

 

 

 

 

13

 


 

 

Solutions Corp.

700,320

51,480

 

 

 

 

 

Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment (6.2%)

*

NVIDIA Corp.

2,072,390

106,023

*

Broadcom Corp.

2,660,690

91,794

 

Taiwan Semiconductor

 

 

 

Manufacturing Co.

 

 

 

Ltd. ADR

4,972,425

49,326

 

Intel Corp.

1,588,620

40,907

 

Texas Instruments, Inc.

877,410

30,042

 

Maxim Integrated

 

 

 

Products, Inc.

973,910

29,227

 

 

 

 

 

Software (1.5%)

 

 

*

Adobe Systems, Inc.

1,241,885

53,091

*

Autodesk, Inc.

723,010

33,490

 

 

 

1,612,215

 

Materials (1.3%)

 

 

 

Praxair, Inc.

947,190

71,664

 

 

 

 

 

Exchange-Traded Fund (0.0%)

 

 

 

2 Vanguard Growth ETF

3,100

193

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Common Stocks

 

 

 

(Cost $4,634,423)

 

5,448,186

 

Temporary Cash Investments (4.3%) 1

 

 

Money Market Fund (4.0%)

 

 

 

3 Vanguard Market Liquidity

 

 

 

Fund, 5.247%

226,700,652

226,701

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Face

 

 

 

Amount

 

 

 

($000)

 

 

U.S. Agency Obligation (0.3%)

 

 

 

4 Federal National

 

 

 

Mortgage Assn.

 

 

 

5 5.204%, 10/3/07

18,000

17,921

 

Total Temporary Cash Investments

 

 

(Cost $244,618)

 

244,622

 

Total Investments (101.0%)

 

 

 

(Cost $4,879,041)

 

5,692,808

 

Other Assets and Liabilities (–1.0%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note C

 

47,706

 

Liabilities

 

(107,253)

 

 

 

(59,547)

 

Net Assets (100%)

 

5,633,261

 

 

14

 


At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 6

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

11,085,679

Undistributed Net Investment Income

11,009

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(6,274,628)

Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

 

Investment Securities

813,767

Futures Contracts

(2,566)

Net Assets

5,633,261

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 221,592,916 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

4,308,003

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Investor Shares

$19.44

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 26,284,671 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

1,325,258

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$50.42

 

 

   See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.

*    Non-income-producing security.

1   The fund invests a portion of its cash reserves in equity markets through the use of index futures contracts. After giving effect to futures investments, the fund’s effective common stock and temporary cash investment positions represent 99.6% and 1.4%, respectively, of net assets. See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements.

2   Considered an affiliated company of the fund as the issuer is another member of The Vanguard Group.

3   Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

4   The issuer operates under a congressional charter; its securities are neither issued nor guaranteed by the U.S. government. If needed, access to additional funding from the U.S. Treasury (beyond the issuer's line of credit) would require congressional action.

5   Securities with a value of $17,921,000 have been segregated as initial margin for open futures contracts.

6   See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

ADR—American Depositary Receipt.

 

15

 


Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends 1

48,539

Interest 1

13,259

Security Lending

1,902

Total Income

63,700

Expenses

 

Investment Advisory Fees—Note B

 

Basic Fee

8,692

Performance Adjustment

(432)

The Vanguard Group—Note C

 

Management and Administrative

 

Investor Shares

15,199

Admiral Shares

1,330

Marketing and Distribution

 

Investor Shares

838

Admiral Shares

226

Custodian Fees

45

Auditing Fees

23

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Investor Shares

93

Admiral Shares

11

Trustees’ Fees and Expenses

10

Total Expenses

26,035

Expenses Paid Indirectly—Note D

(717)

Net Expenses

25,318

Net Investment Income

38,382

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

 

Investment Securities Sold 1

588,129

Futures Contracts

19,463

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

607,592

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

 

Investment Securities

156,488

Futures Contracts

(6,261)

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

150,227

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

796,201

 

 

1   Dividend income, interest income, and realized net gain (loss) from affiliated companies of the fund were $2,000, $12,225,000, and $0, respectively.

 

16

 


Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

38,382

24,196

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

607,592

295,312

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

150,227

(200,387)

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

796,201

119,121

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Investor Shares

(21,929)

(9,864)

Admiral Shares

(9,238)

(4,703)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Investor Shares

Admiral Shares

Total Distributions

(31,167)

(14,567)

Capital Share Transactions—Note G

 

 

Investor Shares

(818,275)

(415,210)

Admiral Shares

(105,323)

242,974

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

(923,598)

(172,236)

Total Increase (Decrease)

(158,564)

(67,682)

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

5,791,825

5,859,507

End of Period 1

5,633,261

5,791,825

 

 

1   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $11,009,000 and $3,794,000.

 

17

 


Financial Highlights

 

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For a Share Outstanding

Year Ended August 31,

Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$17.06

$16.77

$14.39

$14.00

$12.92

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.113

.059

.040 1

.028

.040

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

2.354

.266

2.385

.409

1.082

Total from Investment Operations

2.467

.325

2.425

.437

1.122

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.087)

(.035)

(.045)

(.047)

(.042)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.087)

(.035)

(.045)

(.047)

(.042)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$19.44

$17.06

$16.77

$14.39

$14.00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 2

14.50%

1.93%

16.86%

3.11%

8.73%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$4,308

$4,530

$4,848

$5,503

$5,892

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets 3

0.50%

0.58%

0.55%

0.53%

0.55%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

0.60%

0.34%

0.30% 1

0.19%

0.32%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

51%

48%

38%

71%

47%

 

 

1   Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.017 and 0.11%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

2   Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

3   Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of (0.01%), 0.02%, (0.02%), (0.03%), and (0.02%).

 

18

 


Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For a Share Outstanding

Year Ended August 31,

Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$44.24

$43.47

$37.29

$36.28

$33.46

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.416

.271

.226 1

.147

.164

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

6.107

.677

6.163

1.052

2.811

Total from Investment Operations

6.523

.948

6.389

1.199

2.975

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.343)

(.178)

(.209)

(.189)

(.155)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.343)

(.178)

(.209)

(.189)

(.155)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$50.42

$44.24

$43.47

$37.29

$36.28

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

14.80%

2.16%

17.16%

3.29%

8.95%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$1,325

$1,262

$1,012

$824

$1,071

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets 2

0.27%

0.34%

0.32%

0.32%

0.37%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

0.83%

0.58%

0.53% 1

0.40%

0.50%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

51%

48%

38%

71%

47%

 

 

1   Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.045 and 0.11%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

2   Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of (0.01%), 0.02%, (0.02%), (0.03%), and (0.02%). See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

19

 


Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Investor Shares and Admiral Shares. Investor Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. Admiral Shares are designed for investors who meet certain administrative, service, tenure, and account-size criteria.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value. Temporary cash investments acquired over 60 days to maturity are valued using the latest bid prices or using valuations based on a matrix system (which considers such factors as security prices, yields, maturities, and ratings), both as furnished by independent pricing services. Other temporary cash investments are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value.

2. Futures Contracts: The fund uses index futures contracts to a limited extent, with the objective of maintaining full exposure to the stock market while maintaining liquidity. The fund may purchase or sell futures contracts to achieve a desired level of investment, whether to accommodate portfolio turnover or cash flows from capital share transactions. The primary risks associated with the use of futures contracts are imperfect correlation between changes in market values of stocks held by the fund and the prices of futures contracts, and the possibility of an illiquid market.

Futures contracts are valued at their quoted daily settlement prices. The aggregate principal amounts of the contracts are not recorded in the Statement of Net Assets . Fluctuations in the value of the contracts are recorded in the Statement of Net Assets as an asset (liability) and in the Statement of Operations as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) until the contracts are closed, when they are recorded as realized futures gains (losses).

3. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

4. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

5. Security Lending: The fund may lend its securities to qualified institutional borrowers to earn additional income. Security loans are required to be secured at all times by collateral at least equal to the market value of securities loaned. The fund invests cash collateral received in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, and records a liability for the return of the collateral, during the period the securities are on loan. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less expenses associated with the loan.

6. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class

 

20

 


separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. AllianceBernstein L.P. and William Blair & Company, L.L.C., each provide investment advisory services to a portion of the fund for a fee calculated at an annual percentage rate of average net assets managed by the advisor. The basic fee for AllianceBernstein L.P. is subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance for the preceding three years relative to the Russell 1000 Growth Index. The basic fee for William Blair & Company is subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance since June 1, 2004, relative to the Russell 1000 Growth Index.

The Vanguard Group manages the cash reserves of the portfolio on an at-cost basis.

For the year ended August 31, 2007, the aggregate investment advisory fee represented an effective annual basic rate of 0.15% of the fund’s average net assets before a decrease of $432,000 (0.01%) based on performance.

C. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $497,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.50% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

D. The fund has asked its investment advisors to direct certain security trades, subject to obtaining the best price and execution, to brokers who have agreed to rebate to the fund part of the commissions generated. Such rebates are used solely to reduce the fund’s management and administrative expenses. For the year ended August 31, 2007, these arrangements reduced the fund’s expenses by $717,000 (an annual rate of 0.01% of average net assets).

E. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $27,733,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $6,272,500,000 to offset future net capital gains of $2,713,026,000 through August 31, 2010, $2,548,333,000 through August 31, 2011, $887,490,000 through August 31, 2012, and $123,651,000 through August 31, 2013.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $4,883,052,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $809,756,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $945,834,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $136,078,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

At August 31, 2007, the aggregate settlement value of open futures contracts expiring in September 2007 and the related unrealized appreciation (depreciation) were:

 

 

 

 

($000)

 

 

Aggregate

Unrealized

 

Number of

Settlement

Appreciation

Futures Contracts

Long Contracts

Value

(Depreciation)

E-mini S&P 500 Index

846

62,464

1,465

S&P 500 Index

151

55,745

(1,835)

S&P Mid-Cap 400 Index

73

31,580

(1,683)

E-mini S&P Mid-Cap 400 Index

155

13,411

(513)

 

 

21

 


 

Unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on open futures contracts is required to be treated as realized gain (loss) for tax purposes.

F. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $2,852,673,000 of investment securities and sold $3,616,946,000 of investment securities other than temporary cash investments.

G. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were:

 

 

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

407,021

21,765

 

766,902

43,413

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

21,402

1,180

 

9,625

531

Redeemed

(1,246,698)

(66,948)

 

(1,191,737)

(67,508)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Investor Shares

(818,275)

(44,003)

 

(415,210)

(23,564)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

232,243

4,793

 

451,855

9,832

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

8,540

182

 

4,305

92

Redeemed

(346,106)

(7,213)

 

(213,186)

(4,675)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

(105,323)

(2,238)

 

242,974

5,249

 

H. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

 

22

 


Report of Independent Registered

Public Accounting Firm

 

To the Trustees of Vanguard World Funds and the Shareholders of Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of net assets and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund (the "Fund") at August 31, 2007, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as "financial statements") are the responsibility of the Fund's management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2007 by correspondence with the custodian and broker and by agreement to the underlying ownership records for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

 

October 10, 2007

 

 


Special 2007 tax information (unaudited) for Vanguard U.S. Growth Fund

This information for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007, is included pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund distributed $31,167,000 of qualified dividend income to shareholders during the fiscal year.

For corporate shareholders, 100% of investment income (dividend income plus short-term gains, if any) qualifies for the dividends-received deduction.

 

23

 


Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

This table presents returns for your fund both before and after taxes. The after-tax returns are shown in two ways: (1) assuming that an investor owned the fund during the entire period and paid taxes on the fund’s distributions, and (2) assuming that an investor paid taxes on the fund’s distributions and sold all shares at the end of each period.

Calculations are based on the highest individual federal income tax and capital gains tax rates in effect at the times of the distributions and the hypothetical sales. State and local taxes were not considered. After-tax returns reflect any qualified dividend income, using actual prior-year figures and estimates for 2007. (In the example, returns after the sale of fund shares may be higher than those assuming no sale. This occurs when the sale would have produced a capital loss. The calculation assumes that the investor received a tax deduction for the loss.)

The table shows returns for Investor Shares only; returns for other share classes will differ. Please note that your actual after-tax returns will depend on your tax situation and may differ from those shown. Also note that if you own the fund in a tax-deferred account, such as an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan, this information does not apply to you. Such accounts are not subject to current taxes.

Finally, keep in mind that a fund’s performance—whether before or after taxes—does not guarantee future results.

 

Average Annual Total Returns: U.S. Growth Fund Investor Shares 1

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

One

Five

Ten

 

Year

Years

Years

Returns Before Taxes

14.50%

8.86%

0.53%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

14.42   

8.79   

–0.33   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

9.52   

7.68   

0.35   

 

 

1   Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

 

24

 


About Your Fund’s Expenses

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

A fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. This figure is known as the expense ratio. The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period.

The table below illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

1. Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The “Ending Account Value” shown is derived from the fund’s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period.”

2. Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return. This section is intended to help you compare your fund’s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

 

Six Months Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

Beginning

Ending

Expenses

 

Account Value

Account Value

Paid During

U.S. Growth Fund

2/28/2007

8/31/2007

Period 1

Based on Actual Fund Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,064.62

$2.39

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,065.96

1.25

Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,022.89

$2.35

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,024.00

1.22

 

 

1   The calculations are based on expenses incurred in the most recent six-month period. The fund's annualized six-month expense ratios for that period are 0.46% for Investor Shares and 0.24% for Admiral Shares. The dollar amounts shown as “Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense ratio multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

 

25

 


Note that the expenses shown in the table on page 26 are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include the account service fee described in the prospectus. If such a fee were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not charge transaction fees, such as purchase or redemption fees, nor does it carry a “sales load.”

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

 

26

 


Glossary

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. A fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition below). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

Earnings Growth Rate. The average annual rate of growth in earnings over the past five years for the stocks now in a fund.

Expense Ratio. The percentage of a fund’s average net assets used to pay its annual administrative and advisory expenses. These expenses directly reduce returns to investors.

Foreign Holdings. The percentage of a fund represented by stocks or depositary receipts of companies based outside the United States.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

Median Market Cap. An indicator of the size of companies in which a fund invests; the midpoint of market capitalization (market price x shares outstanding) of a fund’s stocks, weighted by the proportion of the fund’s assets invested in each stock. Stocks representing half of the fund’s assets have market capitalizations above the median, and the rest are below it.

Price/Book Ratio. The share price of a stock divided by its net worth, or book value, per share. For a fund, the weighted average price/book ratio of the stocks it holds.

Price/Earnings Ratio. The ratio of a stock’s current price to its per-share earnings over the past year. For a fund, the weighted average P/E of the stocks it holds. P/E is an indicator of market expectations about corporate prospects; the higher the P/E, the greater the expectations for a company’s future growth.

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0.

Return on Equity. The annual average rate of return generated by a company during the past five years for each dollar of shareholder’s equity (net income divided by shareholder’s equity). For a fund, the weighted average return on equity for the companies whose stocks it holds.

Short-Term Reserves. The percentage of a fund invested in highly liquid, short-term securities that can be readily converted to cash.

Turnover Rate. An indication of the fund’s trading activity. Funds with high turnover rates incur higher transaction costs and may be more likely to distribute capital gains (which may be taxable to investors). The turnover rate excludes in-kind transactions, which have minimal impact on costs.

Yield. A snapshot of a fund’s income from interest and dividends. The yield, expressed as a percentage of the fund’s net asset value, is based on income earned over the past 30 days and is annualized, or projected forward for the coming year. The index yield is based on the current annualized rate of income provided by securities in the index.

 

27

 


 

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The People Who Govern Your Fund

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals.

Our independent board members bring distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service to their task of working with Vanguard officers to establish the policies and oversee the activities of the funds. Among board members’ responsibilities are selecting investment advisors for the funds; monitoring fund operations, performance, and costs; reviewing contracts; nominating and selecting new trustees/directors; and electing Vanguard officers.

Each trustee serves a fund until its termination; or until the trustee’s retirement, resignation, or death; or otherwise as specified in the fund’s organizational documents. Any trustee may be removed at a shareholders’ meeting by a vote representing two-thirds of the net asset value of all shares of the fund together with shares of other Vanguard funds organized within the same trust. The table on these two pages shows information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. The mailing address of the trustees and officers is P.O. Box 876, Valley Forge, PA 19482.

 

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer, and Trustee

 

 

John J. Brennan 1

 

Born 1954

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive

Trustee since May 1987;

Officer, and Director/Trustee of The Vanguard Group, Inc., and of each of the investment

Chairman of the Board and

companies served by The Vanguard Group.

Chief Executive Officer

 

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

Independent Trustees

 

 

 

Charles D. Ellis

 

Born 1937

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Applecore Partners (pro bono ventures

Trustee since January 2001

in education); Senior Advisor to Greenwich Associates (international business strategy

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

consulting); Successor Trustee of Yale University; Overseer of the Stern School of Business

 

at New York University; Trustee of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.

 

 

Rajiv L. Gupta

 

Born 1945

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, and

Trustee since December 2001 2

Chief Executive Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Board Member of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

the American Chemistry Council; Director of Tyco International, Ltd. (diversified

 

manufacturing and services) since 2005; Trustee of Drexel University and of the

 

Chemical Heritage Foundation.

 

 

Amy Gutmann

 

Born 1949

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President of the University of

Trustee since June 2006

Pennsylvania since 2004; Professor in the School of Arts and Sciences, Annenberg School

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

for Communication, and Graduate School of Education of the University of Pennsylvania

 

since 2004; Provost (2001–2004) and Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics and

 

the University Center for Human Values (1990–2004), Princeton University; Director of

 

Carnegie Corporation of New York since 2005 and of Schuylkill River Development

 

Corporation and Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce since 2004.

 

 

 


JoAnn Heffernan Heisen

 

Born 1950

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate Vice President and

Trustee since July 1998

Chief Global Diversity Officer since 2006, Vice President and Chief Information

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Officer (1997–2005), and Member of the Executive Committee of Johnson &

 

Johnson (pharmaceuticals/consumer products); Director of the University Medical

 

Center at Princeton and Women’s Research and Education Institute.

 

 

André F. Perold

 

Born 1952

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Gund Professor of Finance

Trustee since December 2004

and Banking, Harvard Business School; Senior Associate Dean, Director of Faculty

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Recruiting, and Chair of Finance Faculty, Harvard Business School; Director and Chairman

 

of UNX, Inc. (equities trading firm) since 2003; Chair of the Investment Committee of

 

HighVista Strategies LLC (private investment firm) since 2005.

 

 

Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.

 

Born 1941

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, Chief Executive

Trustee since January 1993

Officer, and Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Director

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/aircraft systems and services).

 

 

 

 

J. Lawrence Wilson

 

Born 1936

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Retired Chairman and Chief Executive

Trustee since April 1985

Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Director of Cummins Inc. (diesel engines) and

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

AmerisourceBergen Corp. (pharmaceutical distribution); Trustee of Vanderbilt University

 

and of Culver Educational Foundation.

 

 

Executive Officers 1

 

 

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Born 1957

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.;

Treasurer since July 1998

Treasurer of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard Group.

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

 

 

Heidi Stam

 

Born 1956

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing Director of The Vanguard

Secretary since July 2005

Group, Inc., since 2006; General Counsel of The Vanguard Group since 2005; Secretary of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

The Vanguard Group, and of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard

 

Group, since 2005; Principal of The Vanguard Group (1997–2006).

 

Vanguard Senior Management Team

 

 

 

 

 

 

R. Gregory Barton

Kathleen C. Gubanich

F. William McNabb, III

Ralph K. Packard

Mortimer J. Buckley

Paul A. Heller

Michael S. Miller

George U. Sauter

 

Founder

 

John C. Bogle

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996

 

 

1   Officers of the funds are “interested persons” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940.

2   December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.

More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information, available from The Vanguard Group.

 

 



 

P.O. Box 2600

Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

Connect with Vanguard ® > www.vanguard.com

 

 

Fund Information > 800-662-7447

Vanguard, Admiral, Connect with Vanguard, and the ship

 

logo are trademarks of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739

 

 

All other marks are the exclusive property of their

Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036

respective owners.

 

 

 

 

Text Telephone for People

All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc.

With Hearing Impairment > 800-952-3335

or Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.

 

 

 

You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting

 

guidelines by visiting our website, www.vanguard.com,

This material may be used in conjunction

and searching for “proxy voting guidelines,” or by calling

with the offering of shares of any Vanguard

Vanguard at 800-662-2739. They are also available from

fund only if preceded or accompanied by

the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov. In addition, you may

the fund’s current prospectus.

obtain a free report on how your fund voted the proxies for

 

securities it owned during the 12 months ended June 30.

 

To get the report, visit either www.vanguard.com

 

or www.sec.gov.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You can review and copy information about your fund

 

at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C.

 

To find out more about this public service, call the SEC

 

at 202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also

 

available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive

 

copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a

 

request in either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to

 

publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the

 

Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange

 

Commission, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© 2007 The Vanguard Group, Inc.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.

 

 

 

Q230 102007

 

 

 

 




 

 


>  Vanguard International Growth Fund returned about 21% for its fiscal year, capitalizing on the general strength of international stock markets.

 

>  The fund’s emerging-markets stocks delivered exceptional returns.

 

>  Midsummer turmoil in the U.S. stock and corporate bond markets reverberated throughout global financial markets, though the effects appeared to diminish by the end of August.

 

Contents

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

1

Chairman’s Letter

2

Advisors’ Report

6

Fund Profile

10

Performance Summary

12

Financial Statements

14

Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

28

About Your Fund’s Expenses

29

Glossary

31

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.

 

 


Your Fund’s Total Returns

 

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

Ticker

Total

 

Symbol

Returns

Vanguard International Growth Fund

 

 

Investor Shares

VWIGX

20.9%

Admiral™ Shares 1

VWILX

21.1   

MSCI EAFE Index

 

18.7   

Average International Fund 2

 

19.6   

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA

 

23.0   

 

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance

August 31, 2006–August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Distributions Per Share

 

Starting

Ending

Income

Capital

 

Share Price

Share Price

Dividends

Gains

Vanguard International Growth Fund

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$23.97

$26.13

$0.530

$2.036

Admiral Shares

76.36

83.26

1.832

6.478

 

 

1   A lower-cost class of shares available to many longtime shareholders and to those with significant investments in the fund.

2   Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

1

 



 

Chairman’s Letter

 

Dear Shareholder,

Although the markets hit air pockets in the summer, international equities delivered excellent returns for the 12 months ended August 31, 2007. Vanguard International Growth Fund returned about 21%—ahead of its peer group’s average return and the return of developed international markets, but a bit behind the 23% return of all international markets.

The fund’s strength was broad-based, with unusually robust gains from emerging economies in Asia and Latin America. In both developed and developing markets, the fund’s basic industrial companies—raw-materials producers, heavy-machinery makers—also produced exceptional returns.

If you invest in the fund through a taxable account, page 28 shows after-tax returns for investors in the highest tax bracket.

For the U.S. stock market, a nervous finish to the year

U.S. stocks produced a solid return for the fiscal year, despite a midsummer pullback. The market retreated as problems with low-quality mortgage loans rippled through investment portfolios. Financial stocks, which account for a big share of the U.S. market’s value, were the hardest hit as investment banking and consumer lending businesses throttled back.

The broad U.S. stock market returned 15.6% for the year, after hitting a high-water mark in July. Large-capitalization stocks bested small-caps, and growth-oriented stocks outperformed their value-oriented counterparts during the fiscal period, which ended amid a growing aversion to risk. Though not immune from the turmoil in U.S. credit markets, international stocks handily outperformed U.S. stocks for the full 12 months.

Bond markets rebounded as investors sought safety

As investors sought refuge from the rough and tumble of stock and corporate bond markets, U.S. Treasury bond prices rose, and yields fell. The declines in yield were most pronounced among Treasury securities with the shortest maturities.

Falling short-term yields helped restore the yield curve—which illustrates the relationship between short- and long-term bond yields—to its typical, upward-sloping pattern. At the start of the period, the curve had been mildly inverted. The broad taxable bond market returned 5.3% for the year. Lacking the boost from the late-summer rally in Treasuries, tax-exempt municipal securities returned less.

Gains in the Old World, with an emerging-markets fillip

Vanguard International Growth Fund returned about 21% for the year, reflecting general strength in Europe, benchmark-beating security selection in Asia, and exceptional performance in emerging markets. This return includes a meaningful boost resulting from the U.S. dollar’s decline relative to most major currencies. That sounds paradoxical, but as the dollar

 

2

 


 

Market Barometer

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

One Year

Three Years

Five Years

Stocks

 

 

 

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International)

23.0%

25.2%

22.0%

Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps)

15.3   

12.8   

12.5   

Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps)

11.4   

14.5   

16.6   

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index (Entire market)

15.6   

13.4   

13.3   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bonds

 

 

 

Lehman U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market)

5.3%

3.7%

4.3%

Lehman Municipal Bond Index

2.3   

3.5   

4.2   

Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index

5.1   

3.9   

2.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CPI

 

 

 

Consumer Price Index

2.0%

3.1%

2.8%

 

loses value, assets denominated in euros, pounds, and other major currencies can be converted into a greater number of dollars.

In Europe, the fund’s stock selections generated a return of more than 20%, in line with (though a bit below) the gains of broad regional indexes. Strengths included consumer staples companies—particularly food processors and retailers—and industrial operations such as heavy-machinery and building-materials makers. As interest rates rose, financial companies produced weak returns relative to the broad market, though they still recorded healthy gains on an absolute basis.

The fund made a few missteps in Japan, which was among the globe’s weaker performers during the past year. Although the Japanese economy seemed to be gathering momentum early in the fiscal period, the expansion later lost steam, putting pressure on the fund’s relatively large positions in economically sensitive stocks such as banks. Nonetheless, the fund outperformed Pacific-region indexes on the strength of astute stock selection in Australia and Hong Kong.

The fund earned its highest returns in emerging markets, a longtime allocation that kept its performance a few steps ahead of the returns available in developed markets during the past 12 months. In Asia’s developing economies, heavy-industrial companies and electronics giants returned more than 50% for the year. In Latin America, raw-materials producers and companies poised to benefit from the emergence of a consumer class together produced a collective return of more than 50%.

A solid record based on discipline and an eye for opportunity

Over the past decade, Vanguard

International Growth Fund has successfully captured the return of developed stock markets through a strategy of broad diversification and prudent stock selection. At the same time, the advisors’ willingness to step off the most heavily trodden paths

 

3

 


Total Returns

 

Ten Years Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

Average

 

Annual Return

International Growth Fund Investor Shares

8.2%

MSCI EAFE Index

8.0   

Average International Fund 1

7.5   

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA

9.0   

 

The figures shown represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost.

 

1   Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

4

 


and venture into emerging markets has produced a ten-year return superior to the peer-group average and the return of developed markets.

And, as you would expect from Vanguard, your fund’s low costs have helped shareholders maximize their share of results from the advisors’ successful strategy.

The midsummer turmoil reaffirmed enduring principles

The midsummer turbulence in global stock and bond markets illustrated two important principles of successful investing.

First, diversification is critical. It won’t necessarily protect your portfolio from a loss, but in uncertain financial markets, it’s the most prudent way to manage risk while pursuing long-term growth. During July and August, the returns of broadly diversified, balanced portfolios of U.S. stocks, international equities, and bonds compared favorably with the returns of the hardest-hit market segments.

Second, the headlines are often more alarming than the event. The financial markets will periodically experience alarming downturns, of course. A few months removed from the start of the subprime mortgage loan crisis, however, it’s clear that the frantic commentary and blaring headlines were more unnerving than the event’s impact on well-diversified portfolios. Unpleasant developments may still lie in store, of course, but successful investors learn to tune out the noise and focus on their long-term financial goals.

Thank you for your entrusting your assets

to Vanguard.

 

Sincerely,

 


 

John J. Brennan

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

September 13, 2007

 

 

 

Expense Ratios 1

 

 

 

Your fund compared with its peer group

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average

 

Investor

Admiral

International

 

Shares

Shares

Fund

International Growth Fund

0.51%

0.31%

1.57%

 

1   Fund expense ratios reflect the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007. Peer-group expense ratio is derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and captures information through year-end 2006.

 

5

 


Advisors’ Report

During the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007, Vanguard International Growth Fund returned about 21%. This performance reflects the combined efforts of your fund’s two independent advisors.

 

The use of more than one advisor provides exposure to distinct, yet complementary, investment approaches, enhancing the fund’s diversification. The advisors, the percentage of fund assets each manages, and a brief description of their investment strategies are presented in the table below. Each advisor has also prepared a description of the investment environment that existed during the 2007 fiscal year and of the portfolio’s positioning.

 

Schroder Investment Management

North America Inc.

 

Portfolio Managers:

Virginie Maisonneuve, CFA,

Head of International (EAFE) Equities

Matthew Dobbs

For the vast majority of the year, economic and corporate news was favorable. Despite a slowdown in the United States, European and Asian economies experienced strong growth trends. Corporate profitability has been high in most sectors, and cash-rich companies and wealthier consumers have benefited from relatively low, though rising, interest rates and accommodative lending conditions. Around the world, equity markets rose on a sea of liquidity.

 

Vanguard International Growth Fund Investment Advisors

 

 

 

 

Fund Assets

Managed

 

Investment Advisor

%

$ Million

 

Investment Strategy

Schroder Investment Management

59

10,793

 

Equity analysts in 11 countries and an international

North America Inc.

 

 

 

team of global sector and regional specialists help

 

 

 

 

to identify reasonably priced companies with

 

 

 

 

strong growth prospects and a sustainable

 

 

 

 

competitive advantage.

Baillie Gifford Overseas Ltd.

39

7,112

 

The advisor seeks stocks that can generate above-

 

 

 

 

average growth in earnings and cash flow, producing

 

 

 

 

a bottom-up, stock-driven approach to country and

 

 

 

 

asset allocation. An in-depth view on each company

 

 

 

 

is measured against the consensus view, leading to

 

 

 

 

discrepancies and potential opportunities to add value.

Cash Investments 1

2

374

 

 

 

1  These short-term reserves are invested by Vanguard in equity index products to simulate investment in stocks. Each advisor may also maintain a modest cash position.

 

6

 


Strong petrodollar flows and burgeoning Chinese foreign exchange reserves continue to contribute to ample levels of global liquidity, but liquidity arising from activities linked to “financial innovation” has been adversely affected by a series of recent events triggered by the deterioration of the U.S. subprime mortgage market. Equity markets declined in response to both the momentary shift in global liquidity and the fear that U.S. economic weakness might spread to the rest of the world.

While central banks have injected large amounts of liquidity into the global system, most have so far refrained from acting decisively on interest rates, particularly in Europe and Asia. Economic growth has been strong, and there is a hesitation to create moral hazard by cutting rates too quickly. However, we believe that if employment and economic conditions worsen significantly, interest rates will be lowered to help alleviate pressure.

Looking to the next 12 months, we expect the U.S. economy to slow down—possibly more than previously thought—but we believe the risk of a global recession is limited. Growth in the rest of the world should remain solid, albeit on a deceleration path, as witnessed more recently in Europe and Japan. In China, one of the world’s engines of economic growth, exports in calendar year 2006 represented more than 7% of GDP. Even as big export markets such as the U.S. come under pressure, however, the Chinese economy stands to benefit from strong domestic demand. Retail sales in this large economy are up 16% so far in 2007, which should help balance the U.S. weakness. More generally, developing economies are continuing to support global growth.

In this environment of decelerating global growth (but not recession), growth as an investment style should be favored. We continue to focus on identifying high-quality companies with a sustainable competitive advantage that are trading at attractive valuations relative to their growth prospects. These include companies operating in areas where growth is above world averages—such as China, India, or Brazil.

Within the portfolio, we have overweighted exposures to companies that benefit from strong global demand in areas such as oil and gas exploration and transportation (including Suncor Energy, Niko Resources, and Daewoo Shipbuilding) and infrastructure development (including Ebara and Siemens). Some of these companies are also benefiting from increased business related to energy efficiency and climate-change mitigation. Throughout the period, we have maintained an underweighted exposure to financials.

We balance our cyclical exposure by holding overweighted positions in more-defensive areas of the market, such as the consumer staples and telecommunication services sectors, where we have found attractively priced growth. We are focusing on companies with operations in strong-demand areas, especially Asia, but also, in some cases, Latin America and Eastern Europe. Examples of these companies include China Unicom and Singapore Telecom in telecommunication services, and Groupe Danone (dairy products) and SABMiller (beverages) in consumer staples. Other defensive holdings in the portfolio include Tesco, Nestle, and Reckitt Benckiser.

These companies are market leaders known for their strong brands and good execution of sound business models. We believe that the market is currently underappreciating their growth prospects, and that investors will reward such companies, especially if economic growth does indeed slow as we predict.

 

7

 


Baillie Gifford Overseas Ltd.

Portfolio Manager:

James K. Anderson,

Deputy Chief Investment Officer

 

The present crisis in the credit markets is complex and fast-moving. It is impossible to predict when it will be resolved, but we doubt that it can be entirely confined to the financial sector. The strain placed on banks’ balance sheets by loans that can no longer be readily repackaged and sold in the credit markets, together with a general lack of confidence, will have ramifications for the broader economy. The long period of strong, consumption-led growth in the West, fueled in recent years by the availability of credit, seems to be coming to an end.

The global economy has been firing on all cylinders. This will change. Growth in the emerging world is likely to continue, and technological change will remain important; but the added impetus from increased financial leverage in the developed countries is likely to fade.

Until recently, a rising tide has lifted all boats; now there will likely be losers as well as winners. Companies that are exposed to the surviving engines of global growth—the emerging markets and technological change—are preferable to those that rely on the western consumer. We are wary of “value traps”—stocks that only look cheap because falling earnings estimates have not kept pace with price declines—and “quality traps”—companies that appear defensive because of their long-term dependence on a buoyant western consumer.

On the whole, our portfolio was already well-positioned for the changes we are going through. We remain heavily exposed to the emerging markets and to industrial businesses, but we have little confidence in most banks, except in countries such as Brazil and Italy, where use of credit is still quite low. We like machinery, so we are impressed by the Swedish engineering sector, with its combination of concern for shareholders and bulging order books.

We still like traditional growth stocks in mature markets, but we are aware that in the future a sound defense may rely more on the ownership of real assets—large iron ore reserves, for example—than a smooth earnings record.

In general, this approach has been rewarded in the markets and, so far, we have come through relatively intact. We expect that global growth will remain robust and inflation will remain low, so equity markets should recover their nerve—eventually.

 

8

 


Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

146

1,139

2,077

Turnover Rate

41%

Expense Ratio

 

Investor Shares

0.51%

 

 

Admiral Shares

0.31%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

1%

 

Sector Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Consumer Discretionary

12%

11%

10%

Consumer Staples

10   

8   

8   

Energy

9   

9   

10   

Financials

23   

25   

25   

Health Care

7   

8   

7   

Industrials

16   

11   

11   

Information Technology

7   

10   

10   

Materials

8   

8   

9   

Telecommunication

 

 

 

Services

5   

5   

6   

Utilities

2   

5   

4   

Short-Term Reserves

1%

—   

—   

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Comparative Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

0.96

0.96

Beta

1.04

0.96

 

 

9

 


Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

 

Rio Tinto PLC

diversified metals

 

 

and mining

2.5%

Tesco PLC

food retail

2.4   

Unicredito Italiano SpA

diversified banks

1.9   

BG Group PLC

integrated oil

 

 

and gas

1.7   

Daewoo

construction and

 

Shipbuilding & Marine

farm machinery and

 

Engineering Co., Ltd.

heavy trucks

1.7   

Suez SA

multi-utilities

1.6   

Nestle SA (Registered)

packaged foods

 

 

and meats

1.5   

Intesa Sanpaolo SpA

diversified banks

1.5   

Roche Holdings AG

pharmaceuticals

1.4   

Royal Dutch Shell

 

 

PLC Class A

integrated oil

 

(Amsterdam Shares)

and gas

1.3   

Top Ten

 

17.5%

 

 

Allocation by Region (% of portfolio)

 


 

1  MSCI EAFE Index.

2  MSCI All Country World Index ex USA.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 31.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

10

 


Market Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund 1

Index 2

Index 3

Europe

 

 

 

United Kingdom

22%

23%

18%

France

10   

10   

8   

Switzerland

7   

7   

5   

Germany

7   

8   

7   

Sweden

3   

3   

2   

Italy

3   

4   

3   

Netherlands

3   

3   

3   

Spain

2   

4   

3   

Denmark

2   

1   

1   

Ireland

1   

1   

1   

Greece

1   

1   

1   

Belgium

0   

1   

1   

Austria

0   

1   

0   

Finland

0   

2   

1   

Norway

0   

1   

1   

Subtotal

61%

70%

55%

Pacific

 

 

 

Japan

15%

21%

16%

Australia

4   

6   

5   

Hong Kong

3   

2   

2   

Singapore

1   

1   

1   

Subtotal

23%

30%

24%

Emerging Markets

 

 

 

Brazil

4%

—   

2%

South Korea

2   

—   

3   

India

2   

—   

1   

Mexico

1   

—   

1   

Taiwan

1   

—   

2   

China

1   

—   

3   

Russia

1   

—   

2   

Israel

1   

—   

0   

South Africa

0   

—   

1   

Subtotal

13%

—   

15%

North America

 

 

 

Canada

2%

—   

6%

Short-Term Reserves

1%

   

   

 

 

1   Market percentages exclude currency contracts held by the fund.

2   MSCI EAFE Index.

3   MSCI All Country World Index ex USA.

 

11

 


Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: August 31, 1997–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Five Years

Ten Years

Investment

International Growth Fund Investor Shares 1,2

20.87%

19.27%

8.16%

$21,906

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA

23.00   

21.96   

9.05   

23,781

MSCI EAFE Index

18.71   

19.53   

7.99   

21,579

Average International Fund 3

19.63   

18.31   

7.49   

20,590

 

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

Since

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Five Years

Inception 4

Investment

International Growth Fund Admiral Shares 1

21.11%

19.50%

12.62%

$205,203

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA

23.00   

21.96   

14.83   

230,854

MSCI EAFE Index

18.71   

19.53   

12.54   

204,310

 

 

1   Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares purchased on or after June 27, 2003, and held for less than two months.

2    Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

3   Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

4   Performance for the fund’s Admiral Shares and its comparative standards are calculated since the share class inception: August 13, 2001.

 

12

 


Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): August 31, 1997–August 31, 2007

 


 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

Inception Date

One Year

Five Years

Ten Years

Investor Shares 1,2

9/30/1981

28.48%

17.29%

7.62%

Admiral Shares 1

8/13/2001

28.73   

17.51   

13.42 3    

 

 

1   Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares purchased on or after June 27, 2003, and held for less than two months.

2    Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

3   Return since inception.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on pages 20 and 21 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

13

 


Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

Market

 

 

Value

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (96.8%) 1

 

 

Australia (3.4%)

 

 

BHP Billiton Ltd.

5,889,200

184,908

Brambles Ltd.

12,499,400

141,127

Woodside Petroleum Ltd.

2,777,000

102,578

Woolworths Ltd.

3,995,600

97,819

James Hardie

 

 

Industries NV

7,105,000

47,284

Macquarie Bank Ltd.

732,000

43,725

 

 

617,441

Belgium (0.4%)

 

 

KBC Bank &

 

 

Verzekerings Holding

633,000

79,440

 

 

 

Brazil (3.5%)

 

 

Petroleo Brasileiro

 

 

Series A ADR

3,829,600

203,850

Companhia Vale do Rio

 

 

Doce ADR

4,882,200

203,832

Banco Itau Holding

 

 

Financeira SA ADR

3,124,500

136,009

Unibanco-Uniao de

 

 

Bancos Brasileiros SA

9,142,000

102,556

 

 

646,247

Canada (2.2%)

 

 

Suncor Energy, Inc.

2,528,000

226,467

Niko Resources Ltd.

1,110,962

97,840

Nova Chemicals Corp.

2,368,000

86,311

 

 

410,618

China (1.0%)

 

 

China Unicom Ltd.

54,236,000

102,698

China Resources

 

 

Enterprise Ltd.

16,870,000

68,777

Dongfeng Motor Corp.

6,962,000

4,511

 

 

175,986

 

 

14

 


Denmark (1.6%)

 

 

 

Novo Nordisk A/S B Shares

970,000

108,130

 

Danske Bank A/S

2,619,000

107,534

*

Vestas Wind Systems A/S

1,237,136

83,800

 

 

 

299,464

France (9.9%)

 

 

 

^Suez SA

5,239,400

297,618

 

L’Oreal SA

1,734,336

202,355

 

Total SA

2,546,000

190,934

 

Groupe Danone

2,358,000

179,045

 

Natixis

7,541,000

159,822

 

AXA

3,782,000

151,152

 

Essilor International SA

2,333,000

141,309

 

Schneider Electric SA

949,764

125,574

 

STMicroelectronics NV

6,932,000

120,438

 

Societe Generale Class A

610,000

97,952

 

Pernod Ricard SA

355,020

74,561

 

Cie. de St. Gobain SA

609,302

65,986

 

 

 

1,806,746

Germany (7.2%)

 

 

 

Siemens AG

1,886,000

236,619

 

SAP AG

3,723,500

201,018

 

Deutsche Bank AG

1,540,754

190,222

 

Adidas AG

2,576,510

151,296

 

Deutsche Telekom AG

6,731,000

125,158

 

Porsche AG

64,800

115,831

 

Celesio AG

1,522,800

95,196

 

Bayerische Motoren

 

 

 

Werke AG

1,457,300

88,548

 

Linde AG

648,985

76,208

 

^Solarworld AG

791,698

39,025

 

 

 

1,319,121

Greece (0.9%)

 

 

 

National Bank of

 

 

 

Greece SA

1,440,000

85,420

 

EFG Eurobank Ergasias

2,188,000

74,246

*

EFG Eurobank Ergasias

 

 

 

Rights Exp. 9/24/07

2,188,000

2,355

 

 

 

162,021

Hong Kong (3.3%)

 

 

 

Esprit Holdings Ltd.

8,875,400

128,928

 

Industrial and Commercial

 

 

 

Bank of China

178,473,000

116,381

 

Hong Kong Exchanges &

 

 

 

Clearing Ltd.

6,010,000

110,909

 

Jardine Matheson

 

 

 

Holdings Ltd.

3,663,200

95,117

 

Hutchison

 

 

 

Telecommunications

 

 

 

International Ltd.

48,438,000

63,314

 

CNOOC Ltd.

44,035,000

54,033

 

China Overseas Land &

 

 

 

Investment Ltd.

18,784,000

39,116

 

 

15

 


 

*

China Overseas Land

 

 

 

Warrants Exp. 8/27/08

1,333

1

 

 

 

607,799

India (1.7%)

 

 

* 2

Satyam Computer

 

 

 

Services Ltd.

 

 

 

Warrants Exp. 10/13/10

10,823,000

119,431

 

Infosys Technologies Ltd.

2,415,400

109,850

* 2

State Bank of India

 

 

 

Warrants Exp. 01/28/09

2,024,000

79,858

 

 

 

309,139

Indonesia (0.2%)

 

 

 

PT Indonesian

 

 

 

Satellite Corp. Tbk

56,272,000

43,434

 

 

 

 

Ireland (1.2%)

 

 

 

Anglo Irish Bank Corp.

 

 

 

PLC

6,415,000

119,737

 

Allied Irish Banks PLC

3,997,260

101,892

 

 

 

221,629

Israel (0.5%)

 

 

 

Teva Pharmaceutical

 

 

 

Industries Ltd.

 

 

 

Sponsored ADR

2,153,900

92,618

 

 

 

 

Italy (3.4%)

 

 

 

Unicredito Italiano SpA

40,613,553

348,888

 

Intesa Sanpaolo SpA

35,180,662

265,873

 

 

 

614,761

Japan (14.2%)

 

 

 

Toyota Motor Corp.

3,979,000

230,420

 

Orix Corp.

867,940

184,274

 

Sony Corp.

3,631,600

173,864

 

Canon, Inc.

2,718,700

155,182

 

Mitsui & Co., Ltd.

7,360,000

152,994

 

Honda Motor Co., Ltd.

4,409,000

144,915

 

SMC Corp.

1,055,800

140,253

 

Mitsui Sumitomo

 

 

 

Insurance Co.

11,447,000

129,171

^

Square Enix Co., Ltd

3,837,600

118,989

 

Sumitomo Mitsui

 

 

 

Financial Group, Inc.

14,800

116,742

 

Sumitomo Electric

 

 

 

Industries Ltd.

6,558,000

104,229

 

T & D Holdings, Inc.

1,736,000

100,795

 

Takashimaya Co.

8,257,000

88,680

^

Ebara Corp.

19,171,000

86,234

 

Hoya Corp.

2,310,700

80,117

 

Japan Tobacco, Inc.

12,639

70,191

 

Sumitomo Realty &

 

 

 

Development Co.

1,862,000

60,895

 

KDDI Corp.

7,867

60,675

 

Yamada Denki Co., Ltd.

596,500

59,920

 

 

16

 


 

 

Sumitomo Heavy

 

 

 

Industries Ltd.

5,223,000

58,389

 

Rakuten, Inc.

156,452

57,992

 

 

Asahi Glass Co., Ltd.

3,937,000

49,228

 

Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.

5,012,000

47,879

 

THK Co., Inc.

2,145,000

43,901

*

Jupiter Telecommunications

 

 

Co., Ltd.

49,727

38,106

 

Tokyu Corp.

5,775,000

36,014

 

 

 

2,590,049

Mexico (1.2%)

 

 

*

Cemex SAB de CV ADR

3,324,000

107,332

 

America Movil SA de

 

 

 

CV Series L ADR

1,403,500

84,856

 

Wal-Mart de Mexico SA

8,200,000

29,179

 

 

 

221,367

Netherlands (2.6%)

 

 

 

TNT NV

2,846,000

120,417

 

Mittal Steel Co. NV

1,804,000

118,848

 

Reed Elsevier NV

4,736,000

85,438

 

Heineken Holding NV

1,471,074

80,772

 

ING Groep NV

1,794,000

72,202

 

 

 

477,677

Russia (0.6%)

 

 

*

OAO Gazprom ADR

2,634,100

109,558

 

 

 

 

Singapore (0.5%)

 

 

 

Singapore

 

 

 

Telecommunications Ltd.

38,523,950

92,135

 

 

 

 

South Korea (2.1%)

 

 

 

Daewoo

 

 

 

Shipbuilding & Marine

 

 

 

Engineering Co., Ltd.

5,198,000

310,352

 

Samsung Fire &

 

 

 

Marine Insurance Co.

186,900

36,351

 

Shinsegae Co., Ltd.

51,800

34,233

 

 

 

380,936

Spain (1.7%)

 

 

Telefonica SA

6,970,000

173,328

Industria de Diseno

 

 

Textil SA

2,325,885

136,550

 

 

309,878

Sweden (3.5%)

 

 

Atlas Copco AB—

 

 

A Shares

13,330,427

222,666

Sandvik AB

8,020,700

163,921

Telefonaktiebolaget LM

 

 

Ericsson AB Class B

32,249,270

119,988

Skandinaviska Enskilda

 

 

Banken AB A Shares

2,836,944

85,957

Svenska Handelsbanken

 

 

 

 

17

 


 

AB A Shares

1,471,406

41,010

 

 

633,542

Switzerland (7.3%)

 

 

Nestle SA (Registered)

634,000

276,323

Roche Holdings AG

1,466,000

255,370

 

Novartis AG (Registered)

4,447,000

234,423

Cie. Financiere

 

 

Richemont AG

2,862,400

177,649

UBS AG

2,947,800

154,347

Syngenta AG

671,000

125,701

Geberit AG

494,180

72,965

Adecco SA (Registered)

505,797

33,053

 

 

1,329,831

Taiwan (1.1%)

 

 

Hon Hai Precision

 

 

Industry Co., Ltd.

15,643,200

116,093

Taiwan Semiconductor

 

 

Manufacturing Co., Ltd.

41,706,551

79,185

 

 

195,278

United Kingdom (21.6%)

 

 

Rio Tinto PLC

6,737,800

465,410

Tesco PLC

50,620,000

435,187

BG Group PLC

19,827,000

317,290

Royal Dutch Shell PLC

 

 

Class A

 

 

(Amsterdam Shares)

6,219,000

240,890

Standard Chartered PLC

7,702,800

238,381

WPP Group PLC

14,547,000

207,409

Rolls-Royce Group PLC

18,028,000

186,267

SABMiller PLC

6,647,000

182,840

AstraZeneca Group PLC

3,583,000

176,583

Royal Bank of

 

 

Scotland Group PLC

14,961,000

173,849

Barclays PLC

9,453,000

117,176

Rexam PLC

10,776,000

113,941

Signet Group PLC

58,354,519

111,656

Reckitt Benckiser PLC

1,880,000

102,514

Meggitt PLC

14,917,500

96,086

The Sage Group PLC

19,048,000

91,025

Smith & Nephew PLC

7,692,000

90,623

Experian Group Ltd.

8,264,693

87,399

 

Burberry Group PLC

7,019,000

86,741

 

Northern Rock PLC

4,854,199

72,256

 

Rentokil Initial PLC

20,314,000

71,151

 

Vodafone Group PLC

21,687,000

70,085

 

Wolseley PLC

3,012,000

63,296

 

Smiths Group PLC

3,100,667

61,838

 

Capita Group PLC

3,670,000

55,679

 

Bunzl PLC

2,439,000

34,018

 

 

 

3,949,590

 

 

18

 


Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $13,418,105)

 

17,696,305

Temporary Cash Investments (3.3%) 1

 

Money Market Fund (3.2%)

 

 

3

Vanguard Market

 

 

 

Liquidity Fund, 5.247%

536,978,372

536,978

3

Vanguard Market

 

 

 

Liquidity Fund,

 

 

 

5.247%—Note G

42,921,569

42,922

 

 

 

579,900

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Face

 

 

 

Amount

 

 

 

($000)

 

U.S. Agency Obligation (0.1%)

 

4

Federal Home Loan

 

 

 

Mortgage Corp.

 

 

5

5.213%, 10/9/07

25,000

24,868

Total Temporary Cash Investments

 

(Cost $604,764)

 

604,768

Total Investments (100.1%)

 

 

(Cost $14,022,869)

 

18,301,073

Other Assets and Liabilities (–0.1%)

 

Other Assets—Note C

 

98,791

Liabilities—Note G

 

(120,839)

 

 

 

(22,048)

Net Assets (100%)

 

18,279,025

 

 

19

 


At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 6

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

12,486,613

Undistributed Net Investment Income

316,265

Accumulated Net Realized Gains

1,211,356

Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

 

Investment Securities

4,278,204

Futures Contracts

(17,235)

Foreign Currencies and

 

Forward Currency Contracts

3,822

Net Assets

18,279,025

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 505,858,389 outstanding $.001

par value shares of beneficial interest

 

(unlimited authorization)

13,219,460

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Investor Shares

$26.13

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 60,770,106 outstanding $.001

par value shares of beneficial interest

 

(unlimited authorization)

5,059,565

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$83.26

 

 

   See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*    Non-income-producing security.

^    Part of security position is on loan to broker-dealers. See Note G in Notes to Financial Statements .

1   The fund invests a portion of its cash reserves in equity markets through the use of index futures contracts. After giving effect to futures investments, the fund’s effective common stock and temporary cash investment positions represent 98.7% and 1.4%, respectively, of net assets. See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements .

2   Security exempt from registration under Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933. Such securities may be sold in transactions exempt from registration, normally to qualified institutional buyers. At August 31, 2007, the aggregate value of these securities was $199,289,000, representing 1.1% of net assets.

3   Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

4   The issuer operates under a congressional charter; its securities are neither issued nor guaranteed by the U.S. government. If needed, access to additional funding from the U.S. Treasury (beyond the issuer’s line of credit) would require congressional action.

5   Securities with a value of $24,868,000 have been segregated as initial margin for open futures contracts.

6   See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

ADR—American Depositary Receipt.

 

20

 


Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends 1

451,506

Interest 2

25,509

Security Lending

15,871

Total Income

492,886

Expenses

 

Investment Advisory Fees—Note B

 

Basic Fee

20,781

Performance Adjustment

1,676

The Vanguard Group—Note C

 

Management and Administrative—Investor Shares

39,951

Management and Administrative—Admiral Shares

5,669

Marketing and Distribution—Investor Shares

2,143

Marketing and Distribution—Admiral Shares

731

Custodian Fees

4,864

Auditing Fees

33

Shareholders’ Reports—Investor Shares

282

Shareholders’ Reports—Admiral Shares

8

Trustees’ Fees and Expenses

25

Total Expenses

76,163

Expenses Paid Indirectly—Note D

(446)

Net Expenses

75,717

Net Investment Income

417,169

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

 

Investment Securities Sold

1,555,258

Futures Contracts

45,682

Foreign Currencies and Forward Currency Contracts

3,225

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

1,604,165

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

 

Investment Securities

1,027,430

Futures Contracts

(33,588)

Foreign Currencies and Forward Currency Contracts

3,336

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

997,178

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

3,018,512

 

 

1   Dividends are net of foreign withholding taxes of $17,279,000.

2   Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $24,288,000.

 

21

 


Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

417,169

317,007

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

1,604,165

1,181,387

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

997,178

1,137,455

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

3,018,512

2,635,849

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Investor Shares

(236,800)

(151,413)

Admiral Shares

(88,348)

(48,917)

Realized Capital Gain 1

 

 

Investor Shares

(909,670)

(128,906)

Admiral Shares

(312,400)

(38,055)

Total Distributions

(1,547,218)

(367,291)

Capital Share Transactions—Note H

 

 

Investor Shares

1,670,489

544,778

Admiral Shares

1,165,318

795,669

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

2,835,807

1,340,447

Total Increase (Decrease)

4,307,101

3,609,005

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

13,971,924

10,362,919

End of Period 2

18,279,025

13,971,924

 

 

1   Includes fiscal 2007 and 2006 short-term gain distributions totaling $280,908,000 and $43,463,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $316,265,000 and $228,253,000.

 

22

 


Financial Highlights

 

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$23.97

$19.83

$16.33

$14.01

$12.97

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.594

.541

.341

.27

.19

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

4.132

4.284

3.474

2.26

1.03

Total from Investment Operations

4.726

4.825

3.815

2.53

1.22

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.530)

(.370)

(.315)

(.21)

(.18)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(2.036)

(.315)

Total Distributions

(2.566)

(.685)

(.315)

(.21)

(.18)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$26.13

$23.97

$19.83

$16.33

$14.01

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 1

20.87%

24.79%

23.54%

18.14%

9.62%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$13,219

$10,466

$8,182

$6,797

$5,458

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets 2

0.51%

0.55%

0.60%

0.63%

0.69%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

2.47%

2.52%

1.89%

1.69%

1.57%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

41%

45%

48%

45%

59%

 

 

1   Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares purchased on or after June 27, 2003, and held for less than two months or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

2   Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of 0.01%, (0.01%), (0.01%), 0.00%, and 0.01%.

 

23

 


Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$76.36

$63.15

$51.96

$44.57

$41.27

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

2.051

1.861

1.222

.93

.681

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

13.159

13.639

11.063

7.21

3.264

Total from Investment Operations

15.210

15.500

12.285

8.14

3.945

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(1.832)

(1.288)

(1.095)

(.75)

(.645)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(6.478)

(1.002)

Total Distributions

(8.310)

(2.290)

(1.095)

(.75)

(.645)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$83.26

$76.36

$63.15

$51.96

$44.57

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 1

21.11%

25.03%

23.84%

18.36%

9.80%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$5,060

$3,506

$2,181

$1,262

$1,044

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets 2

0.31%

0.35%

0.40%

0.45%

0.51%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

2.67%

2.72%

2.07%

1.86%

1.76%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

41%

45%

48%

45%

59%

 

 

1   Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares purchased on or after June 27, 2003, and held for less than two months.

2   Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of 0.01%, (0.01%), (0.01%), 0.00%, and 0.01%. See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

24

 


Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard International Growth Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund invests in securities of foreign issuers, which may subject it to investment risks not normally associated with investing in securities of United States corporations. The fund offers two classes of shares, Investor Shares and Admiral Shares. Investor Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. Admiral Shares are designed for investors who meet certain administrative, service, tenure, and account-size criteria.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m. Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued at their fair values calculated according to procedures adopted by the board of trustees. These procedures include obtaining quotations from an independent pricing service, monitoring news to identify significant market- or security-specific events, and evaluating changes in the values of foreign market proxies (for example, ADRs, futures contracts, or exchange-traded funds), between the time the foreign markets close and the fund’s pricing time. When fair-value pricing is employed, the prices of securities used by a fund to calculate its net asset value may differ from quoted or published prices for the same securities. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value. Temporary cash investments acquired over 60 days to maturity are valued using the latest bid prices or using valuations based on a matrix system (which considers such factors as security prices, yields, maturities, and ratings), both as furnished by independent pricing services. Other temporary cash investments are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value.

2. Foreign Currency: Securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars using exchange rates obtained from an independent third party as of the fund’s pricing time on the valuation date. Realized gains (losses) and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investment securities include the effects of changes in exchange rates since the securities were purchased, combined with the effects of changes in security prices. Fluctuations in the value of other assets and liabilities resulting from changes in exchange rates are recorded as unrealized foreign currency gains (losses) until the assets or liabilities are settled in cash, at which time they are recorded as realized foreign currency gains (losses).

3. Futures and Forward Currency Contracts: The fund uses index futures contracts to a limited extent, with the objective of maintaining exposure to the European and Pacific stock markets while maintaining liquidity. The fund may purchase or sell futures contracts to achieve a desired level of investment, whether to accommodate portfolio turnover or cash flows from capital share transactions. The primary risks associated with the use of futures contracts are imperfect correlation between changes in market values of stocks held by the fund and the prices of futures contracts, and the possibility of an illiquid market.

The fund may also enter into forward currency contracts to provide the appropriate currency exposure related to any open futures contracts or to protect the value of securities and related receivables and payables against changes in foreign exchange rates. The primary risk associated with the fund’s use of these contracts is that a counterparty will fail to fulfill its obligation to pay

 

25

 


gains due to the fund under the contracts.

Futures and forward currency contracts are valued at their quoted daily settlement prices. The aggregate principal amounts of the contracts are not recorded in the Statement of Net Assets . Fluctuations in the value of the contracts are recorded in the Statement of Net Assets as an asset (liability) and in the Statement of Operations as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) until the contracts are closed, when they are recorded as realized gains (losses) on futures or forward currency contracts.

4. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

5. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

6. Security Lending: The fund may lend its securities to qualified institutional borrowers to earn additional income. Security loans are required to be secured at all times by collateral at least equal to the market value of securities loaned. The fund invests cash collateral received in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, and records a liability for the return of the collateral, during the period the securities are on loan. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less expenses associated with the loan.

7. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of capital shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. Schroder Investment Management North America Inc. and Baillie Gifford Overseas Ltd. each provide investment advisory services to a portion of the fund for a fee calculated at an annual percentage rate of average net assets managed by the advisor. The basic fee of each advisor is subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance for the preceding three years relative to the Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australasia, Far East Index.

The Vanguard Group manages the cash reserves of the fund on an at-cost basis.

For the year ended August 31, 2007, the aggregate investment advisory fee represented an effective annual basic rate of 0.13% of the fund’s average net assets, before an increase of $1,676,000 (0.01%) based on performance.

C. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $1,619,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 1.62% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

D. The fund has asked its investment advisors to direct certain security trades, subject to obtaining the best price and execution, to brokers who have agreed to rebate to the fund part of the commissions generated. Such rebates are used solely to reduce the fund’s management and administrative expenses. The fund’s custodian bank has also agreed to reduce its fees when the fund maintains cash on deposit in the non-interest-bearing custody account. For the year ended August 31, 2007, these arrangements reduced the fund’s management and administrative expenses by $392,000 and custodian fees by $54,000.

E. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or

 

26

 


temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized net foreign currency gains of $395,000, which increased distributable net income for tax purposes; accordingly, such gains have been reclassified from accumulated net realized gains to undistributed net investment income. Certain of the fund’s investments are in securities considered to be “passive foreign investment companies,” for which any unrealized appreciation and/or realized gains are required to be included in distributable net income for tax purposes. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized gains on the sale of passive foreign investment companies of $20,388,000, which have been included in current year taxable income; accordingly, such gains have been reclassified from accumulated net realized gains to undistributed net investment income. Unrealized appreciation of $34,380,000 on the fund’s passive foreign investment company holdings through October 31, 2006 (the most recent previous mark-to-market date for tax purposes), has been distributed and is reflected in the balance of undistributed net income. Since October 31, 2006, the fund’s passive foreign investment company holdings have depreciated in value by $32,057,000, reducing the amount of taxable income available for distribution as of August 31, 2007. Unrealized appreciation on the fund’s passive foreign investment company holdings at August 31, 2007, was $2,323,000.

The fund used a tax accounting practice to treat a portion of the price of capital shares redeemed during the year as distributions from net investment income and realized capital gains. Accordingly, the fund has reclassified $24,792,000 from undistributed net investment income, and $87,772,000 from accumulated net realized gains, to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $620,654,000 of ordinary income and $945,429,000 of long-term capital gains available for distribution.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $14,025,192,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $4,275,881,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $4,703,648,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $427,767,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

At August 31, 2007, the aggregate settlement value of open futures contracts expiring in September 2007 and the related unrealized appreciation (depreciation) were:

 

 

 

 

($000)

 

 

Aggregate

Unrealized

 

Number of

Settlement

Appreciation

Futures Contracts

Long Contracts

Value

(Depreciation)

Dow Jones EURO STOXX 50 Index

2,325

136,164

(4,730)

FTSE 100 Index

741

94,394

(4,061)

Topix Index

613

85,222

(8,234)

S&P ASX 200 Index

274

34,891

(210)

 

At August 31, 2007, the fund had open forward currency contracts to receive and deliver currencies as follows:

 

27

 


 

 

 

 

 

Unrealized

 

 

 

 

 

Appreciation

 

Contract Amount (000)

(Depreciation)

Contract Settlement Date

Receive

 

Deliver

($000)

9/26/2007

EUR

95,523

 

USD

129,224

1,136

9/26/2007

GBP

44,146

 

USD

88,029

967

9/19/2007

JPY

9,513,500

 

USD

79,322

3,004

9/26/2007

AUD

38,294

 

USD

32,636

(1,479)

AUD—Australian dollar.

 

 

 

 

 

 

EUR—Euro.

 

 

 

 

 

 

GBP—British pound.

 

 

 

 

 

 

JPY—Japanese yen.

 

 

 

 

 

 

USD—U.S. dollar.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on open forward currency contracts is treated as realized gain (loss) for tax purposes.

The fund had net unrealized foreign currency gains of $194,000 resulting from the translation of other assets and liabilities at August 31, 2007.

F. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $8,261,136,000 of investment securities and sold $6,616,448,000 of investment securities other than temporary cash investments.

G. The market value of securities on loan to broker-dealers at August 31, 2007, was $41,098,000, for which the fund received cash collateral of $42,922,000.

H. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were:

 

28

 


 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

2,549,115

101,410

 

2,259,984

101,241

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

1,123,137

47,631

 

271,640

12,831

Redeemed 1

(2,001,763)

(79,750)

 

(1,986,846)

(90,034)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Investor Shares

1,670,489

69,291

 

544,778

24,038

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

1,325,389

16,528

 

1,212,240

17,312

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

373,586

4,979

 

78,427

1,165

Redeemed 1

(533,657)

(6,648)

 

(494,998)

(7,108)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

1,165,318

14,859

 

795,669

11,369

 

I. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $692,000 and $1,093,000 (fund totals).

 

29

 


Report of Independent Registered

Public Accounting Firm

 

To the Trustees of Vanguard World Funds and the Shareholders of Vanguard International Growth Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of net assets and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Vanguard International Growth Fund (the “Fund”) at August 31, 2007, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the five years in the period then ended, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Fund’s management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2007 by correspondence with the custodian and brokers and by agreement to the underlying ownership records for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

October 10, 2007

 

 


Special 2007 tax information (unaudited) for Vanguard International Growth Fund

This information for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007, is included pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund distributed $1,008,042,000 as capital gain dividends (from net long-term capital gains) to shareholders during the fiscal year.

The fund distributed $202,210,000 of qualified dividend income to shareholders during the fiscal year.

The fund will pass through to shareholders foreign source income of $467,996,000 and foreign taxes paid of $16,490,000. The pass-through of foreign taxes paid will affect only shareholders on the dividend record date in December 2007. Shareholders will receive more detailed information along with their Form 1099-DIV in January 2008.

 

30

 


Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

This table presents returns for your fund both before and after taxes. The after-tax returns are shown in two ways: (1) assuming that an investor owned the fund during the entire period and paid taxes on the fund’s distributions, and (2) assuming that an investor paid taxes on the fund’s distributions and sold all shares at the end of each period.

Calculations are based on the highest individual federal income tax and capital gains tax rates in effect at the times of the distributions and the hypothetical sales. State and local taxes were not considered. After-tax returns reflect any qualified dividend income, using actual prior-year figures and estimates for 2007. (In the example, returns after the sale of fund shares may be higher than those assuming no sale. This occurs when the sale would have produced a capital loss. The calculation assumes that the investor received a tax deduction for the loss.)

The table shows returns for Investor Shares only; returns for other share classes will differ. Please note that your actual after-tax returns will depend on your tax situation and may differ from those shown. Also note that if you own the fund in a tax-deferred account, such as an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan, this information does not apply to you. Such accounts are not subject to current taxes.

Finally, keep in mind that a fund’s performance—whether before or after taxes—does not guarantee future results.

 

Average Annual Total Returns: International Growth Fund Investor Shares 1

 

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

One

Five

Ten

 

Year

Years

Years

Returns Before Taxes

20.87%

19.27%

8.16%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

18.52   

18.42   

7.17   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

15.04   

16.69   

6.67   

 

 

1   Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares purchased on or after June 27, 2003, and held for less than two months, nor do they include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

 

31

 


About Your Fund’s Expenses

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

A fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. This figure is known as the expense ratio. The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period.

The table below illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The “Ending Account Value” shown is derived from the fund’s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period.”

Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return . This section is intended to help you compare your fund’s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

 

Six Months Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

Beginning

Ending

Expenses

 

Account Value

Account Value

Paid During

International Growth Fund

2/28/2007

8/31/2007

Period 1

Based on Actual Fund Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,091.02

$2.58

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,092.22

1.48

Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,022.74

$2.50

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,023.79

1.43

 

1   The calculations are based on expenses incurred in the most recent six-month period. The fund’s annualized six-month expense ratios for that period are 0.49% for Investor Shares and 0.28% for Admiral Shares. The dollar amounts shown as “Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense ratio multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

 

32

 


Note that the expenses shown in the table on the previous page are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include the 2% fee that applies to shares purchased on or after June 27, 2003, and held for less than two months, nor do they include the account service fee described in the prospectus. If such fees were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not carry a “sales load.”

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

 

33

 


Glossary

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. A fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition below). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

Expense Ratio. The percentage of a fund’s average net assets used to pay its annual administrative and advisory expenses. These expenses directly reduce returns to investors.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0.

Short-Term Reserves. The percentage of a fund invested in highly liquid, short-term securities that can be readily converted to cash.

Turnover Rate. An indication of the fund’s trading activity. Funds with high turnover rates incur higher transaction costs and may be more likely to distribute capital gains (which may be taxable to investors). The turnover rate excludes in-kind transactions, which have minimal impact on costs.

 

34

 


The People Who Govern Your Fund

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals.

Our independent board members bring distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service to their task of working with Vanguard officers to establish the policies and oversee the activities of the funds. Among board members’ responsibilities are selecting investment advisors for the funds; monitoring fund operations, performance, and costs; reviewing contracts; nominating and selecting new trustees/directors; and electing Vanguard officers.

Each trustee serves a fund until its termination; or until the trustee’s retirement, resignation, or death; or otherwise as specified in the fund’s organizational documents. Any trustee may be removed at a shareholders’ meeting by a vote representing two-thirds of the net asset value of all shares of the fund together with shares of other Vanguard funds organized within the same trust. The table on these two pages shows information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. The mailing address of the trustees and officers is P.O. Box 876, Valley Forge, PA 19482.

 

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer, and Trustee

 

 

John J. Brennan 1

 

Born 1954

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive

Trustee since May 1987;

Officer, and Director/Trustee of The Vanguard Group, Inc., and of each of the investment

Chairman of the Board and

companies served by The Vanguard Group.

Chief Executive Officer

 

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

Independent Trustees

 

 

 

Charles D. Ellis

 

Born 1937

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Applecore Partners (pro bono ventures

Trustee since January 2001

in education); Senior Advisor to Greenwich Associates (international business strategy

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

consulting); Successor Trustee of Yale University; Overseer of the Stern School of Business

 

at New York University; Trustee of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.

 

 

Rajiv L. Gupta

 

Born 1945

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, and

Trustee since December 2001 2

Chief Executive Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Board Member of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

the American Chemistry Council; Director of Tyco International, Ltd. (diversified

 

manufacturing and services) since 2005; Trustee of Drexel University and of the

 

Chemical Heritage Foundation.

 

 

Amy Gutmann

 

Born 1949

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President of the University of

Trustee since June 2006

Pennsylvania since 2004; Professor in the School of Arts and Sciences, Annenberg School

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

for Communication, and Graduate School of Education of the University of Pennsylvania

 

since 2004; Provost (2001–2004) and Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics and

 

the University Center for Human Values (1990–2004), Princeton University; Director of

 

Carnegie Corporation of New York since 2005 and of Schuylkill River Development

 

Corporation and Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce since 2004.

 

 

 


JoAnn Heffernan Heisen

 

Born 1950

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate Vice President and

Trustee since July 1998

Chief Global Diversity Officer since 2006, Vice President and Chief Information

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Officer (1997–2005), and Member of the Executive Committee of Johnson &

 

Johnson (pharmaceuticals/consumer products); Director of the University Medical

 

Center at Princeton and Women’s Research and Education Institute.

 

 

André F. Perold

 

Born 1952

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Gund Professor of Finance

Trustee since December 2004

and Banking, Harvard Business School; Senior Associate Dean, Director of Faculty

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Recruiting, and Chair of Finance Faculty, Harvard Business School; Director and Chairman

 

of UNX, Inc. (equities trading firm) since 2003; Chair of the Investment Committee of

 

HighVista Strategies LLC (private investment firm) since 2005.

 

 

Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.

 

Born 1941

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, Chief Executive

Trustee since January 1993

Officer, and Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Director

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/aircraft systems and services).

 

 

 

 

J. Lawrence Wilson

 

Born 1936

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Retired Chairman and Chief Executive

Trustee since April 1985

Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Director of Cummins Inc. (diesel engines) and

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

AmerisourceBergen Corp. (pharmaceutical distribution); Trustee of Vanderbilt University

 

and of Culver Educational Foundation.

 

 

Executive Officers 1

 

 

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Born 1957

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.;

Treasurer since July 1998

Treasurer of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard Group.

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

 

 

Heidi Stam

 

Born 1956

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing Director of The Vanguard

Secretary since July 2005

Group, Inc., since 2006; General Counsel of The Vanguard Group since 2005; Secretary of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

The Vanguard Group, and of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard

 

Group, since 2005; Principal of The Vanguard Group (1997–2006).

 

Vanguard Senior Management Team

 

 

 

 

 

 

R. Gregory Barton

Kathleen C. Gubanich

F. William McNabb, III

Ralph K. Packard

Mortimer J. Buckley

Paul A. Heller

Michael S. Miller

George U. Sauter

 

Founder

 

John C. Bogle

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996

 

 

1   Officers of the funds are “interested persons” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940.

2   December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.

More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information,available from The Vanguard Group.

 

 



 

P.O. Box 2600

Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

Connect with Vanguard ® > www.vanguard.com

 

Fund Information > 800-662-7447

Vanguard, Admiral, Connect with Vanguard , and the ship

 

logo are trademarks of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739

 

 

All other marks are the exclusive property of their

Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036

respective owners.

 

 

Text Telephone for People

 

With Hearing Impairment > 800-952-3335

All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc.

 

or Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.

 

 

 

You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting

 

guidelines by visiting our website, www.vanguard.com,

This material may be used in conjunction

and searching for “proxy voting guidelines,” or by calling

with the offering of shares of any Vanguard

 

fund only if preceded or accompanied by

 

the fund’s current prospectus.

Vanguard at 800-662-2739. They are also available from

 

the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov. In addition, you may

 

obtain a free report on how your fund voted the proxies for

 

securities it owned during the 12 months ended June 30.

 

To get the report, visit either www.vanguard.com

 

or www.sec.gov.

 

 

 

You can review and copy information about your fund

 

at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C.

 

To find out more about this public service, call the SEC

 

at 202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also

 

available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive

 

copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a

 

request in either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to

 

publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the

 

Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange

 

Commission, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© 2007 The Vanguard Group, Inc.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.

 

 

 

Q810 102007

 

 

 

 




 

 


>  Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund returned 10.7% for Investor Shares and 11.0% for Institutional Shares in the 12 months ended August 31, 2007.

 

>  During the fund’s fiscal year, the broad U.S. stock market returned 15.6%. Stocks climbed throughout much of the year, then retreated as the weak housing market spawned concerns in other areas of the economy.

 

>  Information technology and consumer discretionary stocks were top contributors to the fund’s total return, but its significant allocation to financial stocks restrained overall performance.

 

Contents

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

1

Chairman’s Letter

2

Fund Profile

6

Performance Summary

7

Financial Statements

9

Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

22

About Your Fund’s Expenses

23

Trustees Approve Advisory Arrangement

25

Glossary

26

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.

 

 


Your Fund’s Total Returns

 

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

Ticker

Total

 

Symbol

Returns

Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund

 

 

Investor Shares

VFTSX

10.7%

Institutional Shares 1

VFTNX

11.0   

FTSE4Good US Select Index

 

11.0   

Average Large-Cap Growth Fund 2

 

17.0   

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

 

15.6   

 

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance

August 31, 2006–August 31, 2007

 

 

 

Distributions Per Share

 

Starting

Ending

Income

Capital

 

Share Price

Share Price

Dividends

Gains

Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$8.51

$9.30

$0.120

$0.000

Institutional Shares

8.52

9.32

0.132

0.000

 

 

1  This class of shares carries lower expenses and is available for a minimum initial investment of $5 million.

2  Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

1

 



 

Chairman’s Letter

 

Dear Shareholder,

For the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007, Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund returned 10.7% for Investor Shares and 11.0% for Institutional Shares. The fund achieved its primary objective of closely tracking its target index.

Although returns were strong through much of the year, the fund’s performance faltered in the stock market’s volatile summer months. For the full fiscal year, the FTSE Social Index Fund trailed the results of the broad stock market and the average return of funds in its peer group.

If you hold shares of the fund in a taxable account, you may wish to review our report on after-tax returns on page 22.

For the U.S. stock market, a nervous finish to the year

U.S. stocks produced a solid return for the fiscal year, despite a midsummer pullback. The market retreated as problems with low-quality mortgage loans rippled through investment portfolios. Financial stocks, which account for a big share of the U.S. market’s value, were the hardest hit as investment banking and consumer lending businesses throttled back.

The broad U.S. stock market returned 15.6% for the year, after hitting a high-water mark in July. Large-capitalization stocks bested small-caps, and growth-oriented stocks outperformed their value-oriented counterparts during the fiscal period, which ended amid a growing aversion to risk. Though not immune from the turmoil in U.S. credit markets, international stocks handily outperformed U.S. stocks for the full 12 months.

Bond markets rebounded as investors sought safety

As investors sought refuge from the rough and tumble of stock and corporate bond markets, U.S. Treasury bond prices rose, and yields fell. The declines in yield were most pronounced among Treasury securities with the shortest maturities.

Falling short-term yields helped restore the yield curve—which illustrates the relationship between short- and long-term bond yields—to its typical, upward-sloping pattern. At the start of the period, the curve had been mildly inverted. The broad taxable bond market returned 5.3% for the year. Lacking the boost from the late-summer rally in Treasuries, tax-exempt municipal securities returned less.

The fund’s financial stocks crimped its overall return

During its fiscal year, Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund returned a solid 10.7% for Investor Shares and closely tracked its target benchmark, the FTSE4Good US Select Index. The index, constructed to emphasize socially conscious investing, considers three broad categories of social responsibility: preserving the environment, upholding and supporting human rights, and fostering a safe and healthy workplace.

 

2

 


 

Market Barometer

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

One Year

Three Years

Five Years

Stocks

 

 

 

Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps)

15.3%

12.8%

12.5%

Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps)

11.4   

14.5   

16.6   

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index (Entire market)

15.6   

13.4   

13.3   

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International)

23.0   

25.2   

22.0   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bonds

 

 

 

Lehman U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market)

5.3%

3.7%

4.3%

Lehman Municipal Bond Index

2.3   

3.5   

4.2   

Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index

5.1   

3.9   

2.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CPI

 

 

 

Consumer Price Index

2.0%

3.1%

2.8%

 

These criteria give the index a profile distinct from the overall stock market (as measured by the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index). For example, the FTSE index has smaller allocations to sectors such as industrials, energy, and consumer staples, and greater exposure to financials, health care, and consumer discretionary.

Those differences were underscored in the second half of the fiscal year. The fund posted strong results through much of the period, but lost ground to the broader stock market indexes in June and July. The fund’s significant investment in financial stocks (which represented almost 40% of assets, on average) was a key factor. Concerns over the stagnant housing market and the ensuing subprime lending crisis reverberated throughout the financial sector. As a group, the fund’s financial stocks returned 4% for the 12 months. Real estate investment trusts and mortgage lenders were hit especially hard.

The financials group was one of only two sectors that failed to post a double-digit return for the year. The other was health care, the FTSE index’s second-largest sector, which returned 9%. Pharmaceutical and health equipment companies fared well, but biotech firms had only modest gains.

The sectors that contributed most to the fund’s total return were information technology (+25%) and consumer discretionary (+16%). Gains in these two sizable segments represented nearly half of the fund’s total return. In tech,

 

3

 


Expense Ratios 1

 

 

 

Your fund compared with its peer group

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average

 

Investor

Institutional

Large-Cap

 

Shares

Shares

Growth Fund

FTSE Social Index Fund

0.24%

0.11%

1.43%

 

Total Returns

 

May 31, 2000, 2 through August 31, 2007

 

 

Average

 

Annual Return

FTSE Social Index Fund Investor Shares

–0.1%

Spliced Social Index 3

0.1%

Average Large-Cap Growth Fund 4

–2.8%

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

3.4%

 

The figures shown represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost.

 

1  Fund expense ratios reflect the 12 months ended August 31, 2007. Peer-group expense ratio is derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and captures information through year-end 2006.

2  Fund inception.

3  Calvert Social Index through December 16, 2005; FTSE4Good US Select Index thereafter.

4  Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

4

 


semiconductor stocks made large contributions, as did Apple, a standout that returned over 100% during the year. Consumer discretionary stocks were led by strong returns among restaurants, Internet retailers, and general merchandisers such as Target (+37%).

Returns were also strong across the fund’s six smaller sectors, each of which represented less than 5% of assets, on average. Their returns ranged from 11% in consumer staples to 32% in materials.

Bear market still shadows the fund’s long-term record

The fund was launched in May 2000, near the height of a run-up in the stock market. After three months of healthy returns, the fund endured two years of a deep and painful bear market. As a result, its average annual return since inception is slightly negative, trailing the average returns of large-capitalization growth funds and the broad stock market.

Although the fund is still emerging from the long shadow of that bear market, it has built a respectable track record in the past five years. As of August 31, the fund’s average annual return for that period was 10.4% (for Investor Shares). And while the performance of an index fund is largely dependent on the performance of its benchmark, the fund’s advisor, Vanguard Quantitative Equity Group, has done a fine job of making sure the fund hews closely to its target. The fund’s low expenses (among the lowest for any socially responsible fund) have been an important part of its success.

 

Diversification is critical in shifting investment landscapes

In several of our past letters to FTSE Social Index Fund shareholders, we noted that the fund’s relatively large commitment to financial stocks boosted performance. In the last few months, however, the investment landscape shifted. Financials were the poorest performers in the portfolio. And, although the fund’s 10.7% fiscal-year return was indeed respectable, the jockeying among the fund’s underlying sectors illustrates just how quickly the stock market’s sweet spots can turn sour.

Unfortunately, no one can predict the performance of different market segments or asset classes. That’s why achieving balance and diversification across stock, bond, and money market funds is so important—in good times and bad.

For socially conscious investors who are also mindful of expenses, the FTSE Social Index Fund can play an important role in a long-term investment strategy.

Thank you for investing with Vanguard.

Sincerely,

 


John J. Brennan

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

September 13, 2007

 

5

 


Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

415

419

4,898

Median Market Cap

$28.9B

$28.6B

$33.3B

Price/Earnings Ratio

17.0x

17.0x

17.5x

Price/Book Ratio

2.5x

2.5x

2.8x

Yield

 

1.7%

1.7%

Investor Shares

1.5%

 

 

Institutional Shares

1.6%

 

 

Return on Equity

17.9%

17.8%

18.7%

Earnings Growth Rate

20.1%

20.1%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.5%

0.5%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

20%

Expense Ratio

 

Investor Shares

0.24%

 

 

Institutional Shares

0.11%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Sector Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Consumer Discretionary

15%

15%

11%

Consumer Staples

5   

5   

8   

Energy

2   

2   

11   

Financials

38   

38   

20   

Health Care

17   

17   

11   

Industrials

4   

4   

12   

Information Technology

16   

16   

16   

Materials

1   

1   

4   

Telecommunication

 

 

 

Services

2   

2   

3   

Utilities

0   

0   

4   

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Spliced Index 4

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

1.00

0.91

Beta

1.00

1.03

 

 

6

 


Ten Largest Holdings 5 (% of total net assets)

 

 

 

Bank of America Corp.

diversified

 

 

financial services

3.6%

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

diversified

 

 

financial services

2.5   

Intel Corp.

semiconductors

2.4   

Wells Fargo & Co.

diversified banks

2.0   

Google Inc.

Internet software

 

 

and services

1.9   

Apple Inc.

computer hardware

1.9   

Merck & Co., Inc.

pharmaceuticals

1.8   

Wachovia Corp.

diversified banks

1.5   

Comcast Corp. Class A

broadcasting and

 

 

cable television

1.3   

Abbott Laboratories

pharmaceuticals

1.3   

Top Ten

 

20.2%

 

Investment Focus

 


1  FTSE4Good US Select Index.

2  Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index.

3  For an explanation of R-squared, beta, and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 26.

4  Calvert Social Index through December 16, 2005; FTSE4Good US Select Index thereafter.

5  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

7

 


Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance May 31, 2000–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

Final Value

 

One

Five

Since

of a $10,000

 

Year

Years

Inception 1

Investment

FTSE Social Index Fund Investor Shares 2

10.70%

10.40%

–0.07%

$9,948

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

15.59   

13.28   

3.37   

12,714

Spliced Social Index 3

11.01   

10.66   

0.08   

10,061

Average Large-Cap Growth Fund 4

16.96   

9.41   

–2.80   

8,136

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

Since

of a $5,000,000

 

One Year

Inception 1

Investment

FTSE Social Index Fund Institutional Shares

10.95%

10.41%

7,905,286

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

15.59   

13.87   

9,121,542

Spliced Social Index 3

11.01   

10.48   

7,930,529

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the fund’s inception: May 31, 2000, for Investor Shares and January 14, 2003, for Institutional Shares.

2  Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

3  Calvert Social Index through December 16, 2005; FTSE4Good US Select Index thereafter.

4  Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

8

 


Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): May 31, 2000–August 31, 2007

 


 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

Inception

One

Five

Since

 

Date

Year

Years

Inception

Investor Shares 2

5/31/2000

17.37%

9.60%

0.43%

Institutional Shares

1/14/2003

17.48   

11.72 3    

—   

 

 

1  Calvert Social Index through December 16, 2005; FTSE4Good US Select Index thereafter.

2  Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

3  Return since inception.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on pages 17 and 18 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

9

 


Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (100.1%)

 

 

Consumer Discretionary (14.9%)

 

 

 

Home Depot, Inc.

207,019

7,931

*

Comcast Corp. Class A

299,277

7,808

 

The Walt Disney Co.

208,357

7,001

 

McDonald’s Corp.

125,618

6,187

 

Target Corp.

90,271

5,951

*

Viacom Inc. Class B

66,277

2,615

*

Amazon.com, Inc.

32,495

2,597

*

DIRECTV Group, Inc.

96,371

2,248

 

Carnival Corp.

49,110

2,239

 

Best Buy Co., Inc.

50,478

2,219

*

Kohl’s Corp.

33,830

2,006

 

Clear Channel

 

 

 

Communications, Inc.

52,199

1,945

 

The McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc.

36,151

1,824

 

Marriott International, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

40,844

1,814

 

Staples, Inc.

75,437

1,792

 

Garmin Ltd.

17,100

1,741

*

Coach, Inc.

38,930

1,734

 

Macy’s Inc.

47,866

1,518

 

TJX Cos., Inc.

47,877

1,460

*

Liberty Media Corp.–

 

 

 

Capital Series A

12,993

1,416

 

Nordstrom, Inc.

27,057

1,301

 

 

10

 


*

Liberty Media Corp.–

 

 

 

Interactive Series A

65,920

1,251

 

The Gap, Inc.

63,941

1,200

 

Gannett Co., Inc.

24,922

1,171

*

Apollo Group, Inc. Class A

18,254

1,071

*

Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.

29,193

1,011

 

Limited Brands, Inc.

42,090

975

 

Genuine Parts Co.

17,913

890

*

Expedia, Inc.

28,972

865

 

Virgin Media Inc.

34,486

821

*

Cablevision Systems

 

 

 

NY Group Class A

24,157

810

*

Liberty Global, Inc. Series C

20,236

798

*

Liberty Global, Inc. Class A

19,478

798

*

IAC/InterActiveCorp

27,402

762

 

Tiffany & Co.

14,298

734

 

Abercrombie & Fitch Co.

9,274

730

*

Discovery Holding Co. Class A

28,221

709

*

Office Depot, Inc.

28,957

708

*

AutoZone Inc.

5,576

676

*

Comcast Corp. Special Class A

26,044

674

 

H & R Block, Inc.

33,901

673

 

Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.

16,791

639

*

Mohawk Industries, Inc.

7,210

630

 

Darden Restaurants Inc.

14,909

620

 

Wyndham Worldwide Corp.

19,182

612

 

Idearc Inc.

15,317

523

 

D. R. Horton, Inc.

32,994

499

 

PetSmart, Inc.

14,273

495

 

Family Dollar Stores, Inc.

15,992

468

 

Lamar Advertising Co. Class A

8,791

465

*^

Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc.

153,515

456

*

Dollar Tree Stores, Inc.

10,374

451

 

American Eagle Outfitters, Inc.

17,394

449

 

Pulte Homes, Inc.

26,898

448

*

R.H. Donnelley Corp.

7,500

441

 

E.W. Scripps Co. Class A

9,980

410

 

Ross Stores, Inc.

14,615

407

*

XM Satellite Radio

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

32,243

402

 

Williams-Sonoma, Inc.

11,669

389

 

Lennar Corp. Class A

13,540

383

 

Brinker International, Inc.

11,948

345

 

RadioShack Corp.

14,326

341

 

^New York Times Co. Class A

15,213

334

*

NVR, Inc.

594

332

 

Tribune Co.

11,895

328

*

AutoNation, Inc.

16,378

311

*

Urban Outfitters, Inc.

13,021

298

*

Career Education Corp.

10,017

298

*

Chico’s FAS, Inc.

18,528

296

 

Dow Jones & Co., Inc.

5,010

296

 

KB Home

9,438

286

 

 

11

 


 

 

OfficeMax, Inc.

7,883

280

 

Foot Locker, Inc.

16,377

274

*

Toll Brothers, Inc.

12,278

262

 

Weight Watchers

 

 

 

International, Inc.

4,138

215

 

Washington Post Co. Class B

254

194

*

Getty Images, Inc.

4,794

150

 

^The McClatchy Co. Class A

6,038

136

 

Centex Corp.

3,318

96

*

Sally Beauty Co. Inc.

1,200

10

 

 

 

96,943

Consumer Staples (4.7%)

 

 

 

CVS/Caremark Corp.

155,746

5,890

 

Walgreen Co.

104,891

4,727

 

Costco Wholesale Corp.

46,954

2,899

 

General Mills, Inc.

36,067

2,015

 

The Kroger Co.

74,644

1,984

 

Kellogg Co.

31,419

1,726

 

Avon Products, Inc.

46,306

1,591

 

Safeway, Inc.

46,420

1,473

 

Campbell Soup Co.

30,732

1,160

 

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.

37,471

893

 

Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co.

14,565

848

 

The Hershey Co.

17,640

820

 

Whole Foods Market, Inc.

14,902

660

*

Energizer Holdings, Inc.

5,937

629

 

The Pepsi Bottling Group, Inc.

17,947

621

 

The Estee Lauder Cos. Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

11,734

488

 

McCormick & Co., Inc.

12,314

441

 

Hormel Foods Corp.

10,988

392

 

Dean Foods Co.

13,704

368

 

PepsiAmericas, Inc.

10,159

301

 

Alberto-Culver Co.

10,337

240

 

Del Monte Foods Co.

21,278

224

 

Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co. Class B

2,416

141

 

 

 

30,531

Energy (1.9%)

 

 

 

Apache Corp.

34,525

2,672

 

XTO Energy, Inc.

38,462

2,091

 

Smith International, Inc.

20,968

1,405

 

Peabody Energy Corp.

27,896

1,186

 

Sunoco, Inc.

12,838

939

*

Ultra Petroleum Corp.

16,008

855

 

CONSOL Energy, Inc.

19,230

767

*

Newfield Exploration Co.

13,621

592

 

Pioneer Natural Resources Co.

12,914

530

 

Rowan Cos., Inc.

11,641

437

 

Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc.

16,496

354

 

Teekay Shipping Corp.

5,789

336

 

Pogo Producing Co.

6,190

308

 

 

12

 


 

 

 

12,472

Financial Services (37.9%)

 

 

 

Capital Markets (7.2%)

 

 

 

The Goldman Sachs

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

43,297

7,621

 

Morgan Stanley

111,299

6,942

 

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

91,305

6,729

 

Bank of New York

 

 

 

Mellon Corp.

118,054

4,773

 

Lehman Brothers

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

55,800

3,059

 

Charles Schwab Corp.

131,304

2,600

 

Franklin Resources Corp.

19,708

2,597

 

State Street Corp.

41,661

2,556

 

Ameriprise Financial, Inc.

24,775

1,512

 

T. Rowe Price Group Inc.

27,782

1,426

 

Northern Trust Corp.

23,154

1,423

 

Bear Stearns Co., Inc.

12,589

1,368

 

Legg Mason Inc.

13,877

1,205

*

E*TRADE Financial Corp.

44,847

699

 

A.G. Edwards, Inc.

7,963

666

*

TD Ameritrade Holding Corp.

31,578

573

 

Janus Capital Group Inc.

19,587

521

 

^Allied Capital Corp.

16,067

479

 

SEI Investments Co.

15,688

398

 

 

 

 

 

Commercial Banks (8.2%)

 

 

 

Wells Fargo & Co.

351,568

12,846

 

Wachovia Corp.

201,083

9,849

 

U.S. Bancorp

183,115

5,924

 

SunTrust Banks, Inc.

37,259

2,934

 

PNC Financial Services Group

36,690

2,582

 

Regions Financial Corp.

74,072

2,318

 

BB&T Corp.

57,102

2,269

 

Fifth Third Bancorp

58,194

2,077

 

KeyCorp

41,332

1,376

 

M & T Bank Corp.

11,423

1,209

 

Marshall & Ilsley Corp.

27,307

1,194

 

Synovus Financial Corp.

34,411

950

 

Comerica, Inc.

16,406

915

 

Compass Bancshares Inc.

13,802

902

 

Zions Bancorp

11,376

803

 

Commerce Bancorp, Inc.

20,145

740

 

Huntington Bancshares Inc.

38,536

663

 

First Horizon National Corp.

13,338

409

 

Associated Banc-Corp

13,358

377

 

City National Corp.

5,138

367

 

Popular, Inc.

29,395

363

 

Commerce Bancshares, Inc.

7,415

346

 

UnionBanCal Corp.

5,878

346

 

TCF Financial Corp.

13,599

344

 

Colonial BancGroup, Inc.

16,099

342

 

Valley National Bancorp

12,820

291

 

 

13

 


 

Fulton Financial Corp.

18,276

269

 

 

 

 

 

Consumer Finance (2.2%)

 

 

 

American Express Co.

124,729

7,312

 

Capital One Financial Corp.

43,751

2,829

 

SLM Corp.

43,484

2,186

*

Discover Financial Services

55,649

1,288

*

AmeriCredit Corp.

12,436

215

 

The First Marblehead Corp.

5,041

169

 

Student Loan Corp.

494

97

 

Diversified Financial Services (7.2%)

 

 

 

Bank of America Corp.

468,615

23,749

 

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

359,098

15,987

 

CME Group, Inc.

5,733

3,181

 

NYSE Euronext

27,831

2,025

 

Moody’s Corp.

28,852

1,323

 

CIT Group Inc.

20,285

762

 

 

 

 

 

Insurance (7.0%)

 

 

 

MetLife, Inc.

77,954

4,993

 

Prudential Financial, Inc.

48,753

4,377

 

The Travelers Cos., Inc.

69,853

3,530

 

The Allstate Corp.

63,859

3,496

 

The Hartford Financial

 

 

 

Services Group Inc.

33,334

2,964

 

AFLAC Inc.

51,659

2,754

 

The Chubb Corp.

42,280

2,162

 

ACE Ltd.

34,626

2,000

 

Lincoln National Corp.

28,551

1,738

 

The Principal

 

 

 

Financial Group, Inc.

28,379

1,575

 

Progressive Corp. of Ohio

77,384

1,574

 

XL Capital Ltd. Class A

18,495

1,409

 

Genworth Financial Inc.

45,711

1,325

 

Unum Group

37,898

927

 

MBIA, Inc.

13,827

830

 

Cincinnati Financial Corp.

18,305

771

 

Everest Re Group, Ltd.

6,644

677

 

Ambac Financial Group, Inc.

10,769

677

 

Assurant, Inc.

12,806

660

 

Safeco Corp.

11,131

646

 

Torchmark Corp.

10,049

619

 

W.R. Berkley Corp.

20,464

612

 

White Mountains

 

 

 

Insurance Group Inc.

1,135

592

 

Axis Capital Holdings Ltd.

16,249

587

*

Markel Corp.

1,057

503

 

Old Republic

 

 

 

International Corp.

24,342

443

 

Willis Group Holdings Ltd.

11,245

437

 

PartnerRe Ltd.

5,998

436

 

RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd.

7,594

435

 

First American Corp.

10,217

427

 

 

14

 


 

Brown & Brown, Inc.

14,776

398

 

Protective Life Corp.

7,314

306

 

Unitrin, Inc.

5,272

240

 

Transatlantic Holdings, Inc.

2,850

202

 

Mercury General Corp.

2,921

154

 

Erie Indemnity Co. Class A

2,416

135

 

CNA Financial Corp.

2,563

108

 

Wesco Financial Corp.

151

60

 

 

 

 

 

Real Estate (3.0%)

 

 

 

Simon Property

 

 

 

Group, Inc. REIT

23,551

2,235

 

Vornado Realty Trust REIT

16,007

1,706

 

Archstone-Smith Trust REIT

23,452

1,379

 

General Growth

 

 

 

Properties Inc. REIT

25,793

1,282

 

Boston Properties, Inc. REIT

12,540

1,255

 

Equity Residential REIT

30,687

1,235

 

Host Hotels &

 

 

 

Resorts Inc. REIT

55,067

1,227

 

Kimco Realty Corp. REIT

26,285

1,126

 

Public Storage, Inc. REIT

13,430

1,018

 

Avalonbay

 

 

 

Communities, Inc. REIT

8,266

945

 

Plum Creek

 

 

 

Timber Co. Inc. REIT

18,702

784

 

Developers Diversified

 

 

 

Realty Corp. REIT

13,159

704

 

Health Care Properties

 

 

 

Investors REIT

21,622

658

 

The Macerich Co. REIT

7,584

616

 

AMB Property Corp. REIT

10,404

572

 

Regency Centers Corp. REIT

7,307

508

 

iStar Financial Inc. REIT

13,564

496

 

Duke Realty Corp. REIT

14,422

487

 

Hospitality Properties

 

 

 

Trust REIT

9,863

389

 

Liberty Property Trust REIT

9,700

379

 

Weingarten Realty

 

 

 

Investors REIT

9,028

363

 

 

 

 

Real Estate Management & Development (0.1%)

 

Forest City Enterprise Class A

8,137

452

 

The St. Joe Co.

7,861

249

 

 

 

 

 

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance (3.0%)

 

 

 

Fannie Mae

101,942

6,688

 

Freddie Mac

69,515

4,283

 

Washington Mutual, Inc.

92,883

3,411

 

Countrywide Financial Corp.

62,442

1,239

 

Sovereign Bancorp, Inc.

49,620

897

 

Hudson City Bancorp, Inc.

57,242

814

 

New York Community

 

 

 

 

15

 


 

 

Bancorp, Inc.

32,980

583

 

People’s United Financial Inc.

31,448

556

 

The PMI Group Inc.

9,205

292

 

Astoria Financial Corp.

10,353

270

 

MGIC Investment Corp.

8,818

266

 

 

 

246,418

Health Care (17.1%)

 

 

 

Merck & Co., Inc.

228,802

11,479

 

Abbott Laboratories

162,249

8,422

 

UnitedHealth Group Inc.

141,675

7,085

 

Eli Lilly & Co.

118,771

6,811

 

Medtronic, Inc.

121,400

6,415

*

Amgen, Inc.

114,010

5,713

*

WellPoint Inc.

64,379

5,188

 

Schering-Plough Corp.

155,756

4,676

 

Baxter International, Inc.

68,388

3,745

*

Gilead Sciences, Inc.

97,872

3,560

*

Genentech, Inc.

44,142

3,302

 

Cardinal Health, Inc.

40,461

2,767

 

Aetna Inc.

53,898

2,744

*

Celgene Corp.

39,926

2,564

 

Stryker Corp.

32,238

2,154

*

Boston Scientific Corp.

154,843

1,987

*

Zimmer Holdings, Inc.

25,122

1,968

 

Allergan, Inc.

32,328

1,940

*

Biogen Idec Inc.

30,338

1,936

 

McKesson Corp.

31,139

1,781

*

Genzyme Corp.

27,740

1,731

 

CIGNA Corp.

30,271

1,564

*

Express Scripts Inc.

28,498

1,560

*

St. Jude Medical, Inc.

35,565

1,549

 

Alcon, Inc.

9,574

1,295

*

Forest Laboratories, Inc.

33,509

1,261

*

Humana Inc.

17,707

1,135

*

Laboratory Corp. of

 

 

 

America Holdings

12,406

963

 

AmerisourceBergen Corp.

19,936

954

*

Coventry Health Care Inc.

16,437

943

 

Quest Diagnostics, Inc.

15,469

847

*

Waters Corp.

10,691

658

*

Health Net Inc.

11,772

645

*

DaVita, Inc.

11,079

637

*

Hospira, Inc.

16,419

635

 

Applera Corp.–Applied

 

 

 

Biosystems Group

19,333

611

*

Henry Schein, Inc.

9,301

541

*

Patterson Cos.

14,532

534

*

Cephalon, Inc.

6,983

524

 

Manor Care, Inc.

7,721

493

*

Barr Pharmaceuticals Inc.

8,678

442

 

Omnicare, Inc.

12,800

418

*

Millipore Corp.

5,758

401

*

Invitrogen Corp.

4,940

385

 

 

16

 


*

King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

25,577

384

 

Mylan Laboratories, Inc.

25,363

383

 

Hillenbrand Industries, Inc.

6,572

378

 

Bausch & Lomb, Inc.

5,773

365

*

Community Health

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

10,159

353

*

Millennium

 

 

 

Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

33,828

343

*

Kinetic Concepts, Inc.

5,645

339

*

Sepracor Inc.

11,268

329

*

Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

10,791

322

*

Lincare Holdings, Inc.

8,820

317

 

Universal Health

 

 

 

Services Class B

5,342

282

*

HLTH Corp.

18,190

269

*

ImClone Systems, Inc.

6,681

228

 

 

 

111,255

Industrials (3.8%)

 

 

 

United Parcel Service, Inc.

70,978

5,384

 

Union Pacific Corp.

28,138

3,139

 

Burlington Northern

 

 

 

Santa Fe Corp.

37,796

3,067

 

PACCAR, Inc.

26,368

2,256

 

Norfolk Southern Corp.

41,753

2,138

 

Southwest Airlines Co.

82,660

1,249

 

Pitney Bowes, Inc.

23,359

1,043

 

Masco Corp.

39,774

1,035

 

C.H. Robinson Worldwide Inc.

18,036

884

 

Fastenal Co.

16,016

730

 

Republic Services, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

20,404

634

 

Manpower Inc.

8,994

632

 

Equifax, Inc.

15,338

591

 

Robert Half International, Inc.

17,631

563

 

Cintas Corp.

12,590

461

*

Monster Worldwide Inc.

13,325

456

 

J.B. Hunt Transport

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

11,161

321

*

ChoicePoint Inc.

8,025

316

 

 

 

24,899

Information Technology (16.0%)

 

 

 

Intel Corp.

611,446

15,745

*

Google Inc.

24,330

12,536

*

Apple Inc.

90,330

12,509

*

eBay Inc.

107,979

3,682

 

Applied Materials, Inc.

146,083

3,120

 

Automatic Data

 

 

 

Processing, Inc.

57,901

2,648

*

Adobe Systems, Inc.

61,871

2,645

 

First Data Corp.

79,243

2,632

*

Yahoo! Inc.

106,030

2,410

 

 

17

 


*

NVIDIA Corp.

38,140

1,951

*

Symantec Corp.

97,232

1,829

*

Juniper Networks, Inc.

55,497

1,827

*

Electronic Arts Inc.

32,476

1,719

*

Broadcom Corp.

49,266

1,700

 

Western Union Co.

80,343

1,513

 

Seagate Technology

57,643

1,488

*

SanDisk Corp.

23,967

1,344

 

Analog Devices, Inc.

35,103

1,295

 

KLA-Tencor Corp.

20,162

1,159

*

MEMC Electronic

 

 

 

Materials, Inc.

18,688

1,148

*

Autodesk, Inc.

24,363

1,128

*

Cognizant Technology

 

 

 

Solutions Corp.

14,999

1,103

*

Network Appliance, Inc.

39,062

1,088

 

CA, Inc.

41,543

1,046

*

Intuit, Inc.

36,310

992

 

Fidelity National Information

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

20,176

956

 

Linear Technology Corp.

26,714

908

*

Micron Technology, Inc.

79,296

908

 

Altera Corp.

37,786

900

 

Microchip Technology, Inc.

22,799

878

*

VeriSign, Inc.

25,793

831

*

Fiserv, Inc.

17,687

823

 

Xilinx, Inc.

31,360

802

*

Avaya Inc.

47,523

800

*

LAM Research Corp.

14,272

765

*

Marvell Technology Group Ltd.

46,044

763

*

Amdocs Ltd.

21,597

762

*

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.

57,866

752

 

National Semiconductor Corp.

28,432

748

*

Flextronics International Ltd.

63,535

724

*

Citrix Systems, Inc.

19,176

697

*

BMC Software, Inc.

21,594

661

*

Cadence Design Systems, Inc.

29,255

635

*

Avnet, Inc.

15,733

618

*

McAfee Inc.

16,846

602

*

Iron Mountain, Inc.

20,862

590

*

Akamai Technologies, Inc.

17,404

561

*

Check Point Software

 

 

 

Technologies Ltd.

23,803

558

*

LSI Corp.

81,045

558

*

Ceridian Corp.

15,164

519

*

DST Systems, Inc.

6,775

518

*

BEA Systems, Inc.

41,004

500

*

Alliance Data Systems Corp.

6,232

489

*

Affiliated Computer

 

 

 

Services, Inc. Class A

9,731

487

*

Tellabs, Inc.

45,980

485

 

Jabil Circuit, Inc.

21,696

482

*

Novellus Systems, Inc.

13,298

364

 

 

18

 


 

 

Diebold, Inc.

6,945

305

*

Compuware Corp.

34,155

277

*

Zebra Technologies Corp.

 

 

 

Class A

7,336

266

 

Broadridge Financial

 

 

 

Solutions LLC

14,650

266

*

Convergys Corp.

14,485

243

 

Fair Isaac, Inc.

6,079

225

*

QLogic Corp.

16,570

220

 

MoneyGram International, Inc.

8,933

190

*

Sanmina-SCI Corp.

56,057

128

 

Total System Services, Inc.

4,201

117

 

 

 

104,138

Materials (1.1%)

 

 

 

Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.

22,809

2,053

 

^Southern Peru Copper Corp.

 

 

 

(U.S. Shares)

9,335

983

 

Vulcan Materials Co.

9,979

898

*

The Mosaic Co.

18,414

774

 

Sigma-Aldrich Corp.

13,812

619

 

Sealed Air Corp.

17,150

454

*

Pactiv Corp.

13,792

403

 

Bemis Co., Inc.

11,081

331

 

Cabot Corp.

6,778

273

 

Louisiana-Pacific Corp.

11,012

206

 

 

 

6,994

Telecommunication Services (2.3%)

 

 

 

Sprint Nextel Corp.

296,767

5,615

*

Qwest Communications

 

 

 

International Inc.

196,324

1,757

*

American Tower Corp.

 

 

 

Class A

43,927

1,740

*

NII Holdings Inc.

17,254

1,366

 

Embarq Corp.

15,726

982

*

Level 3 Communications, Inc.

159,988

837

*

Crown Castle

 

 

 

International Corp.

22,507

827

 

CenturyTel, Inc.

11,515

552

 

Citizens Communications Co.

36,033

523

 

Telephone & Data

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.–

 

 

 

Special Common Shares

6,074

374

 

Telephone & Data

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

5,473

354

 

 

 

14,927

Utilities (0.4%)

 

 

 

Questar Corp.

17,992

899

 

Equitable Resources, Inc.

12,800

630

 

Pepco Holdings, Inc.

20,080

560

 

NiSource, Inc.

28,842

543

 

Puget Energy, Inc.

12,274

286

 

 

 

2,918

 

 

19

 


Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $572,471)

 

651,495

Temporary Cash Investment (0.3%)

 

 

1

Vanguard Market Liquidity

 

 

 

Fund, 5.247%—Note E

 

 

 

(Cost $2,075)

2,075,200

2,075

Total Investments (100.4%)

 

 

(Cost $574,546)

 

653,570

Other Assets and Liabilities (–0.4%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

2,644

Liabilities—Note E

 

(5,186)

 

 

 

(2,542)

Net Assets (100%)

 

651,028

 

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 2

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

568,133

Undistributed Net Investment Income

5,522

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(1,651)

Unrealized Appreciation

79,024

Net Assets

651,028

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 58,007,205 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

539,702

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Investor Shares

$9.30

 

 

 

 

Institutional Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 11,943,864 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

111,326

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Institutional Shares

$9.32

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

^  Part of security position is on loan to broker-dealers. See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements .

1  Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

2  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

REIT—Real Estate Investment Trust.

 

20

 


Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

10,261

Interest 1

53

Security Lending

78

Total Income

10,392

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

94

Management and Administrative

 

Investor Shares

881

Institutional Shares

56

Marketing and Distribution

 

Investor Shares

123

Institutional Shares

26

Custodian Fees

76

Auditing Fees

21

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Investor Shares

19

Institutional Shares

Trustees’ Fees and Expenses

1

Total Expenses

1,297

Net Investment Income

9,095

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on Investment Securities Sold

12,259

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation) of Investment Securities

32,031

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

53,385

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $53,000.

 

21

 


Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

9,095

6,194

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

12,259

2,537

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

32,031

21,293

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

53,385

30,024

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Investor Shares

(6,055)

(4,630)

Institutional Shares

(1,389)

(363)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Investor Shares

Institutional Shares

Total Distributions

(7,444)

(4,993)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Investor Shares

97,215

21,636

Institutional Shares

16,384

56,187

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

113,599

77,823

Total Increase (Decrease)

159,540

102,854

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

491,488

388,634

End of Period 1

651,028

491,488

 

 

1   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $5,522,000 and $3,871,000.

 

22

 


Financial Highlights

 

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$8.51

$8.03

$7.40

$6.87

$6.02

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.13

.11

.13 1

.08

.07

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

.78

.47

.62

.52

.84

Total from Investment Operations

.91

.58

.75

.60

.91

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.12)

(.10)

(.12)

(.07)

(.06)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.12)

(.10)

(.12)

(.07)

(.06)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$9.30

$8.51

$8.03

$7.40

$6.87

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 2

10.70%

7.25%

10.16%

8.75%

15.28%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$540

$405

$361

$274

$150

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

0.24%

0.25%

0.25%

0.25%

0.25%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

1.48%

1.41%

1.74% 1

1.17%

1.18%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

20%

51% 3

12%

8%

14%

 

 

1  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $0.04 and 0.43%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

2  Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

3  Includes activity related to a change in the fund’s target index.

 

23

 


Institutional Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 14 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$8.52

$8.04

$7.41

$6.88

$6.22

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.152

.12

.138 2

.084

.05

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

.780

.47

.620

.522

.61

Total from Investment Operations

.932

.59

.758

.606

.66

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.132)

(.11)

(.128)

(.076)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.132)

(.11)

(.128)

(.076)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$9.32

$8.52

$8.04

$7.41

$6.88

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

10.95%

7.37%

10.26%

8.83%

10.61%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$111

$87

$27

$13

$12

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.11%

0.12%

0.12%

0.12%

0.12%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

1.61%

1.54%

1.83% 2

1.30%

1.32%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate

20%

51% 3

12%

8%

14%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $0.036 and 0.43%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

3  Includes activity related to a change in the fund’s target index.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

24

 


Notes to Financial Statements

Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Investor Shares and Institutional Shares. Investor Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. Institutional Shares are designed for investors who meet certain administrative and service criteria and invest a minimum of $5 million.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Security Lending: The fund may lend its securities to qualified institutional borrowers to earn additional income. Security loans are required to be secured at all times by collateral at least equal to the market value of securities loaned. The fund invests cash collateral received in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, and records a liability for the return of the collateral, during the period the securities are on loan. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less expenses associated with the loan.

5. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $57,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.06% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

 

25

 


C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $6,097,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $1,431,000 to offset future net capital gains of $79,000 through August 31, 2012, $985,000 through August 31, 2013, and $367,000 through August 31, 2014.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $574,626,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $78,944,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $99,854,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $20,910,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $234,874,000 of investment securities and sold $118,520,000 of investment securities other than temporary cash investments.

E. The market value of securities on loan to broker-dealers at August 31, 2007, was $1,928,000, for which the fund received cash collateral of $2,075,000.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were:

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

167,494

17,947

 

111,874

13,456

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

5,638

610

 

4,249

509

Redeemed

(75,917)

(8,154)

 

(94,487)

(11,368)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Investor Shares

97,215

10,403

 

21,636

2,597

Institutional Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

41,949

4,428

 

60,218

7,250

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

1,389

150

 

363

44

Redeemed

(26,954)

(2,794)

 

(4,394)

(530)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Institutional Shares

16,384

1,784

 

56,187

6,764

 

G. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

 

26

 


Report of Independent Registered

Public Accounting Firm

 

To the Trustees of Vanguard World Funds and the Shareholders of Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statement of net assets and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund (the “Fund”) at August 31, 2007, the results of its operations for the year then ended, the changes in its net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Fund’s management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2007 by correspondence with the custodian and by agreement to the underlying ownership records for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

 

October 10, 2007

 

 


Special 2007 tax information (unaudited) for Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund

 

This information for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007, is included pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The fund distributed $7,444,000 of qualified dividend income to shareholders during the fiscal year.

For corporate shareholders, 100% of investment income (dividend income plus short-term gains, if any) qualifies for the dividends-received deduction.

 

27

 


Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

This table presents returns for your fund both before and after taxes. The after-tax returns are shown in two ways: (1) assuming that an investor owned the fund during the entire period and paid taxes on the fund’s distributions, and (2) assuming that an investor paid taxes on the fund’s distributions and sold all shares at the end of each period.

Calculations are based on the highest individual federal income tax and capital gains tax rates in effect at the times of the distributions and the hypothetical sales. State and local taxes were not considered. After-tax returns reflect any qualified dividend income, using actual prior-year figures and estimates for 2007. (In the example, returns after the sale of fund shares may be higher than those assuming no sale. This occurs when the sale would have produced a capital loss. The calculation assumes that the investor received a tax deduction for the loss.)

The table shows returns for Investor Shares only; returns for other share classes will differ. Please note that your actual after-tax returns will depend on your tax situation and may differ from those shown. Also note that if you own the fund in a tax-deferred account, such as an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan, this information does not apply to you. Such accounts are not subject to current taxes.

Finally, keep in mind that a fund’s performance—whether before or after taxes—does not guarantee future results.

 

Average Annual Total Returns: FTSE Social Index Investor Shares 1

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

One

Five

Since

 

Year

Years

Inception 2

Returns Before Taxes

10.70%

10.40%

–0.07%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

10.49   

10.15   

–0.29   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

7.24   

8.99   

–0.15   

 

 

1  Total returns do not include the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

2  Inception date for Investor Shares is May 31, 2000.

 

28

 


About Your Fund’s Expenses

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

A fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. This figure is known as the expense ratio. The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period.

The table below illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The “Ending Account Value” shown is derived from the fund’s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period.”

Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return . This section is intended to help you compare your fund’s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

 

Six Months Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

Beginning

Ending

Expenses

 

Account Value

Account Value

Paid During

FTSE Social Index Fund

2/28/2007

8/31/2007

Period 1

Based on Actual Fund Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,004.32

$1.16

Institutional Shares

1,000.00

1,005.39

0.51

Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,024.05

$1.17

Institutional Shares

1,000.00

1,024.70

0.51

 

 

1  The calculations are based on expenses incurred in the most recent six-month period. The fund’s annualized six-month expense ratios for that period are 0.23% for Investor Shares and 0.10% for Institutional Shares. The dollar amounts shown as “Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense ratio multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

 

29

 


Note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include the account service fee described in the prospectus. If such a fee were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not charge transaction fees, such as purchase or redemption fees, nor does it carry a “sales load.”

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

 

30

 


Trustees Approve Advisory Arrangement

The board of trustees of Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund has renewed the fund’s investment advisory arrangement with The Vanguard Group, Inc. Vanguard—through its Quantitative Equity Group—serves as the investment advisor for the fund. The board determined that continuing the fund’s internalized management structure was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders.

The board based its decision upon an evaluation of the advisor’s investment staff, portfolio management process, and performance. The trustees considered the factors discussed below, among others. However, no single factor determined whether the board approved the arrangement. Rather, it was the totality of the circumstances that drove the board’s decision.

Nature, extent, and quality of services

The board considered the quality of the fund’s investment management over both the short and long term, and took into account the organizational depth and stability of the advisor. Vanguard has been managing investments for more than two decades. George U. Sauter, Vanguard managing director and chief investment officer, has been in the investment management business since 1985. Mr. Sauter has led the Quantitative Equity Group since 1987. The Quantitative Equity Group adheres to a sound, disciplined investment management process; the team has considerable experience, stability, and depth.

The board concluded that Vanguard’s experience, stability, depth, and performance, among other factors, warranted continuation of the advisory arrangement.

Investment performance

The board considered the short- and long-term performance of the fund, including any periods of outperformance or underperformance of its target benchmark and peer group. The board concluded that the fund has performed in line with expectations and that its results have been consistent with its investment strategy. Information about the fund’s most recent performance can be found in the Performance Summary section of this report.

Cost

The board concluded that the fund’s expense ratio was far below the average expense ratio charged by funds in its peer group. The board noted that the fund’s advisory expense ratio was also well below its peer-group average. Information about the fund’s expense ratio appears in the About Your Fund’s Expenses section of this report as well as in the Financial Statements section.

The board does not conduct a profitability analysis of Vanguard because of Vanguard’s unique “at-cost” structure. Unlike most other mutual fund management companies, Vanguard is owned by the funds it oversees, and produces “profits” only in the form of reduced expenses for fund shareholders.

The benefit of economies of scale

The board concluded that the fund’s low-cost arrangement with Vanguard ensures that the fund will realize economies of scale as it grows, with the cost to shareholders declining as fund assets increase.

The board will consider whether to renew the advisory arrangement again after a one-year period.

 

31

 


Glossary

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. A fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition below). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

Earnings Growth Rate. The average annual rate of growth in earnings over the past five years for the stocks now in a fund.

Expense Ratio. The percentage of a fund’s average net assets used to pay its annual administrative and advisory expenses. These expenses directly reduce returns to investors.

Foreign Holdings. The percentage of a fund represented by stocks or depositary receipts of companies based outside the United States.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

Median Market Cap. An indicator of the size of companies in which a fund invests; the midpoint of market capitalization (market price x shares outstanding) of a fund’s stocks, weighted by the proportion of the fund’s assets invested in each stock. Stocks representing half of the fund’s assets have market capitalizations above the median, and the rest are below it.

Price/Book Ratio. The share price of a stock divided by its net worth, or book value, per share. For a fund, the weighted average price/book ratio of the stocks it holds.

Price/Earnings Ratio. The ratio of a stock’s current price to its per-share earnings over the past year. For a fund, the weighted average P/E of the stocks it holds. P/E is an indicator of market expectations about corporate prospects; the higher the P/E, the greater the expectations for a company’s future growth.

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0.

Return on Equity. The annual average rate of return generated by a company during the past five years for each dollar of shareholder’s equity (net income divided by shareholder’s equity). For a fund, the weighted average return on equity for the companies whose stocks it holds.

Short-Term Reserves. The percentage of a fund invested in highly liquid, short-term securities that can be readily converted to cash.

Turnover Rate. An indication of the fund’s trading activity. Funds with high turnover rates incur higher transaction costs and may be more likely to distribute capital gains (which may be taxable to investors). The turnover rate excludes in-kind transactions, which have minimal impact on costs.

Yield. A snapshot of a fund’s income from interest and dividends. The yield, expressed as a percentage of the fund’s net asset value, is based on income earned over the past 30 days and is annualized, or projected forward for the coming year. The index yield is based on the current annualized rate of income provided by securities in the index.

 

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The People Who Govern Your Fund

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals.

Our independent board members bring distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service to their task of working with Vanguard officers to establish the policies and oversee the activities of the funds. Among board members’ responsibilities are selecting investment advisors for the funds; monitoring fund operations, performance, and costs; reviewing contracts; nominating and selecting new trustees/directors; and electing Vanguard officers.

Each trustee serves a fund until its termination; or until the trustee’s retirement, resignation, or death; or otherwise as specified in the fund’s organizational documents. Any trustee may be removed at a shareholders’ meeting by a vote representing two-thirds of the net asset value of all shares of the fund together with shares of other Vanguard funds organized within the same trust. The table on these two pages shows information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. The mailing address of the trustees and officers is P.O. Box 876, Valley Forge, PA 19482.

 

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer, and Trustee

 

 

John J. Brennan 1

 

Born 1954

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive

Trustee since May 1987;

Officer, and Director/Trustee of The Vanguard Group, Inc., and of each of the investment

Chairman of the Board and

companies served by The Vanguard Group.

Chief Executive Officer

 

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

Independent Trustees

 

 

 

Charles D. Ellis

 

Born 1937

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Applecore Partners (pro bono ventures

Trustee since January 2001

in education); Senior Advisor to Greenwich Associates (international business strategy

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

consulting); Successor Trustee of Yale University; Overseer of the Stern School of Business

 

at New York University; Trustee of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.

 

 

Rajiv L. Gupta

 

Born 1945

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, and

Trustee since December 2001 2

Chief Executive Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Board Member of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

the American Chemistry Council; Director of Tyco International, Ltd. (diversified

 

manufacturing and services) since 2005; Trustee of Drexel University and of the

 

Chemical Heritage Foundation.

 

 

Amy Gutmann

 

Born 1949

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President of the University of

Trustee since June 2006

Pennsylvania since 2004; Professor in the School of Arts and Sciences, Annenberg School

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

for Communication, and Graduate School of Education of the University of Pennsylvania

 

since 2004; Provost (2001–2004) and Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics and

 

the University Center for Human Values (1990–2004), Princeton University; Director of

 

Carnegie Corporation of New York since 2005 and of Schuylkill River Development

 

Corporation and Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce since 2004.

 

 

 


JoAnn Heffernan Heisen

 

Born 1950

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate Vice President and

Trustee since July 1998

Chief Global Diversity Officer since 2006, Vice President and Chief Information

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Officer (1997–2005), and Member of the Executive Committee of Johnson &

 

Johnson (pharmaceuticals/consumer products); Director of the University Medical

 

Center at Princeton and Women’s Research and Education Institute.

 

 

André F. Perold

 

Born 1952

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Gund Professor of Finance

Trustee since December 2004

and Banking, Harvard Business School; Senior Associate Dean, Director of Faculty

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Recruiting, and Chair of Finance Faculty, Harvard Business School; Director and Chairman

 

of UNX, Inc. (equities trading firm) since 2003; Chair of the Investment Committee of

 

HighVista Strategies LLC (private investment firm) since 2005.

 

 

Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.

 

Born 1941

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, Chief Executive

Trustee since January 1993

Officer, and Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Director

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/aircraft systems and services).

 

 

 

 

J. Lawrence Wilson

 

Born 1936

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Retired Chairman and Chief Executive

Trustee since April 1985

Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Director of Cummins Inc. (diesel engines) and

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

AmerisourceBergen Corp. (pharmaceutical distribution); Trustee of Vanderbilt University

 

and of Culver Educational Foundation.

 

 

Executive Officers 1

 

 

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Born 1957

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.;

Treasurer since July 1998

Treasurer of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard Group.

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

 

 

Heidi Stam

 

Born 1956

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing Director of The Vanguard

Secretary since July 2005

Group, Inc., since 2006; General Counsel of The Vanguard Group since 2005; Secretary of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

The Vanguard Group, and of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard

 

Group, since 2005; Principal of The Vanguard Group (1997–2006).

 

Vanguard Senior Management Team

 

 

 

 

 

 

R. Gregory Barton

Kathleen C. Gubanich

F. William McNabb, III

Ralph K. Packard

Mortimer J. Buckley

Paul A. Heller

Michael S. Miller

George U. Sauter

 

Founder

 

John C. Bogle

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996

 

 

1  Officers of the funds are “interested persons” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940.

2  December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.

More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information , available from The Vanguard Group.

 

 



P.O. Box 2600

Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

Connect with Vanguard ® > www.vanguard.com

 

 

Fund Information > 800-662-7447

All other marks are the exclusive property of their

 

respective owners.

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All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc.

Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036

or Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.

 

 

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With Hearing Impairment > 800-952-3335

You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting

 

guidelines by visiting our website, www.vanguard.com,

 

and searching for “proxy voting guidelines,” or by calling

 

Vanguard at 800-662-2739. They are also available from

 

the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov. In addition, you may

This material may be used in conjunction

obtain a free report on how your fund voted the proxies for

with the offering of shares of any Vanguard

securities it owned during the 12 months ended June 30.

fund only if preceded or accompanied by

To get the report, visit either www.vanguard.com

the fund’s current prospectus.

or www.sec.gov.

 

 

 

 

Vanguard , Connect with Vanguard , and the ship logo

 

are trademarks of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

You can review and copy information about your fund

 

at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C.

 

To find out more about this public service, call the SEC

“FTSE ® ” and “FTSE4Good™” are trademarks jointly

at 202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also

owned by the London Stock Exchange plc and The

available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive

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copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a

International Limited under license. The FTSE4Good

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publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the

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endorse, or promote the fund; is not in any way

Commission, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

connected to it; and does not accept any liability in

 

relation to its issue, operation, and trading.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© 2007 The Vanguard Group, Inc.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.

 

 

 

Q2130 102007

 

 

 

 




 


>  The broad U.S. stock market returned 15.6% during the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007; the market climbed steadily until the end of the period, when it dipped amid growing volatility.

 

>  For the 12 months, the Vanguard U.S. Sector Index Funds posted a wide range of returns. Nearly 30 percentage points separated the return of the materials sector, the best-performing group, from that of financials, the worst.

 

>  The materials, energy, industrials, information technology, and telecommunication services sectors posted the strongest 12-month gains. The consumer staples, health care, utilities, and financials sectors all trailed the one-year return of the broad stock market.

 

Contents

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

1

Chairman’s Letter

2

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

7

Consumer Staples Index Fund

15

Energy Index Fund

21

Financials Index Fund

28

Health Care Index Fund

37

Industrials Index Fund

44

Information Technology Index Fund

52

Materials Index Fund

60

Telecommunication Services Index Fund

67

Utilities Index Fund

73

Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

80

About Your Fund’s Expenses

81

Trustees Approve Advisory Arrangement

82

Glossary

83

 

 


 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.

 

 


Your Fund’s Total Returns

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007

 

Admiral™ Shares

 

 

 

Ticker

Total

 

Symbol

Returns

Vanguard Consumer

 

 

Discretionary Index Fund

VCDAX

15.6%

MSCI ® US IMI/Consumer

 

 

Discretionary

 

15.9   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Consumer Staples

 

 

Index Fund

VCSAX

10.3%

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Staples

 

9.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Energy Index Fund

VENAX

26.0%

MSCI US IMI/Energy

 

26.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Financials Index Fund

VFAIX

2.9%

MSCI US IMI/Financials

 

3.2   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Health Care Index Fund

VHCIX

7.7%

MSCI US IMI/Health Care

 

7.9   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Industrials Index Fund

VINAX

24.9%

MSCI US IMI/Industrials

 

25.0   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Information

 

 

Technology Index Fund

VITAX

23.0%

MSCI US IMI/Information Technology

23.3   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Materials Index Fund

VMIAX

31.0%

MSCI US IMI/Materials

 

31.2   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Telecommunication

 

 

Services Index Fund

VTCAX

24.8%

MSCI US IMI/

 

 

Telecommunication Services

 

27.1   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Utilities Index Fund

VUIAX

14.3%

MSCI US IMI/Utilities

 

14.6   

 

 

 

 

 

 

MSCI US IMI/2500

 

15.5%

 

 

1

 


 

ETF Shares 1

 

 

 

Ticker

Total

 

Symbol

Returns

Vanguard Consumer

 

 

Discretionary ETF

VCR

 

Market Price

 

14.9%

Net Asset Value

 

15.7   

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Discretionary

 

15.9   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Consumer Staples ETF

VDC

 

Market Price

 

10.1%

Net Asset Value

 

10.4   

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Staples

 

9.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Energy ETF

VDE

 

Market Price

 

25.9%

Net Asset Value

 

26.1   

MSCI US IMI/Energy

 

26.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Financials ETF

VFH

 

Market Price

 

2.3%

Net Asset Value

 

3.0   

MSCI US IMI/Financials

 

3.2   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Health Care ETF

VHT

 

Market Price

 

7.4%

Net Asset Value

 

7.7   

MSCI US IMI/Health Care

 

7.9   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Industrials ETF

VIS

 

Market Price

 

24.6%

Net Asset Value

 

24.9   

MSCI US IMI/Industrials

 

25.0   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Information

 

 

Technology ETF

VGT

 

Market Price

 

22.8%

Net Asset Value

 

23.1   

MSCI US IMI/Information Technology

 

23.3

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Materials ETF

VAW

 

Market Price

 

30.8%

Net Asset Value

 

31.1   

MSCI US IMI/Materials

 

31.2   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2

 


 

Vanguard Telecommunication

 

 

Services ETF

VOX

 

Market Price

 

24.3   

Net Asset Value

 

24.8   

MSCI US IMI/Telecommunication Services

 

27.1   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Utilities ETF

VPU

 

Market Price

 

14.1%

Net Asset Value

 

14.4   

MSCI US IMI/Utlilties

 

14.6   

 

 

 

 

 

 

MSCI US IMI/2500

 

15.5%

 

1  Vanguard ETF™ Shares are traded on the American Stock Exchange and are available only through brokers. The table shows the ETF returns based on both the AMEX market price and the net asset value for a share. U.S. Pat. No. 6,879,964 B2.

Note: MSCI US IMI/2500 is the Morgan Stanley Capital International ® US Investable Market 2500 Index.

 

3

 



 

Chairman’s Letter

 

Dear Shareholder,

For the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007, the broad U.S. stock market returned a healthy 15.6%. Some of the gains made through the first ten months of the year were lost during the period’s final months, when the market dropped and volatility increased sharply.

During the period, the Vanguard U.S. Sector Index Funds posted generally strong returns, capturing the performance of their market segments. For the 12 months, five of the ten sector funds outperformed the broad stock market’s return, with materials, energy, industrials, information technology, and telecommunication services posting very healthy gains. At the same time, the consumer staples, health care, utilities, and financials sector funds underperformed the broad stock market for the period. The consumer discretionary fund’s return matched that of the broad market.

For the U.S. stock market, a nervous finish to the year

U.S. stocks produced a solid return for the fiscal year, despite a midsummer pullback. The market retreated as problems with low-quality mortgage loans rippled through investment portfolios. Financial stocks, which account for a big share of the U.S. market’s value, were the hardest hit as investment banking and consumer lending businesses throttled back.

Large-capitalization stocks bested small-caps, and growth-oriented stocks outperformed their value-oriented counterparts during the fiscal period, which ended amid a growing aversion to risk. Though not immune from the turmoil in U.S. credit markets, international stocks handily outperformed U.S. stocks for the full 12 months.

Bond markets rebounded as investors sought safety

As investors sought refuge from the rough and tumble of stock and corporate bond markets, U.S. Treasury bond prices rose, and yields fell. The declines in yield were most pronounced among Treasury securities with the shortest maturities.

Falling short-term yields helped restore the yield curve—which illustrates the relationship between short- and long-term bond yields—to its typical, upward-sloping pattern. At the start of the period, the curve had been mildly inverted. The broad taxable bond market returned 5.3% for

 

4

 


Market Barometer

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

One Year

Three Years

Five Years

Stocks

 

 

 

Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps)

15.3%

12.8%

12.5%

Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps)

11.4   

14.5   

16.6   

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index (Entire market)

15.6   

13.4   

13.3   

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International)

23.0   

25.2   

22.0   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bonds

 

 

 

Lehman U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market)

5.3%

3.7%

4.3%

Lehman Municipal Bond Index

2.3   

3.5   

4.2   

Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index

5.1   

3.9   

2.8   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CPI

 

 

 

Consumer Price Index

2.0%

3.1%

2.8%

 

the year. Lacking the boost from the late-summer rally in Treasuries, tax-exempt municipal securities returned less.

In a healthy stock environment, smaller market sectors prevailed

During a year in which the broad stock market earned robust returns, the Vanguard U.S. Sector Index Funds posted generally healthy gains, though the difference between the best- and worst-performing sectors was dramatic. The fund that tracks one of the market’s smallest segments—materials—produced the largest gain, 31.0%. The materials sector benefited from rising prices for many of the economy’s basic commodities, as the stocks of chemical, steel, and metals and mining firms all climbed sharply during the period.

The energy and industrials sector funds posted returns of 26.0% and 24.9%, respectively. The energy sector was marked by strong gains among oil equipment and services stocks, and by the performance of the large gasoline refiners, which benefited from higher prices at the pump. In the industrials sector, aerospace and defense, marine, railroad, and construction and engineering firms all posted healthy gains.

The relatively small telecommunication services sector and much larger information technology sector also outperformed the broad stock market. The fund’s that track these sectors returned 24.8% and 23.0%, respectively. Within the consumer discretionary category, where our fund’s return matched the results of the broad market, the gains among internet retailers and auto component manufacturers were somewhat offset by the poor performance of the sector’s homebuilding stocks; these companies faced a generally depressed housing market, and their situation was exacerbated by the late-year crisis among subprime mortgage lenders.

The smallish utilities sector and the larger consumer staples and health care sectors underperformed the broad stock market. (As you would expect, the returns of our funds were in line with the returns of their sectors.) In health care, biotech-nology and pharmaceuticals stocks hurt the category’s overall performance. The gains within the consumer staples and utilities sectors were also modest.

The largest and poorest-performing sector during the period was financials. The sector was hurt by the downturn among commercial banks and especially by the poor performance of real estate investment trusts, which were left reeling by the broader difficulties in real estate.

 

5

 


Generally, the U.S. Sector Index Funds met their objectives of seeking to capture their respective market sector’s returns. Most of the funds track their indexes closely. In some cases, tracking differences do occur, largely because of regulatory constraints—limits on investments in single securities that are mandated by the Internal Revenue Code. In most cases, however, the impact of these differences is minimal.

Finally, it’s worth noting that the low expense ratios that accompany the ETF and Admiral Shares available through the U.S. Sector Index Funds allow investors to keep more of their funds’ returns in their pockets.

Diversification is key to a successful long-term strategy

As the last few months have demonstrated, there’s no way to know what will happen in the stock market tomorrow, much less next month or next year. What’s the best strategy to follow when the markets remain so volatile?

As we often counsel, the best way to put together a long-term investment program is to select a diversified mix of stock, bond, and money market mutual funds that fits your goals, time horizon, and tolerance for risk. A balanced portfolio is unlikely to deliver the best or worst short-term returns, but it can help you to reap the rewards of the markets’ best-performing assets while cushioning the impact of the worst-performing ones. The more we diversify across and within asset classes, the more we can mute the market’s inescapable jolts.

Alone, any one of the U.S. Sector Index Funds could provide a risky and volatile experience as an investment. It’s worth reiterating that these funds are designed to be used as part of a portfolio diversified among stock market segments. When used in this fashion, the Vanguard U.S. Sector Index Funds are valuable tools that can help you fine-tune the asset allocations within your portfolio.

Thank you for investing with Vanguard.

Sincerely,

 


John J. Brennan

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

September 17, 2007

 

6

 


Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance

August 31, 2006–August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Distributions Per Share

 

Starting

Ending

Income

Capital

 

Share Price

Share Price

Dividends

Gains

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$27.03

$31.02

$0.242

$0.000

ETF Shares

52.28

60.02

0.470

0.000

Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$30.56

$33.22

$0.462

$0.000

ETF Shares

61.94

67.35

0.960

0.000

Energy Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$40.36

$50.36

$0.445

$0.000

ETF Shares

80.90

100.92

0.929

0.000

Financials Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$29.86

$30.10

$0.675

$0.000

ETF Shares

59.57

60.04

1.369

0.000

Health Care Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$27.99

$29.82

$0.298

$0.000

ETF Shares

55.99

59.65

0.615

0.000

Industrials Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$30.72

$37.94

$0.380

$0.000

ETF Shares

59.85

73.94

0.744

0.000

Information Technology Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$24.40

$29.95

$0.060

$0.000

ETF Shares

47.66

58.52

0.136

0.000

Materials Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$32.37

$41.75

$0.570

$0.000

ETF Shares

63.65

82.10

1.136

0.000

Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$33.29

$41.01

$0.476

$0.000

ETF Shares

65.40

80.60

0.927

0.000

Utilities Index Fund

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares

$36.47

$40.60

$1.039

$0.000

ETF Shares

72.68

80.92

2.096

0.000

 

 

7

 


ETF Premium/Discount Record

The extent to which the funds’ ETF Shares have traded at a premium or a discount to net asset value (NAV) since inception. Market prices for ETF Shares, and for exchange-traded funds in general, can deviate from the NAV of the underlying securities.

 

 

 

 

Market Price

 

 

 

 

 

 

Above or Equal to

 

 

Market Price Below

 

 

 

Net Asset Value

 

 

Net Asset Value

 

Basis Point

Number

Percentage of

 

Number

Percentage of

 

Differential 2

of Days

Total Days

 

of Days

Total Days

January 26, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consumer Discretionary ETF

0–24.9

494

54.35%

 

373

41.03%

 

25–49.9

31

3.41   

 

3

0.33   

 

50–74.9

1

0.11   

 

2

0.22   

 

75–100.0

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

>100.0

2

0.22   

 

3

0.33   

 

Total

528

58.09%

 

381

41.91%

January 26, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consumer Staples ETF

0–24.9

529

58.20%

 

366

40.26%

 

25–49.9

10

1.10   

 

2

0.22   

 

50–74.9

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

75–100.0

0

0.00   

 

2

0.22   

 

>100.0

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

Total

539

59.30%

 

370

40.70%

September 23, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Energy ETF

0–24.9

392

52.83%

 

344

46.37%

 

25–49.9

5

0.67   

 

1

0.13   

 

50–74.9

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

75–100.0

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

>100.0

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

Total

397

53.50%

 

345

46.50%

January 26, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Financials ETF

0–24.9

518

56.99%

 

349

38.39%

 

25–49.9

30

3.30   

 

3

0.33   

 

50–74.9

1

0.11   

 

1

0.11   

 

75–100.0

2

0.22   

 

1

0.11   

 

>100.0

1

0.11   

 

3

0.33   

 

Total

552

60.73%

 

357

39.27%

January 26, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Health Care ETF

0–24.9

570

62.71%

 

331

36.41%

 

25–49.9

6

0.66   

 

2

0.22   

 

50–74.9

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

75–100.0

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

>100.0

0

0.00   

 

0

0.00   

 

Total

576

63.37%

 

333

36.63%

September 23, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Industrials ETF

0–24.9

382

51.49%

 

317

42.73%

 

25–49.9

34

4.58   

 

2

0.27   

 

50–74.9

1

0.13   

 

0

0.00   

 

75–100.0

2

0.27   

 

1

0.13   

 

>100.0

1

0.13   

 

2

0.27   

 

Total

420

56.60%

 

322

43.40%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  One basis point equals 1/100 of a percentage point.

 

8

 


ETF Premium/Discount Record (continued)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market Price

 

 

 

 

 

 

Above or Equal to

 

 

Market Price Below

 

 

 

Net Asset Value

 

 

Net Asset Value

 

Basis Point

Number

Percentage of

 

Number

Percentage of

 

Differential 2

of Days

Total Days

 

of Days

Total Days

January 26, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information Technology ETF

0–24.9

537

59.08%

 

342

37.62%

 

25–49.9

9

0.99   

 

6

0.66   

 

50–74.9

1

0.11   

 

1

0.11   

 

75–100.0

0

0.00   

 

1

0.11   

 

>100.0

5

0.55   

 

7

0.77   

 

Total

552

60.73%

 

357

39.27%

January 26, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Materials ETF

0–24.9

452

49.73%

 

445

48.95%

 

25–49.9

1

0.11   

 

1

0.11   

 

50–74.9

1

0.11   

 

7

0.77   

 

75–100.0

0

0.00      

 

1

0.11   

 

>100.0

1

0.11   

 

0

0.00   

 

Total

455

50.06%

 

454

49.94%

September 23, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Telecommunication Services ETF

0–24.9

348

46.91%

 

340

45.82%

 

25–49.9

35

4.72   

 

2

0.27   

 

50–74.9

1

0.13   

 

2

0.27   

 

75–100.0

2

0.27   

 

2

0.27   

 

>100.0

3

0.40   

 

7

0.94   

 

Total

389

52.43%

 

353

47.57%

January 26, 2004 1 –August 31, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

Utilities ETF

0–24.9

471

51.82%

 

424

46.64%

 

25–49.9

5

0.55   

 

5

0.55   

 

50–74.9

0

0.00   

 

1

0.11   

 

75–100.0

0

0.00   

 

1

0.11   

 

>100.0

0

0.00   

 

2

0.22   

 

Total

476

52.37%

 

433

47.63%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  One basis point equals 1/100 of a percentage point.

 

9

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

427

427

2,437

Median Market Cap

$16.8B

$16.8B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

20.9x

20.9x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

2.7x

2.7x

2.8x

Yield

 

1.0%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

1.0%

 

 

ETF Shares

1.1%

 

 

Return on Equity

15.2%

15.2%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

19.7%

19.6%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.4%

0.4%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

8%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.27%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Target Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

1.00

0.76

Beta

1.00

1.31

 

 

10

 


Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Advertising

2%

Apparel Retail

5   

Apparel, Accessories & Luxury Goods

3   

Auto Parts & Equipment

3   

Automobile Manufacturers

2   

Automotive Retail

2   

Broadcasting & Cable TV

12   

Casinos & Gaming

4   

Catalog Retail

1   

Computer & Electronics Retail

2   

Consumer Electronics

1   

Department Stores

4   

Distributors

1   

Education Services

1   

Footwear

2   

General Merchandise Stores

4   

Home Furnishings

1   

Home Improvement Retail

7   

Homebuilding

2   

Home Furnishing Retail

1   

Hotels, Resorts & Cruise Lines

5   

Household Appliances

1   

Housewares & Specialties

2   

Internet Retail

2   

Leisure Products

1   

Motorcycle Manufacturers

1   

Movies & Entertainment

12   

Publishing

4   

Restaurants

8   

Specialized Consumer Services

1   

Specialty Stores

3   

 

Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

Home Depot, Inc.

4.4%

Comcast Corp.

4.4   

Time Warner, Inc.

4.1   

The Walt Disney Co.

3.6   

McDonald’s Corp.

3.4   

Target Corp.

3.1   

News Corp.

2.7   

Lowe’s Cos., Inc.

2.7   

Amazon.com, Inc.

1.4   

Viacom Inc. Class B

1.4   

Top Ten

31.2%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Consumer Discretionary.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 83.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

11

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

 

Cumulative Performance: January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

 

Investment

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

Net Asset Value

15.69%

5.74%

 

$12,224

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

Market Price

14.85    

5.67    

 

12,194

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54    

9.76    

 

13,978

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Discretionary

15.89    

5.94    

 

12,306

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

15.64%

5.08%

$111,129

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54    

11.42    

125,918

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Discretionary

15.89    

5.30    

111,637

 

 

12

 


Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

14.85%

21.94%

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

15.69   

22.24   

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Discretionary

15.89   

23.87   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

1/26/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

19.97%

7.75%

Net Asset Value

 

20.13   

7.76   

Admiral Shares 2

7/14/2005

20.11   

8.55   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: January 26, 2004, for ETF Shares; July 14, 2005, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on page 13 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

13

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (99.7%)

 

 

Auto Components (3.2%)

 

 

 

Johnson Controls, Inc.

12,858

1,454

*

The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.

12,113

335

 

BorgWarner, Inc.

3,790

320

 

Autoliv, Inc.

5,297

304

 

WABCO Holdings Inc.

3,927

178

 

Gentex Corp.

8,836

177

*

Lear Corp.

4,468

131

*

TRW Automotive Holdings Corp.

3,981

122

*

Tenneco Automotive, Inc.

2,965

94

 

Cooper Tire & Rubber Co.

3,766

92

 

ArvinMeritor, Inc.

4,342

76

 

American Axle &

 

 

 

Manufacturing Holdings, Inc.

2,893

68

 

Modine Manufacturing Co.

2,001

56

*

Drew Industries, Inc.

1,264

50

*

Visteon Corp.

8,404

45

*

Aftermarket Technology Corp.

1,415

42

 

Superior Industries

 

 

 

International, Inc.

1,491

30

 

Sauer-Danfoss, Inc.

806

22

*

Raser Technologies, Inc.

1,498

21

 

 

 

3,617

Automobiles (2.5%)

 

 

 

General Motors Corp.

29,610

910

 

Harley-Davidson, Inc.

16,885

908

*

Ford Motor Co.

100,842

788

 

Thor Industries, Inc.

2,350

103

 

Winnebago Industries, Inc.

1,923

51

*

Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc.

4,155

39

 

Monaco Coach Corp.

1,820

24

 

 

14

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

 

 

 

2,823

Distributors (0.6%)

 

 

 

Genuine Parts Co.

11,151

554

*

LKQ Corp.

3,096

96

*

Keystone Automotive

 

 

 

Industries, Inc.

1,064

50

 

Building Materials Holding Corp.

1,882

28

*

Core-Mark Holding Co., Inc.

514

17

*

Source Interlink Cos., Inc.

174

1

 

 

 

746

Diversified Consumer Services (2.6%)

 

 

*

Apollo Group, Inc. Class A

9,606

564

 

H & R Block, Inc.

21,120

419

*

ITT Educational Services, Inc.

2,700

296

 

Service Corp. International

19,084

233

*

Career Education Corp.

6,187

184

 

Sotheby’s

3,818

165

 

Strayer Education, Inc.

934

149

 

DeVry, Inc.

3,930

136

 

Weight Watchers

 

 

 

International, Inc.

2,325

121

 

Regis Corp.

2,932

97

 

Matthews International Corp.

2,066

89

*

Corinthian Colleges, Inc.

5,573

78

*

Bright Horizons Family

 

 

 

Solutions, Inc.

1,699

67

 

Jackson Hewitt Tax Service Inc.

2,209

64

*

Coinstar, Inc.

1,798

59

*

Steiner Leisure Ltd.

1,046

45

 

Stewart Enterprises, Inc. Class A

6,152

44

*

Pre-Paid Legal Services, Inc.

659

36

*

INVESTools Inc.

2,686

32

*

Universal Technical Institute Inc.

1,576

28

 

Coinmach Service Corp. Class A

1,870

24

*

Capella Education Co.

269

14

 

 

 

2,944

Hotels, Restaurants & Leisure (17.8%)

 

 

 

McDonald’s Corp.

78,658

3,874

*

Starbucks Corp.

49,131

1,354

 

Carnival Corp.

28,542

1,301

 

Yum! Brands, Inc.

34,690

1,135

 

Hilton Hotels Corp.

24,036

1,104

 

Harrah’s Entertainment, Inc.

12,179

1,045

 

Marriott International, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

22,850

1,015

 

Starwood Hotels & Resorts

 

 

 

Worldwide, Inc.

14,059

859

 

International Game Technology

22,135

845

*

MGM Mirage, Inc.

8,359

702

*

Las Vegas Sands Corp.

6,961

694

 

Wynn Resorts Ltd.

3,663

453

 

 

15

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

 

Tim Hortons, Inc.

12,485

413

 

Wyndham Worldwide Corp.

12,932

413

 

Darden Restaurants Inc.

9,036

376

 

Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.

9,038

344

 

Station Casinos, Inc.

3,179

279

*

Penn National Gaming, Inc.

4,719

277

 

Brinker International, Inc.

7,994

231

 

Wendy’s International, Inc.

6,254

206

*

Scientific Games Corp.

4,513

157

 

Boyd Gaming Corp.

3,665

150

 

Orient-Express Hotel Ltd.

2,750

138

*

Gaylord Entertainment Co.

2,654

136

*

Jack in the Box Inc.

2,190

136

*

The Cheesecake Factory Inc.

4,877

122

 

Applebee’s International, Inc.

4,884

121

*

Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc.

 

 

 

Class B

1,139

107

*

Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc.

3,801

106

*

Life Time Fitness, Inc.

1,898

105

*

Bally Technologies Inc.

3,128

104

*

Vail Resorts Inc.

1,769

101

*

Sonic Corp.

4,510

98

 

International Speedway Corp.

2,039

96

*

Chipotle Mexican Grill, Inc.

883

92

 

Choice Hotels International, Inc.

2,400

90

*

Panera Bread Co.

1,961

86

 

Ruby Tuesday, Inc.

3,842

85

*

Rare Hospitality International Inc.

2,234

84

 

Burger King Holdings Inc.

3,550

84

 

Bob Evans Farms, Inc.

2,397

80

*

WMS Industries, Inc.

2,671

79

*

CEC Entertainment Inc.

2,167

67

 

IHOP Corp.

1,050

66

 

CKE Restaurants Inc.

3,683

62

 

CBRL Group, Inc.

1,654

62

*

P.F. Chang’s China Bistro, Inc.

1,644

55

 

Domino’s Pizza, Inc.

3,031

53

 

Ameristar Casinos, Inc.

1,653

48

 

Triarc Cos., Inc. Class B

3,006

46

*

Texas Roadhouse, Inc.

3,603

46

*

Papa John’s International, Inc.

1,571

40

*

Red Robin Gourmet

 

 

 

Burgers, Inc.

1,026

39

*

Morgans Hotel Group

2,046

39

 

Ambassadors Group, Inc.

995

39

 

Speedway Motorsports, Inc.

999

38

*

California Pizza Kitchen, Inc.

1,722

35

*

Shuffle Master, Inc.

2,237

33

 

Landry’s Restaurants, Inc.

1,105

32

 

Churchill Downs, Inc.

623

31

 

The Marcus Corp.

1,383

29

 

 

16

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

*

AFC Enterprises, Inc.

1,866

28

*

Steak n Shake Co.

1,720

27

*

Great Wolf Resorts, Inc.

1,811

26

*

Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Inc.

3,884

26

 

O’Charley’s Inc.

1,561

25

*

Six Flags, Inc.

5,989

24

*

Peet’s Coffee & Tea Inc.

902

23

*

Denny’s Corp.

5,562

21

*

BJ’s Restaurants Inc.

931

21

*

Monarch Casino & Resort, Inc.

728

21

*

Jamba Inc.

2,788

19

*

Ruth’s Chris Steak House

1,098

18

 

Triarc Cos., Inc. Class A

1,154

17

*

Isle of Capri Casinos, Inc.

880

16

*

MTR Gaming Group Inc.

1,566

16

*

Town Sports International

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

779

14

*

Bluegreen Corp.

1,352

11

 

Dover Downs Gaming &

 

 

 

Entertainment, Inc.

859

9

*

Trump Entertainment

 

 

 

Resorts, Inc.

100

1

*

Magna Entertainment Corp.

 

 

 

Class A

131

 

 

 

20,500

Household Durables (6.0%)

 

 

 

Fortune Brands, Inc.

9,908

823

 

Garmin Ltd.

7,770

791

 

Whirlpool Corp.

5,103

492

 

Newell Rubbermaid, Inc.

18,140

468

 

Harman International

 

 

 

Industries, Inc.

4,065

461

 

Black & Decker Corp.

4,299

373

*

Mohawk Industries, Inc.

3,556

310

 

D. R. Horton, Inc.

18,512

280

 

The Stanley Works

4,874

277

 

Leggett & Platt, Inc.

11,626

237

 

Pulte Homes, Inc.

14,229

237

 

Lennar Corp. Class A

8,328

235

 

Centex Corp.

7,810

226

*

Toll Brothers, Inc.

8,578

183

 

Snap-On Inc.

3,638

178

*

Jarden Corp.

5,035

165

*

NVR, Inc.

295

165

 

KB Home

5,008

152

 

Tupperware Brands Corp.

3,984

123

 

MDC Holdings, Inc.

2,340

104

 

Tempur-Pedic International Inc.

3,273

95

 

American Greetings Corp.

 

 

 

Class A

3,646

90

 

Ryland Group, Inc.

2,794

80

 

 

17

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

 

Ethan Allen Interiors, Inc.

1,941

65

*

Champion Enterprises, Inc.

4,997

58

*

Helen of Troy Ltd.

1,827

41

 

Sealy Corp.

2,688

41

 

Blyth, Inc.

1,642

37

 

La-Z-Boy Inc.

3,259

31

 

Kimball International, Inc.

 

 

 

Class B

1,557

21

*

Avatar Holding, Inc.

336

21

 

CSS Industries, Inc.

482

19

*

iRobot Corp.

706

16

 

M/I Homes, Inc.

791

14

*

Palm Harbor Homes, Inc.

664

9

 

Standard Pacific Corp.

220

2

 

Furniture Brands International Inc.

156

2

 

Beazer Homes USA, Inc.

133

2

*

Hovnanian Enterprises Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

120

1

*

Meritage Corp.

73

1

*

WCI Communities, Inc.

114

1

 

Brookfield Homes Corp.

45

1

 

 

 

6,928

Internet & Catalog Retail (3.2%)

 

 

*

Amazon.com, Inc.

20,350

1,626

*

Liberty Media Corp.-Interactive

 

 

 

Series A

41,153

781

*

Expedia, Inc.

12,385

370

*

IAC/InterActiveCorp

13,180

366

*

Priceline.com, Inc.

2,263

188

*

Nutri/System Inc.

2,076

113

*

Blue Nile Inc.

945

80

*

Netflix.com, Inc.

3,382

59

*

GSI Commerce, Inc.

1,357

31

*

Shutterfly, Inc.

767

21

 

FTD Group, Inc.

1,196

21

*

Overstock.com, Inc.

908

20

*

ValueVision Media, Inc.

2,148

18

*

1-800-FLOWERS.COM, Inc.

1,564

17

*

Stamps.com Inc.

1,271

15

 

Systemax Inc.

653

12

 

 

 

3,738

Leisure Equipment & Products (1.8%)

 

 

 

Mattel, Inc.

25,728

557

 

Eastman Kodak Co.

18,802

501

 

Hasbro, Inc.

9,837

278

 

Brunswick Corp.

5,929

149

 

Polaris Industries, Inc.

2,538

121

 

Pool Corp.

3,291

107

 

Callaway Golf Co.

4,561

74

 

Oakley, Inc.

1,782

51

*

Smith & Wesson Holding Corp.

2,115

44

 

 

18

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

*

RC2 Corp.

1,294

40

*

JAKKS Pacific, Inc.

1,741

39

*

MarineMax, Inc.

1,143

21

*

Leapfrog Enterprises, Inc.

2,213

16

 

Arctic Cat, Inc.

742

13

 

Marine Products Corp.

969

9

 

Nautilus Inc.

107

1

 

 

 

2,021

Media (30.0%)

 

 

 

Time Warner, Inc.

249,168

4,729

 

The Walt Disney Co.

124,130

4,171

*

Comcast Corp. Class A

126,099

3,290

 

News Corp., Class A

121,281

2,454

*

Comcast Corp. Special

 

 

 

Class A

70,154

1,814

*

Viacom Inc. Class B

39,726

1,568

 

CBS Corp.

44,709

1,409

 

The McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc.

23,177

1,170

 

Clear Channel

 

 

 

Communications, Inc.

30,704

1,144

*

DIRECTV Group, Inc.

48,105

1,122

 

Omnicom Group Inc.

21,868

1,114

*

Liberty Media Corp.-Capital

 

 

 

Series A

8,046

877

 

Gannett Co., Inc.

15,334

721

 

News Corp., Class B

32,257

701

*

EchoStar Communications

 

 

 

Corp. Class A

13,516

572

*

Liberty Global, Inc. Class A

12,537

514

*

Cablevision Systems NY

 

 

 

Group Class A

14,944

501

*

Liberty Global, Inc. Series C

11,923

470

*

Discovery Holding Co. Class A

17,518

440

 

Virgin Media Inc.

18,148

432

 

Idearc Inc.

9,529

325

*

Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc.

28,788

315

 

Lamar Advertising Co. Class A

5,328

282

 

Washington Post Co. Class B

363

278

*

R.H. Donnelley Corp.

4,591

270

*

Sirius Satellite Radio, Inc.

90,313

268

 

E.W. Scripps Co. Class A

5,803

239

 

Dow Jones & Co., Inc.

3,741

221

*

XM Satellite Radio Holdings, Inc.

17,586

219

 

New York Times Co. Class A

8,855

195

*

DreamWorks Animation

 

 

 

SKG, Inc.

4,970

153

 

Tribune Co.

5,273

145

 

Meredith Corp.

2,518

141

*

Getty Images, Inc.

3,496

109

 

John Wiley & Sons Class A

2,593

108

 

Regal Entertainment Group

 

 

 

 

19

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

 

Class A

4,537

102

*

Gemstar-TV Guide

 

 

 

International, Inc.

16,584

101

 

Belo Corp. Class A

5,743

99

 

Arbitron Inc.

1,928

96

*

Marvel Entertainment, Inc.

4,143

94

*

Catalina Marketing Corp.

2,882

90

*

Live Nation, Inc.

4,041

84

 

The McClatchy Co. Class A

3,617

82

*

Scholastic Corp.

2,378

81

 

Harte-Hanks, Inc.

3,243

78

*

Charter Communications, Inc.

26,594

74

*

Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.

7,588

72

 

Interactive Data Corp.

2,393

65

*

Morningstar, Inc.

947

61

*

CTC Media, Inc.

2,451

56

 

Citadel Broadcasting Corp.

12,237

50

 

Hearst-Argyle Television Inc.

1,760

45

 

Entercom

 

 

 

Communications Corp.

2,003

43

 

Media General, Inc. Class A

1,395

39

 

Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc.

3,039

38

 

PRIMEDIA Inc.

2,528

37

*

Entravision

 

 

 

Communications Corp.

3,951

36

 

RCN Corp.

2,438

35

*

CKX, Inc.

2,709

33

*

TiVo Inc.

5,888

33

*

Mediacom

 

 

 

Communications Corp.

3,745

32

*

LodgeNet Entertainment Corp.

1,203

32

 

Journal Communications, Inc.

3,016

31

*

Knology, Inc.

1,910

30

*

Cox Radio, Inc.

2,162

30

 

GateHouse Media, Inc.

2,200

29

*

Valassis Communications, Inc.

3,140

29

 

Gray Television, Inc.

2,790

25

 

Courier Corp.

685

25

*

Lin TV Corp.

1,794

24

*

Fisher Communications, Inc.

477

23

*

Cumulus Media Inc.

2,029

22

*

Martha Stewart Living

 

 

 

Omnimedia, Inc.

1,588

20

 

World Wrestling

 

 

 

Entertainment, Inc.

1,318

20

*

Radio One, Inc. Class D

4,780

19

*

Harris Interactive Inc.

3,703

16

*

Playboy Enterprises, Inc.

 

 

 

Class B

1,394

15

 

Sun-Times Media Group, Inc.

4,162

12

*

Spanish Broadcasting

 

 

 

 

20

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

 

System, Inc.

2,391

7

 

Lee Enterprises, Inc.

134

2

 

Warner Music Group Corp.

126

1

 

Westwood One, Inc.

247

1

 

Emmis Communications, Inc.

110

1

 

Journal Register Co.

133

 

Salem Communications Corp.

37

 

 

 

34,551

Multiline Retail (8.0%)

 

 

 

Target Corp.

53,362

3,518

*

Kohl’s Corp.

19,617

1,163

 

Macy’s Inc.

30,364

963

 

J.C. Penney Co., Inc.

 

 

 

(Holding Co.)

13,987

962

*

Sears Holdings Corp.

5,540

795

 

Nordstrom, Inc.

13,471

648

*

Dollar Tree Stores, Inc.

6,690

291

 

Family Dollar Stores, Inc.

9,407

275

*

Big Lots Inc.

7,139

213

 

Saks Inc.

8,008

129

 

Dillard’s Inc.

4,113

98

*

99 Cents Only Stores

3,175

39

 

Fred’s, Inc.

2,515

26

*

Retail Ventures, Inc.

1,830

21

 

Tuesday Morning Corp.

1,955

21

 

Bon-Ton Stores, Inc.

453

13

 

 

 

9,175

Specialty Retail (19.5%)

 

 

 

Home Depot, Inc.

133,320

5,107

 

Lowe’s Cos., Inc.

98,664

3,065

 

Best Buy Co., Inc.

26,806

1,178

 

Staples, Inc.

47,287

1,123

 

TJX Cos., Inc.

29,769

908

 

The Gap, Inc.

37,091

696

*

Bed Bath & Beyond, Inc.

18,542

642

 

Limited Brands, Inc.

23,422

542

 

Sherwin-Williams Co.

7,503

518

 

Tiffany & Co.

8,941

459

 

Abercrombie & Fitch Co.

5,784

455

*

GameStop Corp. Class A

9,008

452

*

Office Depot, Inc.

18,071

442

*

AutoZone Inc.

3,230

392

 

American Eagle Outfitters, Inc.

13,131

339

*

CarMax, Inc.

14,037

318

 

PetSmart, Inc.

9,038

314

 

Ross Stores, Inc.

9,138

254

*

O’Reilly Automotive, Inc.

7,038

250

 

Advance Auto Parts, Inc.

6,890

245

 

Williams-Sonoma, Inc.

6,259

209

 

RadioShack Corp.

8,453

201

*

AutoNation, Inc.

10,121

192

 

 

21

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

*

Chico’s FAS, Inc.

11,492

184

 

OfficeMax, Inc.

4,882

173

*

Urban Outfitters, Inc.

7,546

173

 

Foot Locker, Inc.

10,187

170

 

Men’s Wearhouse, Inc.

3,276

166

*

Dick’s Sporting Goods, Inc.

2,463

160

 

Guess ?, Inc.

2,967

157

*

AnnTaylor Stores Corp.

4,699

147

 

Barnes & Noble, Inc.

3,610

130

 

Circuit City Stores, Inc.

11,496

125

*

J. Crew Group, Inc.

2,475

123

*

Tractor Supply Co.

2,372

114

*

Guitar Center, Inc.

1,916

108

*

Aeropostale, Inc.

5,149

107

*

Collective Brands, Inc.

4,268

101

*

Rent-A-Center, Inc.

4,574

88

*

The Gymboree Corp.

2,097

84

*

Charming Shoppes, Inc.

7,996

72

 

Aaron Rents, Inc.

2,799

72

*

Zale Corp.

3,184

72

*

Genesco, Inc.

1,470

67

*

Tween Brands, Inc.

2,143

63

*

Pacific Sunwear of

 

 

 

California, Inc.

4,503

63

 

Brown Shoe Co., Inc.

2,685

61

 

The Pep Boys

 

 

 

(Manny, Moe & Jack)

3,729

61

*

Select Comfort Corp.

3,408

58

 

Borders Group, Inc.

3,858

58

*

The Dress Barn, Inc.

3,240

57

 

Penske Automotive Group Inc.

2,804

55

*

Cabela’s Inc.

2,272

54

 

Sonic Automotive, Inc.

1,980

53

 

Group 1 Automotive, Inc.

1,488

52

*

Hibbett Sports Inc.

2,080

52

 

Stage Stores, Inc.

2,821

49

*

Zumiez Inc.

1,006

49

*

Coldwater Creek Inc.

3,904

49

 

Asbury Automotive Group, Inc.

2,185

47

*

The Children’s Place Retail

 

 

 

Stores, Inc.

1,591

46

*

Sally Beauty Co. Inc.

5,334

45

 

Cato Corp. Class A

1,972

44

*

CSK Auto Corp.

2,815

37

*

Pier 1 Imports Inc.

5,779

36

*

Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Inc.

1,180

36

*

Blockbuster Inc. Class A

6,880

34

*

Jo-Ann Stores, Inc.

1,489

34

 

Talbots Inc.

1,570

33

 

Monro Muffler Brake, Inc.

837

32

 

The Buckle, Inc.

819

31

 

 

22

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

 

Christopher & Banks Corp.

2,433

29

 

Big 5 Sporting Goods Corp.

1,384

29

*

DSW Inc. Class A

894

27

 

bebe stores, inc.

1,847

26

*

Charlotte Russe Holding Inc.

1,449

25

*

Hot Topic, Inc.

2,912

24

*

Blockbuster Inc. Class B

4,407

21

 

Lithia Motors, Inc.

1,040

19

*

A.C. Moore Arts & Crafts, Inc.

987

19

*

Build-A-Bear-Workshop, Inc.

976

16

 

Stein Mart, Inc.

1,772

16

*

Citi Trends Inc.

636

14

*

New York & Co., Inc.

1,686

11

*

Conn’s, Inc.

455

10

 

Deb Shops, Inc.

353

9

 

Finish Line, Inc.

142

1

 

 

 

22,479

Textiles, Apparel & Luxury Goods (4.5%)

 

 

 

NIKE, Inc. Class B

22,154

1,248

*

Coach, Inc.

24,221

1,079

 

VF Corp.

5,852

467

 

Polo Ralph Lauren Corp.

3,969

300

 

Liz Claiborne, Inc.

6,687

228

 

Phillips-Van Heusen Corp.

3,627

211

*

Hanesbrands Inc.

6,293

189

*

Crocs, Inc.

2,805

166

 

Jones Apparel Group, Inc.

7,123

137

*

Under Armour, Inc.

1,988

129

*

Quiksilver, Inc.

8,043

108

*

Fossil, Inc.

3,113

104

*

The Warnaco Group, Inc.

2,975

104

 

Wolverine World Wide, Inc.

3,618

95

*

Deckers Outdoor Corp.

777

73

*

Iconix Brand Group Inc.

3,251

67

*

Timberland Co.

3,314

67

*

Carter’s, Inc.

3,252

64

 

Columbia Sportswear Co.

949

57

 

K-Swiss, Inc.

1,676

40

 

UniFirst Corp.

917

38

 

Oxford Industries, Inc.

1,037

38

 

Movado Group, Inc.

1,239

37

*

Skechers U.S.A., Inc.

1,698

34

 

Kellwood Co.

1,697

33

 

Steven Madden, Ltd.

1,314

32

*

Volcom, Inc.

705

28

 

Kenneth Cole Productions, Inc.

799

17

*

True Religion Apparel, Inc.

974

16

*

Heelys Inc.

528

5

 

 

 

5,211

Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $117,141)

 

114,733

 

 

23

 


 

Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

Temporary Cash Investment (0.1%)

 

 

1

Vanguard Market

 

 

 

Liquidity Fund, 5.247%

 

 

 

(Cost $69)

69,223

69

Total Investments (99.8%)

 

 

(Cost $117,210)

 

114,802

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.2%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

507

Liabilities

 

(292)

 

 

 

215

Net Assets (100%)

 

115,017

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 2

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

117,793

Undistributed Net Investment Income

530

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(898)

Unrealized Depreciation

(2,408)

Net Assets

115,017

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 31,372 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

973

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$31.02

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 1,900,000 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

114,044

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$60.02

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

2  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

24

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

1,032

Interest 1

4

Total Income

1,036

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

12

Management and Administrative

 

Admiral Shares

2

ETF Shares

106

Marketing and Distribution

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

20

Custodian Fees

29

Auditing Fees

21

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

13

Total Expenses

203

Net Investment Income

833

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

8,674

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

191

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

9,698

 

 

25

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

833

377

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

8,674

1,273

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

191

(2,542)

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

9,698

(892)

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(8)

(2)

ETF Shares

(564)

(216)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(572)

(218)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

268

550

ETF Shares

57,946

15,947

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

58,214

16,497

Total Increase (Decrease)

67,340

15,387

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

47,677

32,290

End of Period 2

115,017

47,677

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $4,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $530,000 and $269,000.

 

26

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

July 14,

 

Year Ended

 

2005 1 to

 

August 31,

 

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

 

2005

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$27.03

$27.75

 

$28.29

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.217

.245 2

 

.16 2

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

4.015

(.808)

 

(.70)

Total from Investment Operations

4.232

(.563)

 

(.54)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.242)

(.157)

 

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

 

Total Distributions

(.242)

(.157)

 

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$31.02

$27.03

 

$27.75

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 3

15.64%

–2.03%

 

–1.91%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$1

$0.6

 

$0.1

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.27%

0.28%

 

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

0.84%

0.89%

 

0.67%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

8%

10%

 

13%

 

 

27

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 26,

 

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$52.28

$53.65

$46.99

$50.09

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.45

.494 2

.35 2

.20

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

7.76

(1.556)

6.66

(3.30)

Total from Investment Operations

8.21

(1.062)

7.01

(3.10)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.47)

(.308)

(.35)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.47)

(.308)

(.35)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$60.02

$52.28

$53.65

$46.99

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

15.69%

–1.99%

14.91%

–6.19%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$114

$47

$32

$19

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

0.89%

0.92%

0.69%

0.68%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

8%

10%

13%

11%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

4  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

28

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Consumer Discretionary Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $10,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.01% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification

 

29

 


Consumer Discretionary Index Fund

may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $9,231,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $555,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $898,000 to offset future net capital gains of $36,000 through August 31, 2013, $86,000 through August 31, 2014, $178,000 through August 31, 2015, and $598,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $117,210,000. Net unrealized depreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $2,408,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $5,900,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $8,308,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $141,724,000 of investment securities and sold $83,311,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

884

28

 

737

27

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

7

 

1

Redeemed 1

(623)

(20)

 

(188)

(7)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

268

8

 

550

20

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

134,154

2,300

 

51,989

1,000

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(76,208)

(1,300)

 

(36,042)

(700)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

57,946

1,000

 

15,947

300

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $8,000 and $2,000.

 

30

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

106

105

2,437

Median Market Cap

$51.4B

$110.8B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

18.7x

18.4x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

3.6x

3.8x

2.8x

Yield

 

2.3%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

2.1%

 

 

ETF Shares

2.2%

 

 

Return on Equity

26.6%

27.5%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

10.2%

10.3%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

1.1%

1.1%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

12%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Target Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

0.99

0.42

Beta

1.00

0.51

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Agricultural Products

3%

Brewers

4   

Distillers & Vintners

1   

Drug Retail

8   

Food Distributors

2   

Food Retail

5   

Household Products

21   

Hypermarkets & Super Centers

9   

Packaged Foods & Meats

16   

Personal Products

3   

Soft Drinks

16   

Tobacco

12   

 

 

31

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

The Procter & Gamble Co.

14.1%

Altria Group, Inc.

9.7   

The Coca-Cola Co.

7.1   

PepsiCo, Inc.

7.1   

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

6.9   

CVS/Caremark Corp.

4.5   

Kraft Foods Inc.

3.9   

Walgreen Co.

3.4   

Anheuser-Busch Cos., Inc.

2.9   

Colgate-Palmolive Co.

2.6   

Top Ten

62.2%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Consumer Staples.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 83.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

32

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

 

Cumulative Performance: January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

 

Investment

Consumer Staples Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

Net Asset Value

10.38%

9.57%

 

$13,888

Consumer Staples Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

Market Price

10.07   

9.52   

 

13,865

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

9.76   

 

13,978

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Staples

9.84   

9.31   

 

13,769

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Consumer Staples Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

10.30%

9.70%

$139,342

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

10.47   

142,875

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Staples

9.84   

9.47   

138,290

 

 

33

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Consumer Staples Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

10.07%

38.65%

Consumer Staples Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

10.38   

38.88   

MSCI US IMI/Consumer Staples

9.84   

37.86   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

1/26/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

16.04%

10.09%

Net Asset Value

 

16.48   

10.11   

Admiral Shares 2

1/30/2004

16.45   

10.26   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: January 26, 2004, for ETF Shares; January 30, 2004, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on page 19 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

 

34

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (100.1%)

 

 

Beverages (20.3%)

 

 

 

The Coca-Cola Co.

422,658

22,731

 

PepsiCo, Inc.

331,061

22,522

 

Anheuser-Busch Cos., Inc.

185,758

9,176

 

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.

71,003

1,691

 

Molson Coors Brewing Co.

 

 

 

Class B

17,637

1,578

*

Constellation Brands, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

58,304

1,410

 

The Pepsi Bottling Group, Inc.

37,905

1,311

 

Brown-Forman Corp. Class B

15,254

1,091

*

Hansen Natural Corp.

20,393

916

 

PepsiAmericas, Inc.

22,775

674

*

Central European

 

 

 

Distribution Corp.

13,023

571

*

Boston Beer Co., Inc. Class A

6,478

316

*

Jones Soda Co.

23,622

255

 

Coca-Cola Bottling Co.

4,280

251

 

National Beverage Corp.

21,273

224

 

 

 

64,717

Food & Staples Retailing (24.4%)

 

 

 

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

501,233

21,869

 

CVS/Caremark Corp.

377,295

14,269

 

Walgreen Co.

241,642

10,891

 

Costco Wholesale Corp.

110,089

6,798

 

Sysco Corp.

152,752

5,099

 

The Kroger Co.

167,899

4,463

 

Safeway, Inc.

111,089

3,525

 

SuperValu Inc.

54,572

2,300

 

Whole Foods Market, Inc.

37,850

1,675

*

Rite Aid Corp.

166,153

842

*

BJ’s Wholesale Club, Inc.

20,980

734

 

Longs Drug Stores, Inc.

11,041

582

 

 

35

 


 

Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

 

Casey’s General Stores, Inc.

17,574

498

 

Ruddick Corp.

14,967

488

*

Winn-Dixie Stores, Inc.

21,765

456

*

United Natural Foods, Inc.

16,689

448

*

Performance Food Group Co.

15,037

428

*

The Pantry, Inc.

11,124

371

 

The Andersons, Inc.

7,717

365

*

The Great Atlantic & Pacific

 

 

 

Tea Co., Inc.

10,833

340

 

Nash-Finch Co.

8,484

318

 

Weis Markets, Inc.

7,147

307

*

Pathmark Stores, Inc.

23,234

298

 

Ingles Markets, Inc.

9,217

278

 

 

 

77,642

Food Products (18.9%)

 

 

 

Kraft Foods Inc.

387,552

12,425

 

Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.

145,615

4,907

 

General Mills, Inc.

85,830

4,796

 

Kellogg Co.

69,781

3,833

 

H.J. Heinz Co.

81,601

3,679

 

ConAgra Foods, Inc.

126,061

3,241

 

Sara Lee Corp.

186,379

3,098

 

Bunge Ltd.

30,990

2,834

 

Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co.

45,539

2,653

 

Campbell Soup Co.

60,929

2,300

 

The Hershey Co.

42,073

1,956

 

Tyson Foods, Inc.

74,028

1,595

 

McCormick & Co., Inc.

33,363

1,196

*

Smithfield Foods, Inc.

32,943

1,078

 

Dean Foods Co.

38,218

1,026

 

Corn Products International, Inc.

22,078

998

 

J.M. Smucker Co.

16,416

903

 

Hormel Foods Corp.

23,432

835

 

Del Monte Foods Co.

65,549

691

 

Pilgrim’s Pride Corp.

15,361

624

 

Flowers Foods, Inc.

28,929

597

*

Ralcorp Holdings, Inc.

9,317

576

*

Hain Celestial Group, Inc.

16,150

473

 

Lancaster Colony Corp.

10,249

417

 

Seaboard Corp.

195

405

*

TreeHouse Foods Inc.

14,593

393

 

Sanderson Farms, Inc.

9,045

379

*

Chiquita Brands

 

 

 

International, Inc.

22,583

352

 

Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc.

12,284

333

 

Lance, Inc.

13,271

331

 

J & J Snack Foods Corp.

8,738

328

 

Reddy Ice Holdings, Inc.

10,781

312

 

Alico, Inc.

4,941

253

 

Farmer Brothers, Inc.

10,249

236

 

Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co. Class B

3,993

232

 

 

 

60,285

Household Products (20.9%)

 

 

 

 

36

 


 

Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

 

The Procter & Gamble Co.

690,057

45,068

 

 

Colgate-Palmolive Co.

124,579

8,262

 

 

Kimberly-Clark Corp.

111,300

7,645

 

 

The Clorox Co.

39,385

2,355

 

*

Energizer Holdings, Inc.

14,579

1,544

 

 

Church & Dwight, Inc.

19,933

895

 

 

WD-40 Co.

9,508

331

 

*

Central Garden & Pet Co.

 

 

 

 

Class A

21,281

268

 

*

Spectrum Brands Inc.

46,837

264

 

*

Central Garden and Pet Co.

10,513

135

 

 

 

 

66,767

 

Personal Products (3.3%)

 

 

 

 

Avon Products, Inc.

110,063

3,781

 

 

The Estee Lauder Cos. Inc.

 

 

 

 

Class A

31,760

1,321

 

*

NBTY, Inc.

18,925

695

 

 

Alberto-Culver Co.

27,888

646

 

 

Herbalife Ltd.

14,047

596

 

*

Bare Escentuals, Inc.

20,878

514

 

*

Playtex Products, Inc.

24,598

448

*

Chattem, Inc.

6,955

429

Nu Skin Enterprises, Inc.

26,096

406

*

Elizabeth Arden, Inc.

14,124

347

 

*

American Oriental

 

 

 

Bioengineering, Inc.

35,011

326

*

Prestige Brands Holdings Inc.

25,530

280

*

USANA Health Sciences, Inc.

7,243

276

*

Revlon, Inc. Class A

201,258

231

Mannatech, Inc.

25,811

213

 

 

10,509

Tobacco (12.3%)

 

 

Altria Group, Inc.

445,193

30,901

Reynolds American Inc.

45,083

2,981

Carolina Group

28,367

2,159

UST, Inc.

42,052

2,072

Universal Corp. (VA)

10,388

510

Vector Group Ltd.

16,002

368

*

Alliance One International, Inc.

46,998

362

 

 

 

37

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

 

 

39,353

Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $288,321)

 

319,273

Temporary Cash Investment (0.1%)

 

 

1 Vanguard Market

 

 

Liquidity Fund, 5.247%

 

 

(Cost $190)

190,135

190

Total Investments (100.2%)

 

 

(Cost $288,511)

 

319,463

Other Assets and Liabilities (–0.2%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

3,070

Liabilities

 

(3,633)

 

 

(563)

Net Assets (100%)

 

318,900

 

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 2

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

287,321

Undistributed Net Investment Income

4,003

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(3,376)

Unrealized Appreciation

30,952

Net Assets

318,900

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 273,328 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

9,081

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$33.22

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 4,600,000 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

309,819

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$67.35

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

2  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

 

38

 

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

7,038

Interest 1

5

Total Income

7,043

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

47

Management and Administrative

 

   Admiral Shares

15

   ETF Shares

440

Marketing and Distribution

 

   Admiral Shares

2

   ETF Shares

69

Custodian Fees

13

Auditing Fees

21

Shareholders’ Reports

 

   Admiral Shares

   ETF Shares

31

Total Expenses

638

Net Investment Income

6,405

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

6,817

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

13,738

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

26,960

 

 

39

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

6,405

2,149

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

6,817

(1,072)

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

13,738

15,111

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

26,960

16,188

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

   Admiral Shares

(96)

(51)

   ETF Shares

(3,840)

(1,054)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

   Admiral Shares

   ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(3,936)

(1,105)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

   Admiral Shares

2,899

1,104

   ETF Shares

76,754

123,168

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

79,653

124,272

Total Increase (Decrease)

102,677

139,355

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

216,223

76,868

End of Period 2

318,900

216,223

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $5,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $4,003,000 and $1,534,000.

 

40

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 30,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$30.56

$27.64

$25.82

$25.00

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.662

.547 2

.427 2

.24

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

2.460

2.716

1.952

.58

Total from Investment Operations

3.122

3.263

2.379

.82

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.462)

(.343)

(.440)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(.119)

Total Distributions

(.462)

(.343)

(.559)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$33.22

$30.56

$27.64

$25.82

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 3

10.30%

11.92%

9.29%

3.28%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$9

$6

$4

$1

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.16%

1.90%

1.69%

1.51%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

12%

14%

7%

20%

 

 

41

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 26,

 

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$61.94

$56.03

$52.28

$50.84

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

1.37

1.090 2

.950 2

.47

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

5.00

5.523

3.894

.97

Total from Investment Operations

6.37

6.613

4.844

1.44

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.96)

(.703)

(.853)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(.241)

Total Distributions

(.96)

(.703)

(1.094)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$67.35

$61.94

$56.03

$52.28

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

10.38%

11.91%

9.33%

2.83%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$310

$211

$73

$21

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.20%

1.93%

1.71%

1.51%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

12%

14%

7%

20%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

4  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

42

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Consumer Staples Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $28,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.03% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

 

43

 


Consumer Staples Index Fund

 

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $9,112,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $4,134,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $3,381,000 to offset future net capital gains of $276,000 through August 31, 2014, $773,000 through August 31, 2015, and $2,332,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $288,514,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $30,949,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $34,924,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $3,975,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $148,717,000 of investment securities and sold $66,012,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

4,493

139

 

1,868

65

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

92

3

 

50

2

Redeemed 1

(1,686)

(53)

 

(814)

(29)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

2,899

89

 

1,104

38

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

109,926

1,700

 

123,168

2,100

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(33,172)

(500)

 

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

76,754

1,200

 

123,168

2,100

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $9,000 and $4,000.

 

44

 


Energy Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

152

152

2,437

Median Market Cap

$37.6B

$113.7B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

12.9x

12.6x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

2.7x

2.9x

2.8x

Yield

 

1.3%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

1.1%

 

 

ETF Shares

1.2%

 

 

Return on Equity

23.4%

24.5%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

54.3%

52.6%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.3%

0.3%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

15%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Coal & Consumable Fuels

2%

Integrated Oil & Gas

45   

Oil & Gas Drilling

7   

Oil & Gas Equipment & Services

21   

Oil & Gas Exploration & Production

16   

Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing

5   

Oil & Gas Storage & Transportation

4   

 

 

45

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Ten Largest Holdings 3 (% of total net assets)

 

 

ExxonMobil Corp.

19.9%

Chevron Corp.

11.0   

ConocoPhillips Co.

7.4   

Schlumberger Ltd.

7.3   

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

2.8   

Valero Energy Corp.

2.3   

Marathon Oil Corp.

2.3   

Devon Energy Corp.

1.9   

Halliburton Co.

1.9   

Transocean Inc.

1.8   

Top Ten

58.6%

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Energy.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

See page 83 for a glossary of investment terms.

 

46

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Energy Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

26.09%

28.75%

$21,000

Energy Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

25.89

28.71

20,980

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54

13.22

14,399

MSCI US IMI/Energy

26.84

28.31

20,793

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Energy Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

26.03%

26.69%

$198,481

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54

12.58

140,960

MSCI US IMI/Energy

26.84

26.16

196,093

 

 

47

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Energy Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

25.89%

109.80%

Energy Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

26.09   

110.00   

MSCI US IMI/Energy

26.84   

107.93   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

9/23/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

24.46%

30.78%

Net Asset Value

 

24.66   

30.83   

Admiral Shares 2

10/7/2004

24.60   

28.64   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: September 23, 2004, for ETF Shares; October 7, 2004, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.
Note: See
Financial Highlights tables on page 26 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

48

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (99.8%)

 

 

Energy Equipment & Services (27.9%)

 

 

 

Oil & Gas Drilling (7.4%)

 

 

*

Transocean Inc.

134,451

14,129

 

GlobalSantaFe Corp.

109,372

7,721

 

Noble Corp.

130,466

6,401

*

Nabors Industries, Inc.

145,090

4,293

 

ENSCO International, Inc.

75,438

4,090

 

Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc.

35,851

3,770

*

Pride International, Inc.

88,212

3,102

 

Rowan Cos., Inc.

61,738

2,318

 

Patterson-UTI Energy, Inc.

92,162

1,979

 

Helmerich & Payne, Inc.

58,419

1,840

*

Unit Corp.

30,432

1,493

*

Hercules Offshore, Inc.

55,369

1,409

*

Atwood Oceanics, Inc.

18,410

1,399

*

Grey Wolf, Inc.

152,164

1,010

*

Parker Drilling Co.

95,943

747

*

Pioneer Drilling Co.

60,063

730

*

Bronco Drilling Co., Inc.

39,346

580

 

 

 

 

 

Oil & Gas Equipment & Services (20.5%)

 

 

 

Schlumberger Ltd.

582,344

56,196

 

Halliburton Co.

427,917

14,802

 

Baker Hughes, Inc.

150,805

12,647

*

National Oilwell Varco Inc.

84,302

10,791

*

Weatherford International Ltd.

161,001

9,399

 

Smith International, Inc.

98,038

6,570

*

Cameron International Corp.

54,867

4,486

 

BJ Services Co.

151,431

3,757

*

Grant Prideco, Inc.

66,121

3,656

*

FMC Technologies Inc.

34,112

3,230

 

 

49

 


 

Energy Index Fund

 

 

*

Exterran Holdings, Inc.

35,333

2,738

 

*

Oceaneering International, Inc.

31,788

2,135

 

 

Tidewater Inc.

31,464

2,059

 

*

Superior Energy Services, Inc.

45,924

1,783

 

*

Dresser Rand Group, Inc.

48,101

1,773

*

Core Laboratories N.V.

14,287

1,602

 

*

Global Industries Ltd.

60,147

1,454

 

*

SEACOR Holdings Inc.

15,686

1,377

 

*

Oil States International, Inc.

32,344

1,365

 

*

W-H Energy Services, Inc.

21,114

1,342

 

*

Dril-Quip, Inc.

25,588

1,204

 

*

TETRA Technologies, Inc.

52,967

1,059

 

 

CARBO Ceramics Inc.

19,305

903

 

*

Complete Production

 

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

40,070

890

 

*

Bristow Group, Inc.

20,269

879

 

 

Lufkin Industries, Inc.

15,408

876

 

*

Input/Output, Inc.

61,548

873

 

*

Hornbeck Offshore

 

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

21,900

835

 

*

Gulfmark Offshore, Inc.

18,116

831

 

*

NATCO Group Inc.

16,154

807

 

*

Willbros Group, Inc.

26,460

752

 

 

RPC Inc.

50,153

692

 

*

Trico Marine Services, Inc.

20,955

689

 

*

Horizon Offshore, Inc.

41,411

685

 

*

Allis-Chalmers Energy Inc.

32,161

641

 

*

Superior Well Services, Inc.

28,803

622

 

*

Cal Dive International, Inc.

43,944

615

 

*

Newpark Resources, Inc.

107,414

602

 

*

Basic Energy Services Inc.

17,930

371

 

*

SulphCo, Inc.

51,440

352

 

*

Matrix Service Co.

11,349

215

 

 

 

 

215,566

 

Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels (71.9%)

 

 

 

 

Coal & Consumable Fuels (2.1%)

 

 

 

 

Peabody Energy Corp.

130,925

5,566

 

 

CONSOL Energy, Inc.

92,059

3,671

 

 

Arch Coal, Inc.

80,109

2,362

 

 

Foundation Coal Holdings, Inc.

34,137

1,158

 

 

Massey Energy Co.

45,826

951

 

*

Alpha Natural Resources, Inc.

47,894

925

 

*

USEC Inc.

65,854

882

 

*

International Coal Group, Inc.

160,015

648

 

*

Evergreen Energy, Inc.

79,671

328

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Integrated Oil & Gas (45.2%)

 

 

 

 

ExxonMobil Corp.

1,792,686

153,687

 

 

Chevron Corp.

966,571

84,826

 

 

ConocoPhillips Co.

695,478

56,953

 

 

 

50

 


 

Energy Index Fund

 

 

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

386,147

21,891

 

Marathon Oil Corp.

323,390

17,427

 

Hess Corp.

136,991

8,407

 

Murphy Oil Corp.

88,619

5,400

 

 

 

 

 

Oil & Gas Exploration & Production (16.5%)

 

 

Devon Energy Corp.

197,780

14,895

 

Apache Corp.

154,894

11,986

 

Anadarko Petroleum Corp.

219,580

10,755

 

XTO Energy, Inc.

175,380

9,534

 

EOG Resources, Inc.

117,705

7,929

 

Chesapeake Energy Corp.

212,795

6,865

 

Noble Energy, Inc.

84,934

5,102

*

Ultra Petroleum Corp.

76,811

4,102

*

Southwestern Energy Co.

89,541

3,330

*

Newfield Exploration Co.

69,570

3,026

 

Range Resources Corp.

79,769

2,896

 

Pioneer Natural Resources Co.

67,024

2,751

*

Denbury Resources, Inc.

66,644

2,651

 

Cabot Oil & Gas Corp.

57,806

1,927

*

Helix Energy

 

 

 

Solutions Group, Inc.

48,836

1,877

*

Forest Oil Corp.

47,092

1,820

 

Cimarex Energy Co.

50,566

1,811

 

Pogo Producing Co.

35,647

1,776

*

Plains Exploration &

 

 

 

Production Co.

45,763

1,717

*

Petrohawk Energy Corp.

107,485

1,627

*

Cheniere Energy, Inc.

37,108

1,339

*

Quicksilver Resources, Inc.

33,415

1,335

 

St. Mary Land &

 

 

 

Exploration Co.

37,845

1,262

*

Mariner Energy Inc.

58,928

1,236

*

Whiting Petroleum Corp.

31,264

1,162

 

Penn Virginia Corp.

28,344

1,131

*

EXCO Resources, Inc.

65,452

1,100

*

Encore Acquisition Co.

38,672

1,075

 

Atlas America, Inc.

21,014

1,069

 

Berry Petroleum Class A

30,421

1,037

*

Comstock Resources, Inc.

36,324

1,000

*

Bill Barrett Corp.

26,200

923

*

ATP Oil & Gas Corp.

20,711

892

*

Oilsands Quest, Inc.

175,935

887

*

Delta Petroleum Corp.

59,328

879

*

Swift Energy Co.

23,035

857

*

Carrizo Oil & Gas, Inc.

21,822

857

*

Arena Resources, Inc.

13,938

855

*

Rosetta Resources, Inc.

50,361

845

*

CNX Gas Corp.

30,326

808

 

W&T Offshore, Inc.

34,071

759

*

Parallel Petroleum Corp.

42,766

757

 

 

51

 


 

Energy Index Fund

 

*

Petroleum Development Corp.

18,861

755

*

Warren Resources Inc.

60,475

715

*

Harvest Natural

 

 

 

Resources, Inc.

57,532

659

*

Bois d’Arc Energy, Inc.

34,079

612

*

McMoRan Exploration Co.

44,509

605

*

Goodrich Petroleum Corp.

20,114

596

*

PetroQuest Energy, Inc.

52,471

586

*

Veneco Inc.

35,857

576

*

Stone Energy Corp.

16,326

538

*

Energy Partners, Ltd.

28,786

393

*

Brigham Exploration Co.

64,380

325

*

The Meridian Resource Corp.

61,584

143

*

GeoGlobal Resources Inc.

6,010

19

 

 

 

 

 

Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing (4.6%)

 

 

 

Valero Energy Corp.

255,889

17,531

 

Sunoco, Inc.

61,408

4,491

 

Tesoro Corp.

71,115

3,508

 

Frontier Oil Corp.

61,060

2,505

 

Holly Corp.

27,977

1,865

 

Western Refining, Inc.

22,674

1,175

 

World Fuel Services Corp.

22,379

863

*

US BioEnergy Corp.

68,498

713

 

Alon USA Energy, Inc.

17,688

677

 

Delek US Holdings, Inc.

22,572

619

*

Aventine Renewable

 

 

 

Energy Holdings, Inc.

22,888

328

*

Rentech, Inc.

129,368

301

*

Pacific Ethanol, Inc.

24,647

285

*

VeraSun Energy Corp.

19,090

247

 

 

 

 

 

Oil & Gas Storage & Transportation (3.5%)

 

 

 

Williams Cos., Inc.

286,024

8,867

 

Spectra Energy Corp.

306,056

7,116

 

El Paso Corp.

345,875

5,489

*

Kinder Morgan

 

 

 

Management, LLC

38,198

1,839

Overseas Shipholding

 

 

Group Inc.

20,873

1,490

Crosstex Energy, Inc.

25,366

833

* Enbridge Energy

 

 

Management LLC

14,104

735

MarkWest Hydrocarbon, Inc.

11,900

598

General Maritime Corp.

3,963

102

 

 

52

 


Energy Index Fund

 

 

 

554,223

Total Investments (99.8%)

 

 

(Cost $601,382)

 

769,789

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.2%)

 

 

Receivables For Investment

 

 

Securities Sold

 

16,126

Other Assets—Note B

 

2,211

Liabilities

 

(16,943)

 

 

1,394

Net Assets (100%)

 

771,183

 

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 1

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid in Capital

601,008

Undistributed Net Investment Income

5,014

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(3,246)

Unrealized Appreciation

168,407

Net Assets

771,183

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 2,280,470 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

114,849

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$50.36

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 6,503,632 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

656,334

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$100.92

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

53

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

7,749

Interest 1

61

Total Income

7,810

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

  Investment Advisory Services

84

  Management and Administrative

 

    Admiral Shares

189

    ETF Shares

725

  Marketing and Distribution

 

    Admiral Shares

20

    ETF Shares

109

Custodian Fees

52

Auditing Fees

23

Shareholders’ Reports

 

    Admiral Shares

1

    ETF Shares

41

Trustees’ Fees and Expenses

1

Total Expenses

1,245

Net Investment Income

6,565

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

3,965

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

115,652

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

126,182

 

 

54

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

6,565

4,233

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

3,965

16,291

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

115,652

11,499

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

126,182

32,023

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(852)

(618)

ETF Shares

(4,184)

(2,034)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(5,036)

(2,652)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

13,336

15,324

ETF Shares

213,757

135,972

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

227,093

151,296

Total Increase (Decrease)

348,239

180,667

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

422,944

242,277

End of Period 2

771,183

422,944

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $61,000.

2   Net Assets End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $5,014,000 and $3,485,000.

 

55

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Oct. 7,

 

Year Ended

2004 1 to

 

August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$40.36

$36.29

$25.98

Investment Operations

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.501 2

.46 2

.588 2,3

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

9.944

3.96

9.833

Total from Investment Operations

10.445

4.42

10.421

Distributions

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.445)

(.35)

(.111)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.445)

(.35)

(.111)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$50.36

$40.36

$36.29

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 4

26.03%

12.27%

40.27%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$115

$83

$60

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.16%

1.20%

1.95% 3, *

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

15%

21%

16%

 

 

56

 


Energy Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sept. 23,

 

 

Year Ended

 

2004 1 to

 

 

August 31,

 

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

 

2005

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$80.90

$72.72

 

$49.24

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

1.080

. 2 966 2

 

1.169 2,6

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

19.869

7.915

 

22.527

Total from Investment Operations

20.949

8.881

 

23.696

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.929)

(.701)

 

(.216)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

 

Total Distributions

(.929)

(.701)

 

(.216)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$100.92

$80.90

 

$72.72

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

26.09%

12.31%

 

48.29%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$656

$340

 

$182

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

 

0.26%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.20%

1.23%

 

1.97% 6, *

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

15%

21%

 

16%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.163 and 0.52%, respectively, resulting from a cash payment received in connection with the merger of Chevron Corp. and Unocal Corp. in August 2005.

4  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

5  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

6  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.324 and 0.52%, respectively, resulting from a cash payment received in connection with the merger of Chevron Corp. and Unocal Corp. in August 2005.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

57

 


Energy Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Energy Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $66,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.07% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future.

 

58

 


 

Energy Index Fund

Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $5,829,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $5,288,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $2,704,000 to offset future net capital gains of $5,000 through August 31, 2013, $789,000 through August 31, 2014, $461,000 through August 31, 2015, and $1,449,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $601,923,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $167,866,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $175,248,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $7,382,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $334,761,000 of investment securities and sold $107,748,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2005–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

 

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

43,071

931

 

31,354

808

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

749

17

 

548

15

Redeemed 1

(30,484)

(721)

 

(16,578)

(436)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

13,336

227

 

15,324

387

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

247,713

2,700

 

203,625

2,604

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(33,956)

(400)

 

(67,653)

(900)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

213,757

2,300

 

135,972

1,704

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $96,000 and $112,000.

 

59

 


Financials Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

519

519

2,437

Median Market Cap

$33.3B

$33.3B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

12.0x

12.0x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

1.8x

1.8x

2.8x

Yield

 

3.0%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

2.8%

 

 

ETF Shares

2.9%

 

 

Return on Equity

16.6%

16.6%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

19.3%

19.2%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.3%

0.3%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

12%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Target Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

1.00

0.62

Beta

1.00

0.95

 

 

60

 


Financials Index Fund

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Asset Management & Custody Banks

6%

Consumer Finance

4   

Diversified Banks

9   

Diversified REITs

1   

Industrial REITs

1   

Insurance Brokers

1   

Investment Banking & Brokerage

9   

Life & Health Insurance

5   

Mortgage REITs

1   

Multiline Insurance

7   

Office REITs

1   

Other Diversified Financial Services

19   

Property & Casualty Insurance

9   

Real Estate Management & Development

1   

Regional Banks

10   

Reinsurance

1   

Residential REITs

2   

Retail REITs

3   

Specialized Finance

2   

Specialized REITs

2   

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance

6   

 

Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

Citigroup, Inc.

7.3%

Bank of America Corp.

7.1   

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

4.8   

American International Group, Inc.

4.6   

Wells Fargo & Co.

3.7   

Wachovia Corp.

2.9   

The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

2.0   

Fannie Mae

2.0   

American Express Co.

2.0   

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

1.9   

Top Ten

38.3%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Financials.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 83.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

61

 


Financials Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

 

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

 

Investment

Financials Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

2.97%

7.01%

 

$12,758

Financials Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

2.32   

6.92   

 

12,721

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

9.76   

 

13,978

MSCI US IMI/Financials

3.16   

7.22   

 

12,849

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Financials Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

2.95%

7.55%

$129,670

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

10.72   

143,822

MSCI US IMI/Financials

3.16   

7.78   

130,659

 

 

62

 


Financials Index Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Financials Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

2.32%

27.21%

Financials Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

2.97   

27.58   

MSCI US IMI/Financials

3.16   

28.49   

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

1/26/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

13.17%

9.33%

Net Asset Value

 

13.33   

9.36   

Admiral Shares 2

2/4/2004

13.33   

9.96   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: January 26, 2004, for ETF Shares; February 4, 2004, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.
Note: See
Financial Highlights tables on page 35 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

63

 


Financials Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (100.2%)

 

 

Capital Markets (14.5%)

 

 

 

The Goldman

 

 

 

Sachs Group, Inc.

34,968

6,155

 

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

78,722

5,802

 

Morgan Stanley

90,029

5,615

 

Bank of New York

 

 

 

Mellon Corp.

106,384

4,301

 

Lehman Brothers

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

42,031

2,305

 

State Street Corp.

37,309

2,289

 

Franklin Resources Corp.

16,759

2,208

 

Charles Schwab Corp.

91,784

1,817

 

Ameriprise Financial, Inc.

21,882

1,335

 

T. Rowe Price Group Inc.

23,737

1,218

 

Bear Stearns Co., Inc.

10,736

1,167

 

Northern Trust Corp.

18,513

1,138

 

Legg Mason Inc.

12,337

1,071

 

American Capital

 

 

 

Strategies, Ltd.

16,173

668

*

E*TRADE Financial Corp.

40,085

625

 

A.G. Edwards, Inc.

7,121

595

 

Janus Capital Group Inc.

17,803

473

 

Nuveen Investments, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

7,452

463

*

TD Ameritrade Holding Corp.

25,399

461

 

Eaton Vance Corp.

11,240

432

 

Allied Capital Corp.

14,294

426

 

SEI Investments Co.

13,935

354

*

Affiliated Managers Group, Inc.

2,893

328

 

Federated Investors, Inc.

8,889

312

 

Raymond James Financial, Inc.

8,700

285

 

 

64

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

Jefferies Group, Inc.

9,512

246

 

Apollo Investment Corp.

9,449

206

 

Waddell & Reed Financial, Inc.

7,837

195

*

Investment Technology

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

4,111

166

*

Knight Capital Group, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

9,324

128

*

GFI Group Inc.

1,545

114

 

Ares Capital Corp.

6,234

102

 

optionsXpress Holdings Inc.

3,835

90

*

Piper Jaffray Cos., Inc.

1,738

89

 

MCG Capital Corp.

5,820

85

 

Greenhill & Co., Inc.

1,455

84

*

Stifel Financial Corp.

964

52

 

Calamos Asset

 

 

 

Management, Inc.

2,195

51

*

KBW Inc.

1,771

49

 

Cohen & Steers, Inc.

1,455

48

 

SWS Group, Inc.

2,275

40

 

Gamco Investors Inc. Class A

710

38

 

Capital Southwest Corp.

254

36

*

LaBranche & Co. Inc.

5,111

32

*

Tradestation Group Inc.

2,576

29

*

Penson Worldwide, Inc.

1,129

18

*

Thomas Weisel Partners

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

1,173

16

*

ACA Capital Holdings Inc.

970

7

 

 

 

43,764

Commercial Banks (18.6%)

 

 

 

Wells Fargo & Co.

300,940

10,996

 

Wachovia Corp.

180,746

8,853

 

U.S. Bancorp

165,867

5,366

 

SunTrust Banks, Inc.

31,706

2,497

 

PNC Financial Services Group

32,505

2,287

 

Regions Financial Corp.

68,683

2,150

 

BB&T Corp.

51,616

2,051

 

Fifth Third Bancorp

46,981

1,677

 

National City Corp.

54,031

1,454

 

KeyCorp

37,538

1,250

 

Marshall & Ilsley Corp.

21,560

942

 

Comerica, Inc.

14,801

826

 

Compass Bancshares Inc.

12,179

796

 

Zions Bancorp

10,090

712

 

Synovus Financial Corp.

24,496

677

 

M & T Bank Corp.

6,240

661

 

Commerce Bancorp, Inc.

16,700

613

 

Huntington Bancshares Inc.

32,615

561

 

First Horizon National Corp.

11,690

359

 

Associated Banc-Corp.

11,412

322

 

UnionBanCal Corp.

5,254

309

 

Popular, Inc.

24,767

306

 

 

65

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

Colonial BancGroup, Inc.

14,237

302

 

TCF Financial Corp.

10,975

277

 

City National Corp.

3,797

271

 

Cullen/Frost Bankers, Inc.

5,082

262

 

Commerce Bancshares, Inc.

5,605

262

 

Wilmington Trust Corp.

6,143

246

 

Valley National Bancorp

10,791

245

 

Bank of Hawaii Corp.

4,655

239

 

Fulton Financial Corp.

16,259

239

 

Webster Financial Corp.

5,285

224

 

East West Bancorp, Inc.

5,766

206

 

BancorpSouth, Inc.

6,640

166

 

The South Financial Group, Inc.

7,082

163

*

SVB Financial Group

3,265

162

 

Whitney Holdings Corp.

5,862

162

 

First Midwest Bancorp, Inc.

4,655

160

 

UCBH Holdings, Inc.

9,232

153

 

UMB Financial Corp.

3,372

149

 

Chittenden Corp.

4,291

149

 

FirstMerit Corp.

7,536

146

 

First Community Bancorp

2,620

142

 

First Republic Bank

2,596

142

 

Westamerica Bancorporation

2,866

139

 

Greater Bay Bancorp

4,888

138

 

Cathay General Bancorp

4,138

135

 

Umpqua Holdings Corp.

5,966

129

 

Trustmark Corp.

4,495

127

 

Citizens Banking Corp.

7,152

126

 

Sterling Financial Corp.

4,517

115

 

United Bankshares, Inc.

3,655

114

 

International Bancshares Corp.

4,930

113

 

BOK Financial Corp.

2,195

112

 

Prosperity Bancshares, Inc.

3,224

109

 

Pacific Capital Bancorp

4,156

105

 

Wintrust Financial Corp.

2,310

100

 

F.N.B. Corp.

5,722

97

 

MB Financial, Inc.

2,752

97

 

Park National Corp.

1,064

97

 

Glacier Bancorp, Inc.

4,346

95

 

Provident Bankshares Corp.

3,068

95

 

Boston Private

 

 

 

Financial Holdings, Inc.

3,490

95

 

Central Pacific Financial Co.

2,961

94

 

Frontier Financial Corp.

3,809

94

 

First Charter Corp.

3,078

92

 

Hancock Holding Co.

2,275

91

*

Signature Bank

2,622

91

 

First Citizens BancShares

 

 

 

Class A

499

88

 

Old National Bancorp

5,552

88

 

Susquehanna Bancshares, Inc.

4,350

86

 

 

66

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

United Community Banks, Inc.

3,224

78

 

Sterling Bancshares, Inc.

6,715

77

 

National Penn Bancshares Inc.

4,286

76

 

Alabama National

 

 

 

BanCorporation

1,425

75

 

CVB Financial Corp.

5,954

71

 

S & T Bancorp, Inc.

2,000

70

*

Investors Bancorp, Inc.

4,793

68

 

NBT Bancorp, Inc.

3,089

68

 

First Commonwealth

 

 

 

Financial Corp.

6,098

67

 

First BanCorp Puerto Rico

6,658

67

 

Community Banks, Inc.

2,137

63

 

Hanmi Financial Corp.

4,015

62

 

City Holding Co.

1,679

62

 

First Financial Bankshares, Inc.

1,447

61

 

Amcore Financial, Inc.

2,113

57

 

PrivateBancorp, Inc.

1,686

56

 

Chemical Financial Corp.

2,119

54

 

Community Bank System, Inc.

2,653

53

 

Westbanco Inc.

1,869

50

*

Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc.

2,234

49

 

Columbia Banking System, Inc.

1,516

46

 

Cascade Bancorp

1,962

46

 

Sandy Spring Bancorp, Inc.

1,396

44

 

Sterling Financial Corp. (PA)

2,437

43

 

Harleysville National Corp.

2,485

42

 

First Financial Bancorp

3,067

41

 

IBERIABANK Corp.

824

41

 

City Bank Lynnwood (WA)

1,287

40

 

Independent Bank Corp. (MA)

1,341

39

 

Community Trust Bancorp Inc.

1,228

39

 

First Indiana Corp.

1,271

39

 

West Coast Bancorp

1,416

39

*

Western Alliance Bancorp

1,354

36

 

Bank of the Ozarks, Inc.

1,175

36

 

First State Bancorporation

1,859

36

 

BankFinancial Corp.

2,253

35

 

Nara Bancorp, Inc.

2,152

34

 

Washington Trust Bancorp, Inc.

1,306

34

 

Old Second Bancorp, Inc.

1,129

34

 

First Merchants Corp.

1,551

33

*

Centennial Bank Holdings Inc.

4,810

32

 

S.Y. Bancorp, Inc.

1,204

32

 

Capital City Bank Group, Inc.

1,021

32

 

Renasant Corp.

1,587

32

 

Banner Corp.

981

32

 

Capitol Bancorp Ltd.

1,246

31

 

CoBiz Inc.

1,667

30

 

U.S.B. Holding Co., Inc.

1,273

30

 

First Community

 

 

 

 

67

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

Bancshares, Inc.

888

29

 

Integra Bank Corp.

1,529

29

 

TriCo Bancshares

1,278

29

 

First Financial Corp. (IN)

941

28

 

Union Bankshares Corp.

1,221

28

 

Omega Financial Corp.

1,063

28

 

First Source Corp.

1,190

28

 

Simmons First National Corp.

1,017

28

 

Yardville National Bancorp

804

27

 

BancFirst Corp.

603

27

 

Univest Corp. of Pennsylvania

1,153

27

 

Sterling Bancorp

1,730

26

 

W Holding Co., Inc.

10,923

26

 

Tompkins Trustco, Inc.

660

25

 

Lakeland Bancorp, Inc.

1,930

25

 

Midwest Banc Holdings, Inc.

1,629

24

*

Virginia Commerce

 

 

 

Bancorp, Inc.

1,607

24

 

Great Southern Bancorp, Inc.

868

23

 

Seacoast Banking Corp.

 

 

 

of Florida

1,317

23

 

Independent Bank Corp. (MI)

1,872

22

 

Heartland Financial USA, Inc.

1,079

22

 

Irwin Financial Corp.

1,834

20

 

Taylor Capital Group, Inc.

586

18

 

Center Financial Corp.

1,075

17

 

Wilshire Bancorp Inc.

1,507

17

 

Republic Bancorp, Inc. Class A

886

13

 

 

 

55,939

Consumer Finance (4.1%)

 

 

 

American Express Co.

101,202

5,932

 

Capital One Financial Corp.

39,323

2,543

 

SLM Corp.

38,363

1,929

*

Discover Financial Services

45,015

1,042

 

The First Marblehead Corp.

6,209

208

*

AmeriCredit Corp.

11,012

191

 

Cash America International Inc.

2,784

100

 

Student Loan Corp.

457

90

 

Advanta Corp. Class B

2,577

67

 

Advance America,

 

 

 

Cash Advance Centers, Inc.

4,511

57

*

First Cash Financial

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

2,599

56

*

Dollar Financial Corp.

2,214

53

*

World Acceptance Corp.

1,460

45

*

EZCORP, Inc.

3,058

37

 

Nelnet, Inc.

1,815

32

*

CompuCredit Corp.

1,411

30

 

Advanta Corp. Class A

841

19

*

Credit Acceptance Corp.

716

16

 

 

 

12,447

 

 

68

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

Diversified Financial Services (22.0%)

 

 

 

Citigroup, Inc.

467,201

21,902

 

Bank of America Corp.

418,867

21,228

 

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

322,536

14,359

 

CME Group, Inc.

4,625

2,566

 

Nymex Holdings Inc.

8,272

1,067

 

Moody’s Corp.

22,381

1,026

 

NYSE Euronext

12,539

912

*

IntercontinentalExchange Inc.

5,402

788

 

CIT Group Inc.

18,667

701

 

Leucadia National Corp.

15,247

677

*

Nasdaq Stock Market Inc.

7,811

255

 

International Securities

 

 

 

Exchange, Inc.

3,221

214

 

Portfolio Recovery

 

 

 

Associates, Inc.

1,532

79

 

Financial Federal Corp.

2,411

74

*

PICO Holdings, Inc.

1,145

50

*

MarketAxess Holdings, Inc.

2,763

48

 

ASTA Funding, Inc.

958

35

 

Resource America, Inc.

1,541

23

*

Primus Guaranty, Ltd.

1,651

16

*

NewStar Financial, Inc.

1,286

15

 

Asset Acceptance

 

 

 

Capital Corp.

1,038

12

 

 

 

66,047

Insurance (23.5%)

 

 

 

American International

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

208,304

13,748

*

Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

 

 

 

Class B

1,183

4,602

 

MetLife, Inc.

71,446

4,576

 

Prudential Financial, Inc.

43,651

3,919

 

The Travelers Cos., Inc.

63,500

3,209

 

The Allstate Corp.

55,189

3,022

 

The Hartford Financial

 

 

 

Services Group Inc.

30,080

2,674

 

AFLAC Inc.

46,517

2,480

 

The Chubb Corp.

38,645

1,976

 

Loews Corp.

40,610

1,909

 

ACE Ltd.

30,690

1,773

 

Lincoln National Corp.

26,031

1,585

 

The Principal Financial

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

25,207

1,399

 

Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc.

51,719

1,378

 

Progressive Corp. of Ohio

66,446

1,352

 

XL Capital Ltd. Class A

17,025

1,297

 

Genworth Financial Inc.

42,495

1,232

 

Aon Corp.

26,220

1,136

 

Unum Group

32,184

788

 

 

69

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

MBIA, Inc.

12,647

759

 

Everest Re Group, Ltd.

6,149

626

 

Ambac Financial Group, Inc.

9,959

626

 

Cincinnati Financial Corp.

14,689

619

 

Safeco Corp.

9,945

577

 

Willis Group Holdings Ltd.

14,729

573

 

Torchmark Corp.

9,237

569

 

Assurant, Inc.

9,879

509

 

W.R. Berkley Corp.

15,385

460

 

Axis Capital Holdings Ltd.

12,644

456

*

Markel Corp.

894

425

 

White Mountains Insurance

 

 

 

Group Inc.

813

424

 

PartnerRe Ltd.

5,390

392

 

Old Republic

 

 

 

International Corp.

20,705

377

 

RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd.

6,453

370

*

Arch Capital Group Ltd.

4,944

355

 

Fidelity National Financial, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

19,442

354

 

First American Corp.

7,727

323

 

Brown & Brown, Inc.

11,188

301

 

HCC Insurance Holdings, Inc.

10,463

289

 

Erie Indemnity Co. Class A

4,938

276

 

Nationwide Financial

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

5,154

276

 

Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.

9,250

273

 

Protective Life Corp.

6,267

262

 

StanCorp Financial Group, Inc.

5,019

236

*

Philadelphia Consolidated

 

 

 

Holding Corp.

5,650

226

 

Endurance Specialty

 

 

 

Holdings Ltd.

5,270

210

*

Alleghany Corp.

496

204

 

The Hanover Insurance

 

 

 

Group Inc.

4,759

204

*

Conseco, Inc.

14,269

201

 

Unitrin, Inc.

4,376

199

 

Aspen Insurance Holdings Ltd.

7,806

196

 

Platinum Underwriters

 

 

 

Holdings, Ltd.

5,639

196

 

American Financial Group, Inc.

6,732

190

 

Allied World Assurance

 

 

 

Holdings, Ltd.

3,924

188

 

Transatlantic Holdings, Inc.

2,551

181

 

Montpelier Re Holdings Ltd.

10,008

165

 

National Financial

 

 

 

Partners Corp.

3,356

164

 

Delphi Financial Group, Inc.

4,048

163

 

Hilb, Rogal and Hamilton Co.

3,448

161

 

Reinsurance Group of

 

 

 

 

70

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

America, Inc.

2,893

157

 

Zenith National Insurance Corp.

3,519

152

*

ProAssurance Corp.

2,866

151

 

Commerce Group, Inc.

4,726

151

 

The Phoenix Cos., Inc.

10,216

141

 

Assured Guaranty Ltd.

5,174

135

 

Mercury General Corp.

2,557

135

 

IPC Holdings Ltd.

4,796

122

 

R.L.I. Corp.

2,001

120

 

Selective Insurance Group

5,318

112

*

Argo Group International

 

 

 

Holdings

2,727

111

 

Max Re Capital Ltd.

3,901

107

 

Odyssey Re Holdings Corp.

2,683

97

 

LandAmerica Financial

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

1,579

87

 

Horace Mann Educators Corp.

3,997

77

 

Infinity Property &

 

 

 

Casualty Corp.

1,816

75

 

United Fire & Casualty Co.

1,911

73

*

Navigators Group, Inc.

1,283

70

 

Security Capital

 

 

 

Assurance, Ltd.

3,388

69

*

Universal American

 

 

 

Financial Corp.

3,248

67

 

Midland Co.

1,168

64

 

Alfa Corp.

3,418

61

 

Stewart Information

 

 

 

Services Corp.

1,607

60

 

Enstar Group Ltd.

426

54

 

National Western

 

 

 

Life Insurance Co. Class A

206

53

 

21st Century Insurance Group

2,405

53

 

OneBeacon Insurance

 

 

 

Group Ltd.

2,312

49

 

Tower Group, Inc.

1,924

48

 

American Equity Investment

 

 

 

Life Holding Co.

4,713

48

 

FBL Financial Group, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

1,223

48

 

Safety Insurance Group, Inc.

1,307

45

*

United America Indemnity, Ltd.

2,004

43

 

Harleysville Group, Inc.

1,303

42

*

American Physicians

 

 

 

Capital, Inc.

1,054

42

 

Amtrust Financial Services Inc.

2,525

41

 

State Auto Financial Corp.

1,329

40

 

Presidential Life Corp.

2,128

37

*

CNA Surety Corp.

1,714

31

 

James River Group Inc.

702

23

 

Baldwin & Lyons, Inc. Class B

720

20

 

 

71

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

National Interstate Corp.

540

18

 

Donegal Group Inc. Class A

1,114

17

*

Scottish Re Group Ltd.

4,855

16

*

Darwin Professional

 

 

 

Underwriters, Inc.

622

15

*

eHealth, Inc.

725

15

*

First Acceptance Corp.

1,557

13

*

Crawford & Co. Class B

954

6

 

 

 

70,821

Real Estate Investment Trusts (10.5%)

 

 

 

Simon Property Group, Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

20,789

1,973

 

ProLogis REIT

23,971

1,442

 

Vornado Realty Trust REIT

12,861

1,371

 

Archstone-Smith Trust REIT

20,500

1,205

 

Host Hotels & Resorts Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

50,626

1,128

 

Equity Residential REIT

27,456

1,105

 

Boston Properties, Inc. REIT

11,038

1,105

 

General Growth

 

 

 

Properties Inc. REIT

20,430

1,016

 

Public Storage, Inc. REIT

11,969

907

 

Kimco Realty Corp. REIT

21,141

905

 

Avalonbay Communities, Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

7,426

849

 

Plum Creek Timber Co. Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

16,664

699

 

SL Green Realty Corp. REIT

5,495

613

 

Developers Diversified

 

 

 

Realty Corp. REIT

11,324

606

 

Health Care

 

 

 

Properties Investors REIT

18,848

573

 

The Macerich Co. REIT

6,816

554

 

AMB Property Corp. REIT

9,289

511

 

Ventas, Inc. REIT

12,192

464

 

Regency Centers Corp. REIT

6,467

449

 

Federal Realty

 

 

 

Investment Trust REIT

5,256

442

 

iStar Financial Inc. REIT

11,925

436

 

Duke Realty Corp. REIT

12,645

427

 

Annaly Mortgage

 

 

 

Management Inc. REIT

29,037

409

 

Apartment Investment &

 

 

 

Management Co.

 

 

 

Class A REIT

9,056

405

 

Hospitality Properties Trust

 

 

 

REIT

8,764

346

 

Liberty Property Trust REIT

8,522

333

 

Camden Property Trust REIT

5,337

328

 

UDR, Inc. REIT

12,593

316

 

Rayonier Inc. REIT

7,234

309

 

 

72

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

Health Care Inc. REIT

7,381

294

 

Weingarten Realty Investors

 

 

 

REIT

7,242

291

 

Essex Property Trust, Inc. REIT

2,328

274

 

Mack-Cali Realty Corp. REIT

6,338

265

 

BRE Properties Inc.

 

 

 

Class A REIT

4,710

262

 

Alexandria Real Estate

 

 

 

Equities, Inc. REIT

2,780

259

 

Taubman Co. REIT

4,990

257

 

Realty Income Corp. REIT

9,418

254

 

Nationwide Health

 

 

 

Properties, Inc. REIT

8,003

222

 

Douglas Emmett, Inc. REIT

8,582

210

 

Brandywine Realty Trust REIT

7,932

204

 

CapitalSource Inc. REIT

10,926

195

 

HRPT Properties Trust REIT

19,749

193

 

CBL & Associates

 

 

 

Properties, Inc. REIT

5,811

192

 

Kilroy Realty Corp. REIT

3,085

189

 

Digital Realty Trust, Inc. REIT

4,592

179

 

Highwood Properties, Inc. REIT

4,986

178

 

First Industrial Realty Trust REIT

4,255

174

 

Corporate Office

 

 

 

Properties Trust, Inc. REIT

3,863

166

 

Potlatch Corp. REIT

3,617

163

 

Post Properties, Inc. REIT

4,048

162

 

DCT Industrial Trust Inc. REIT

15,779

161

 

Senior Housing

 

 

 

Properties Trust REIT

7,797

159

 

LaSalle Hotel Properties REIT

3,803

158

 

Home Properties, Inc. REIT

3,068

156

 

BioMed Realty Trust, Inc. REIT

6,144

150

 

Colonial Properties Trust REIT

4,129

148

 

DiamondRock Hospitality Co.

 

 

 

REIT

8,235

148

 

Strategic Hotels and

 

 

 

Resorts, Inc. REIT

7,083

146

 

Sunstone Hotel Investors, Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

5,395

145

 

National Retail Properties REIT

6,072

143

 

Washington REIT

4,181

137

 

Pennsylvania REIT

3,498

132

 

Lexington Realty Trust REIT

6,116

126

 

FelCor Lodging Trust, Inc. REIT

5,451

120

 

Entertainment Properties Trust

 

 

 

REIT

2,466

118

 

Equity Inns, Inc. REIT

5,104

115

 

Ashford Hospitality Trust REIT

10,399

113

 

Tanger Factory Outlet

 

 

 

Centers, Inc. REIT

2,921

111

 

 

73

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

Healthcare Realty Trust Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

4,449

111

 

Mid-America Apartment

 

 

 

Communities, Inc. REIT

2,213

110

 

Equity Lifestyle Properties, Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

2,109

103

 

American Financial

 

 

 

Realty Trust REIT

12,239

101

 

Cousins Properties, Inc. REIT

3,572

98

 

EastGroup Properties, Inc. REIT

2,250

95

 

Inland Real Estate Corp. REIT

5,995

93

 

Omega Healthcare

 

 

 

Investors, Inc. REIT

6,174

92

 

Maguire Properties, Inc. REIT

3,484

91

 

Equity One, Inc. REIT

3,431

90

 

Extra Space Storage Inc. REIT

5,764

89

 

Redwood Trust, Inc. REIT

2,360

88

 

PS Business Parks, Inc. REIT

1,500

85

 

Sovran Self Storage, Inc. REIT

1,850

83

 

Newcastle Investment Corp.

 

 

 

REIT

4,843

81

 

Franklin Street Properties Corp.

 

 

 

REIT

4,611

80

*

Alexander’s, Inc. REIT

197

79

 

Glimcher Realty Trust REIT

3,454

77

 

Acadia Realty Trust REIT

2,896

72

 

Friedman, Billings,

 

 

 

Ramsey Group, Inc. REIT

14,656

69

 

Parkway Properties Inc. REIT

1,483

69

 

National Health Investors REIT

2,247

68

 

U-Store-It Trust REIT

4,583

62

 

American Campus

 

 

 

Communities, Inc. REIT

2,154

61

 

Medical Properties Trust Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

4,514

61

 

MFA Mortgage

 

 

 

Investments, Inc. REIT

7,603

59

 

NorthStar Realty Finance Corp.

 

 

 

REIT

5,458

58

 

Anthracite Capital Inc. REIT

5,943

54

 

Cedar Shopping Centers, Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

4,006

53

 

Ramco-Gershenson

 

 

 

Properties Trust REIT

1,588

51

 

Saul Centers, Inc. REIT

973

49

 

Kite Realty Group Trust REIT

2,780

47

 

First Potomac REIT

2,199

47

 

Sun Communities, Inc. REIT

1,618

46

 

Gramercy Capital Corp. REIT

1,824

46

 

Getty Realty Holding Corp. REIT

1,599

44

 

Investors Real Estate Trust REIT

4,151

43

 

 

74

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

LTC Properties, Inc. REIT

1,843

42

 

CapLease, Inc. REIT

4,092

39

 

Crystal River Capital Inc. REIT

2,412

39

 

Universal Health

 

 

 

Realty Income REIT

1,090

37

 

Arbor Realty Trust, Inc. REIT

1,801

36

 

Capital Trust Class A REIT

1,040

36

 

Education Realty Trust, Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

2,471

34

 

Deerfield Triarc Capital Corp.

 

 

 

REIT

3,793

33

 

Urstadt Biddle Properties

 

 

 

Class A REIT

1,839

31

 

RAIT Financial Trust REIT

3,485

31

 

GMH Communities Trust REIT

3,869

30

 

JER Investors Trust Inc. REIT

2,270

28

 

Anworth Mortgage Asset Corp.

 

 

 

REIT

4,293

23

 

Impac Mortgage Holdings, Inc.

 

 

 

REIT

7,277

13

 

Thornburg Mortgage, Inc. REIT

760

9

 

Luminent Mortgage

 

 

 

Capital, Inc. REIT

4,252

7

 

 

 

31,468

 

 

 

 

Real Estate Management & Development (0.5%)

*

CB Richard Ellis Group, Inc.

19,072

563

 

Jones Lang LaSalle Inc.

3,432

383

 

Forest City Enterprise Class A

5,778

321

 

The St. Joe Co.

6,596

209

*

Tejon Ranch Co.

1,127

47

*

Hilltop Holdings Inc.

3,828

46

*

Move, Inc.

13,163

39

 

 

 

1,608

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance (6.5%)

 

 

 

Fannie Mae

91,678

6,015

 

Freddie Mac

62,431

3,846

 

Washington Mutual, Inc.

83,244

3,057

 

Countrywide Financial Corp.

55,364

1,099

 

Hudson City Bancorp, Inc.

49,730

707

 

Sovereign Bancorp, Inc.

35,616

644

 

People’s United Financial Inc.

28,104

497

 

New York Community

 

 

 

Bancorp, Inc.

26,410

467

 

The PMI Group Inc.

8,141

258

 

MGIC Investment Corp.

7,764

234

 

Astoria Financial Corp.

8,361

218

 

Washington Federal Inc.

8,173

217

 

IndyMac Bancorp, Inc.

6,664

161

 

MAF Bancorp, Inc.

2,679

144

 

NewAlliance Bancshares, Inc.

9,628

144

 

 

75

 


 

Financials Index Fund

 

 

First Niagara Financial

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

9,795

138

 

Downey Financial Corp.

1,958

111

 

Provident Financial

 

 

 

Services Inc.

5,631

95

 

Municipal Mortgage &

 

 

 

Equity, L.L.C.

3,619

86

 

TrustCo Bank NY

7,102

79

*

First Federal Financial Corp.

1,563

79

 

Capitol Federal Financial

2,066

72

 

Brookline Bancorp, Inc.

5,739

72

 

Bank Mutual Corp.

5,414

64

 

Northwest Bancorp, Inc.

1,833

53

 

Provident New York

 

 

 

Bancorp, Inc.

3,779

52

 

BankUnited Financial Corp.

3,010

51

 

Anchor Bancorp Wisconsin Inc.

1,733

46

 

Flagstar Bancorp, Inc.

3,543

44

 

Partners Trust Financial

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

3,552

43

 

WSFS Financial Corp.

635

38

 

Corus Bankshares Inc.

2,789

37

 

BankAtlantic Bancorp, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

4,479

37

 

First Financial Holdings, Inc.

1,152

37

 

PFF Bancorp, Inc.

2,046

36

 

Dime Community Bancshares

2,612

36

*

Ocwen Financial Corp.

3,604

34

 

KNBT Bancorp Inc.

2,263

33

 

TierOne Corp.

1,475

33

 

First Place Financial Corp.

1,671

29

 

First Busey Corp.

1,424

28

 

Fremont General Corp.

6,053

27

*

Nexcen Brands, Inc.

3,894

27

 

Kearny Financial Corp.

2,007

27

*

Oritani Financial Corp.

1,391

21

 

ViewPoint Financial Group

1,131

19

*

Franklin Bank Corp.

2,039

19

*

Triad Guaranty, Inc.

1,097

18

*

Accredited Home

 

 

 

Lenders Holding Co.

2,020

18

 

United Community

 

 

 

Financial Corp.

2,440

18

*

Wauwatosa Holdings, Inc.

1,075

18

 

Roma Financial Corp.

888

15

 

Radian Group, Inc.

497

9

 

 

76

 


Financials Index Fund

 

 

 

 

19,407

Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $313,372)

 

301,501

Temporary Cash Investment (0.1%)

 

 

1 Vanguard Market

 

 

Liquidity Fund, 5.247%

 

 

(Cost $385)

384,717

385

Total Investments (100.3%)

 

 

(Cost $313,757)

 

301,886

Other Assets and Liabilities (–0.3%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

1,553

Liabilities

 

(2,546)

 

 

(993)

Net Assets (100%)

 

300,893

 

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 2

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

312,077

Undistributed Net Investment Income

1,701

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(1,014)

Unrealized Depreciation

(11,871)

Net Assets

300,893

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 621,102 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

18,692

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$30.10

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 4,700,000 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

282,201

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$60.04

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

2  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

REIT—Real Estate Investment Trust.

 

77

 


Financials Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

6,917

Interest 1

14

Total Income

6,931

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

43

Management and Administrative

 

Admiral Shares

27

ETF Shares

325

Marketing and Distribution

 

Admiral Shares

3

ETF Shares

59

Custodian Fees

72

Auditing Fees

23

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

32

Total Expenses

584

Net Investment Income

6,347

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

7,622

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

(20,258)

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

(6,289)

 

 

78

 


Financials Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

6,347

2,255

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

7,622

1,259

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

(20,258)

8,095

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

(6,289)

11,609

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(272)

(98)

ETF Shares

(5,087)

(1,715)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(5,359)

(1,813)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

11,614

3,796

ETF Shares

168,244

63,343

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

179,858

67,139

Total Increase (Decrease)

168,210

76,935

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

132,683

55,748

End of Period 2

300,893

132,683

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $14,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $1,701,000 and $686,000.

 

79

 


Financials Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Feb. 4,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$29.86

$26.36

$25.35

$24.90

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.770 2

.716 2

.660 2

.31

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

.145

3.392

1.086

.14

Total from Investment Operations

.915

4.108

1.746

.45

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.675)

(.608)

(.736)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.675)

(.608)

(.736)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$30.10

$29.86

$26.36

$25.35

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 3

2.95%

15.76%

6.88%

1.81%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$19

$8

$3

$1

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.37%

2.49%

2.59%

2.38%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

12%

6%

6%

9%

 

 

80

 


Financials Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 26,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$59.57

$52.57

$50.57

$50.51

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

1.557 2

1.43 2

1.316 2

.70

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

.282

6.80

2.160

(.64)

Total from Investment Operations

1.839

8.23

3.476

.06

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(1.369)

(1.23)

(1.476)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(1.369)

(1.23)

(1.476)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$60.04

$59.57

$52.57

$50.57

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

2.97%

15.82%

6.85%

0.12%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$282

$125

$53

$20

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.41%

2.52%

2.61%

2.38%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

12%

6%

6%

9%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

4  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

81

 


Financials Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Financials Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $26,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.03% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification

 

82

 


Financials Index Fund

may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $8,510,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $1,785,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $969,000 to offset future net capital gains of $85,000 through August 31, 2014, $11,000 through August 31, 2015, and $873,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $313,798,000. Net unrealized depreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $11,912,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $8,284,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $20,196,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $247,160,000 of investment securities and sold $65,473,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

17,304

546

 

5,301

188

 

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

234

7

 

96

3

 

Redeemed 1

(5,924)

(186)

 

(1,601)

(57)

 

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

11,614

367

 

3,796

134

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

213,622

3,300

 

69,220

1,200

 

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

 

Redeemed

(45,378)

(700)

 

(5,877)

(100)

 

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

168,244

2,600

 

63,343

1,100

 

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $53,000 and $25,000.

 

83

 


Health Care Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

259

267

2,437

Median Market Cap

$57.4B

$57.4B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

24.0x

23.9x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

3.7x

3.7x

2.8x

Yield

 

1.4%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

1.3%

 

 

ETF Shares

1.4%

 

 

Return on Equity

20.9%

20.9%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

13.3%

13.3%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.1%

0.1%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

10%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Target Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

1.00

0.38

Beta

1.00

0.69

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Biotechnology

13%

Health Care Distributors

4   

Health Care Equipment

16   

Health Care Facilities

1   

Health Care Services

4   

Health Care Supplies

1   

Health Care Technology

1   

Life Sciences Tools & Services

4   

Managed Health Care

11   

Pharmaceuticals

45   

 

 

84

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

Johnson & Johnson

9.5%

Pfizer Inc.

9.3   

Merck & Co., Inc.

5.8   

Abbott Laboratories

4.3   

UnitedHealth Group Inc.

3.6   

Wyeth

3.3   

Medtronic, Inc.

3.2   

Eli Lilly & Co.

3.1   

Amgen, Inc.

3.1   

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

3.1   

Top Ten

48.3%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Health Care.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 83.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

85

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Health Care Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

7.69%

5.31%

$12,044

Health Care Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

7.45   

5.26   

12,023

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

9.76   

13,978

MSCI US IMI/Health Care

7.92   

5.55   

12,141

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Health Care Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

7.65%

5.29%

$120,182

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

10.66   

143,505

MSCI US IMI/Health Care

7.92   

5.56   

121,286

 

 

86

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Health Care Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

7.45%

20.23%

Health Care Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

7.69   

20.44   

MSCI US IMI/Health Care

7.92   

21.41   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

1/26/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

16.60%

5.95%

Net Asset Value

 

16.68   

5.95   

Admiral Shares 2

2/5/2004

16.66   

5.93   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: January 26, 2004, for ETF Shares; February 5, 2004, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on page 42 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

87

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (99.6%)

 

 

Biotechnology (13.1%)

 

 

*

Amgen, Inc.

375,862

18,834

*

Genentech, Inc.

153,759

11,503

*

Gilead Sciences, Inc.

302,774

11,012

*

Celgene Corp.

123,233

7,913

*

Biogen Idec Inc.

92,983

5,934

*

Genzyme Corp.

85,358

5,327

*

Amylin Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

42,576

2,088

*

Cephalon, Inc.

21,496

1,613

*

Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

41,002

1,597

*

Millennium

 

 

 

Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

99,202

1,007

*

PDL BioPharma Inc.

37,448

731

*

Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

17,744

703

*

ImClone Systems, Inc.

19,273

656

*

Medarex, Inc.

37,756

648

*

Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

10,604

641

*

BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc.

29,644

637

*

OSI Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

18,614

635

*

Myriad Genetics, Inc.

13,938

613

*

Alkermes, Inc.

32,700

551

*

United Therapeutics Corp.

7,597

520

*

Theravance, Inc.

14,843

466

*

Cubist Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

17,814

408

*

Pharmion Corp.

9,452

388

*

Human Genome

 

 

 

Sciences, Inc.

40,923

377

*

Regeneron

 

 

 

Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

18,343

357

*

LifeCell Corp.

10,380

344

*

Applera Corp.–

 

 

 

 

88

 


 

Health Care Index Fund

 

 

Celera Genomics Group

25,401

335

*

Cepheid, Inc.

17,828

333

*

Isis Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

24,656

304

*

Martek Biosciences Corp.

10,444

282

*

Arena Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

18,270

245

*

Savient Pharmaceuticals Inc.

17,043

225

*

Dendreon Corp.

26,599

211

*

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals Inc.

8,446

197

*

InterMune Inc.

8,904

176

*

Progenics Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

7,195

166

*

Geron Corp.

21,602

155

*

Zymogenetics, Inc.

12,118

146

*

Incyte Corp.

24,515

143

*

Halozyme Therapeutics Inc

15,909

140

*

Keryx Biopharmaceuticals, Inc.

13,567

136

*

Senomyx, Inc.

9,812

131

*

Omrix Biopharmaceuticals, Inc.

3,485

122

*

MannKind Corp.

12,584

112

*

ARIAD Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

21,390

106

*

Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

9,998

92

*

GTx, Inc.

4,548

73

*

Osiris Therapeutics, Inc.

4,568

59

*

Affymax Inc.

1,666

40

 

Ligand Pharmaceuticals Inc.

 

 

 

Class B

5,798

36

*

CV Therapeutics, Inc.

3,700

36

*

deCODE genetics, Inc.

5,889

23

*

Nabi Biopharmaceuticals

6,210

22

*

Emergent Biosolutions inc.

1,852

17

 

 

 

79,566

Health Care Equipment & Supplies (17.3%)

 

 

 

Medtronic, Inc.

374,060

19,765

 

Baxter International, Inc.

212,332

11,627

*

Covidien Ltd.

160,320

6,386

 

Stryker Corp.

92,534

6,181

 

Becton, Dickinson & Co.

79,425

6,111

*

Zimmer Holdings, Inc.

77,514

6,072

*

Boston Scientific Corp.

432,756

5,552

*

St. Jude Medical, Inc.

111,472

4,857

 

C.R. Bard, Inc.

33,486

2,792

*

Intuitive Surgical, Inc.

12,057

2,668

 

Dade Behring Holdings Inc.

27,916

2,108

*

Hospira, Inc.

50,635

1,957

 

DENTSPLY International Inc.

46,938

1,848

*

Varian Medical Systems, Inc.

41,757

1,687

*

Cytyc Corp.

36,578

1,563

 

Beckman Coulter, Inc.

20,067

1,444

*

IDEXX Laboratories Corp.

10,181

1,138

*

Respironics, Inc.

23,715

1,125

 

Bausch & Lomb, Inc.

17,696

1,118

 

Hillenbrand Industries, Inc.

19,006

1,094

 

 

89

 


 

Health Care Index Fund

 

*

Gen-Probe Inc.

16,938

1,084

*

Kinetic Concepts, Inc.

17,266

1,038

*

ResMed Inc.

24,681

1,004

*

Kyphon Inc.

14,532

972

*

Edwards Lifesciences Corp.

18,839

910

*

Hologic, Inc.

17,101

909

*

Immucor Inc.

21,987

733

 

Cooper Cos., Inc.

14,485

706

*

Inverness Medical

 

 

 

Innovations, Inc.

13,099

631

 

STERIS Corp.

21,054

591

 

Mentor Corp.

13,063

582

*

Advanced Medical Optics, Inc.

19,253

553

*

ArthroCare Corp.

8,760

491

*

Haemonetics Corp.

8,793

437

 

West Pharmaceutical

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

10,648

426

*

American Medical

 

 

 

Systems Holdings, Inc.

21,870

402

*

Align Technology, Inc.

17,696

402

 

Arrow International, Inc.

8,770

396

 

PolyMedica Corp.

7,392

383

*

DJ Orthopedics Inc.

7,534

367

*

Nuvasive, Inc.

10,976

350

*

Integra LifeSciences Holdings

6,796

330

*

Thoratec Corp.

15,244

315

 

Analogic Corp.

4,562

315

 

Meridian Bioscience Inc.

12,180

314

*

Wright Medical Group, Inc.

11,397

298

*

CONMED Corp.

9,090

264

*

SurModics, Inc.

5,217

252

*

Orthofix International NV

4,832

231

 

Invacare Corp.

9,584

222

*

Greatbatch, Inc.

7,191

216

*

Sirona Dental Systems Inc.

6,249

182

*

Palomar Medical

 

 

 

Technologies, Inc.

5,477

173

*

Quidel Corp.

9,928

169

*

Conceptus, Inc.

9,625

168

*

Symmetry Medical Inc.

10,363

166

*

ICU Medical, Inc.

4,334

164

*

SonoSite, Inc.

5,382

157

*

Foxhollow Technologies Inc.

6,334

156

 

Datascope Corp.

4,201

140

*

OraSure Technologies, Inc.

15,005

138

*

ev3 Inc.

8,914

136

*

Abaxis, Inc.

6,827

133

 

Vital Signs, Inc.

2,636

132

*

Merit Medical Systems, Inc.

8,546

105

*

Cyberonics, Inc.

6,698

101

*

Volcano Corp.

6,700

100

 

 

90

 


 

Health Care Index Fund

 

*

Hansen Medical Inc.

3,093

75

*

Aspect Medical Systems, Inc.

5,586

70

*

Northstar Neuroscience, Inc.

4,564

52

 

 

 

105,734

Health Care Providers & Services (19.7%)

 

 

 

UnitedHealth Group Inc.

434,357

21,722

*

WellPoint Inc.

198,443

15,993

 

Aetna Inc.

167,616

8,533

 

Cardinal Health, Inc.

124,681

8,526

*

Medco Health Solutions, Inc.

90,798

7,759

 

McKesson Corp.

95,868

5,485

 

CIGNA Corp.

99,844

5,160

*

Express Scripts Inc.

74,816

4,096

*

Humana Inc.

54,144

3,470

*

Coventry Health Care Inc.

51,764

2,970

*

Laboratory Corp. of

 

 

 

America Holdings

38,051

2,955

 

Quest Diagnostics, Inc.

53,824

2,947

 

AmerisourceBergen Corp.

61,554

2,945

*

Health Net Inc.

37,837

2,073

*

DaVita, Inc.

33,796

1,944

*

Henry Schein, Inc.

28,721

1,671

 

Manor Care, Inc.

23,697

1,514

*

Patterson Cos.

36,143

1,329

 

Omnicare, Inc.

39,423

1,286

*

WellCare Health Plans Inc.

11,312

1,116

*

VCA Antech, Inc.

27,104

1,108

*

Community Health

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

30,543

1,061

*

Lincare Holdings, Inc.

27,945

1,006

*

Pediatrix Medical Group, Inc.

15,834

945

 

Universal Health Services

 

 

 

Class B

16,329

862

*

Sierra Health Services, Inc.

17,673

742

*

Psychiatric Solutions, Inc.

17,320

638

*

Healthways, Inc.

11,272

561

*

AMERIGROUP Corp.

16,902

535

*

Sunrise Senior Living, Inc.

14,782

529

 

Owens & Minor, Inc.

 

 

 

Holding Co.

13,059

521

*

LifePoint Hospitals, Inc.

17,765

499

*

Magellan Health Services, Inc.

12,286

499

 

Chemed Corp.

7,839

486

*

HealthSouth Corp.

25,903

473

 

Brookdale Senior Living Inc.

11,496

421

*

PSS World Medical, Inc.

22,060

421

*

Apria Healthcare Group Inc.

13,859

369

*

inVentiv Health, Inc.

9,154

363

*

Amedisys Inc.

8,400

317

*

HealthExtras, Inc.

10,128

285

*

Centene Corp.

14,075

284

 

 

91

 


 

Health Care Index Fund

 

*

Tenet Healthcare Corp.

78,727

267

*

Healthspring, Inc.

13,960

261

 

Health Management

 

 

 

Associates Class A

37,390

255

 

LCA-Vision Inc.

6,756

232

*

AmSurg Corp.

9,790

231

*

Kindred Healthcare, Inc.

10,394

206

*

AMN Healthcare

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

11,139

199

*

Matria Healthcare, Inc.

7,012

179

*

Gentiva Health Services, Inc.

8,444

175

*

MedCath Corp.

5,929

174

*

Emeritus Corp.

6,273

170

*

Assisted Living Concepts Inc.

18,684

170

*

Cross Country Healthcare, Inc.

9,944

170

*

PharMerica corp.

9,365

166

*

Res-Care, Inc.

7,227

154

 

Landauer, Inc.

3,019

153

*

Molina Healthcare Inc.

4,149

141

*

Odyssey Healthcare, Inc.

11,405

112

 

National Healthcare Corp.

2,093

110

*

Nighthawk Radiology

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

4,430

97

*

Radiation Therapy

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

4,226

96

*

Alliance Imaging, Inc.

8,285

73

 

 

 

120,210

Health Care Technology (0.8%)

 

 

 

IMS Health, Inc.

63,347

1,897

*

Cerner Corp.

21,637

1,234

*

HLTH Corp.

50,469

746

*

Allscripts Healthcare

 

 

 

Solutions, Inc.

16,580

375

*

Eclipsys Corp.

15,368

355

*

Omnicell, Inc.

10,281

248

*

The TriZetto Group, Inc.

13,373

209

 

 

 

5,064

Life Sciences Tools & Services (4.3%)

 

 

*

Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.

136,788

7,418

*

Waters Corp.

32,951

2,029

 

Applera Corp.–

 

 

 

Applied Biosystems Group

59,583

1,883

*

Covance, Inc.

20,842

1,528

*

Invitrogen Corp.

15,662

1,220

*

Millipore Corp.

17,373

1,211

 

Pharmaceutical Product

 

 

 

Development, Inc.

34,298

1,201

*

Charles River

 

 

 

Laboratories, Inc.

21,752

1,142

 

PerkinElmer, Inc.

39,936

1,095

*

Illumina, Inc.

19,423

938

 

 

92

 


 

Health Care Index Fund

 

*

Ventana Medical Systems, Inc.

10,904

892

*

Techne Corp.

12,182

768

*

Varian, Inc.

10,065

604

*

Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

5,997

506

*

Affymetrix, Inc.

22,019

499

*

Dionex Corp.

6,282

455

*

PAREXEL International Corp.

8,851

381

*

Exelixis, Inc.

31,109

350

*

AMAG Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

5,200

284

*

PRA International

6,335

185

*

Pharmanet Development

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

5,740

165

*

Kendle International Inc.

4,216

165

*

Enzo Biochem, Inc.

8,991

162

*

Luminex Corp.

10,196

144

*

eResearch Technology, Inc.

13,007

142

*

Medivation Inc.

7,676

134

 

Cambrex Corp.

8,838

110

*

Albany Molecular

 

 

 

Research, Inc.

7,461

109

*

Bruker BioSciences Corp.

13,744

98

*

Qiagen NV

4,712

80

*

Nektar Therapeutics

2,350

19

 

 

 

25,917

Pharmaceuticals (44.4%)

 

 

 

Johnson & Johnson

939,041

58,023

 

Pfizer Inc.

2,275,041

56,512

 

Merck & Co., Inc.

702,984

35,269

 

Abbott Laboratories

499,832

25,946

 

Wyeth

436,522

20,211

 

Eli Lilly & Co.

330,216

18,938

 

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

637,913

18,595

 

Schering-Plough Corp.

480,504

14,425

 

Allergan, Inc.

99,791

5,988

*

Forest Laboratories, Inc.

103,183

3,883

*

Barr Pharmaceuticals Inc.

32,881

1,673

*

Endo Pharmaceuticals

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

43,334

1,382

 

Mylan Laboratories, Inc.

79,486

1,200

*

King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

78,956

1,187

*

Watson Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

31,650

944

*

Sepracor Inc.

27,358

798

*

MGI Pharma, Inc.

25,616

604

*

Warner Chilcott Ltd.

32,540

603

 

Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp.

17,942

548

 

Perrigo Co.

25,564

529

*

Valeant Pharmaceuticals

 

 

 

International

30,168

476

*

Adams Respiratory

 

 

 

Therapeutics, Inc.

10,306

397

 

 

93

 


 

Health Care Index Fund

 

 

Alpharma, Inc. Class A

13,873

318

*

K-V Pharmaceutical Co.

 

 

 

Class A

10,860

297

*

Xenoport Inc.

6,478

269

*

Par Pharmaceutical Cos. Inc.

11,759

263

*

The Medicines Co.

15,742

263

*

Abraxis Bioscience, Inc.

10,840

238

*

Sciele Pharma, Inc.

10,267

237

*

Salix Pharmaceuticals, Ltd.

15,250

176

*

Noven Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

8,055

123

*

Akorn, Inc.

13,250

101

*

Cadence Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

3,458

50

 

 

 

270,466

Total Investments (99.6%)

 

 

(Cost $590,318)

 

606,957

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.4%)

 

Other Assets—Note B

4,974

Liabilities

(2,556)

 

2,418

Net Assets (100%)

609,375

 

 

94

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 1

 

 

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

591,256

Undistributed Net Investment Income

6,053

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(4,573)

Unrealized Appreciation

16,639

Net Assets

609,375

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 4,426,966 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

131,997

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$29.82

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 8,002,626 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

477,378

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$59.65

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

95

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

8,908

Interest 1

13

Total Income

8,921

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

85

Management and Administrative

 

Admiral Shares

257

ETF Shares

636

Marketing and Distribution

 

Admiral Shares

25

ETF Shares

101

Custodian Fees

43

Auditing Fees

23

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Admiral Shares

1

ETF Shares

38

Total Expenses

1,209

Net Investment Income

7,712

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

40,442

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

(11,813)

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

36,341

 

 

96

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

7,712

4,314

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

40,442

2,987

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

(11,813)

12,648

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

36,341

19,949

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(1,154)

(671)

ETF Shares

(3,876)

(1,702)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(5,030)

(2,373)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

17,034

30,610

ETF Shares

89,085

146,248

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

106,119

176,858

Total Increase (Decrease)

137,430

194,434

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

471,945

277,511

End of Period 2

609,375

471,945

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $13,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $6,053,000 and $3,371,000.

 

97

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Feb. 5,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$27.99

$26.92

$23.97

$25.33

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.392

.304 2

.274 2

.13

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

1.736

.951

2.762

(1.49)

Total from Investment Operations

2.128

1.255

3.036

(1.36)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.298)

(.185)

(.086)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.298)

(.185)

(.086)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$29.82

$27.99

$26.92

$23.97

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 3

7.65%

4.68%

12.70%

–5.37%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$132

$108

$73

$11

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.42%

1.12%

1.11%

1.09%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

10%

11%

9%

8%

 

 

98

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 26,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$55.99

$53.85

$47.90

$50.55

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.809

.622 2

.597 2

.23

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

3.466

1.905

5.486

(2.88)

Total from Investment Operations

4.275

2.527

6.083

(2.65)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.615)

(.387)

(.133)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.615)

(.387)

(.133)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$59.65

$55.99

$53.85

$47.90

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

7.69%

4.71%

12.72%

–5.24%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$477

$364

$205

$19

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.46%

1.15%

1.13%

1.09%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

10%

11%

9%

8%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

4  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

99

 


Health Care Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Health Care Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $52,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.05% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification

 

100

 


 

Health Care Index Fund

may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $44,794,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $6,453,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $4,249,000 to offset future net capital gains of $207,000 through August 31, 2014, $343,000 through August 31, 2015, and $3,699,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $590,749,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $16,208,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $46,838,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $30,630,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $352,346,000 of investment securities and sold $245,767,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

29,033

979

 

44,720

1,672

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

449

16

 

236

9

Redeemed 1

(12,448)

(423)

 

(14,346)

(534)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

17,034

572

 

30,610

1,147

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

290,709

4,901

 

162,547

3,002

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(201,624)

(3,400)

 

(16,299)

(300)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

89,085

1,501

 

146,248

2,702

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $52,000 and $69,000.

 

101

 


Industrials Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

331

330

2,437

Median Market Cap

$30.1B

$30.1B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

18.7x

18.7x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

3.4x

3.4x

2.8x

Yield

 

1.7%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

1.4%

 

 

ETF Shares

1.6%

 

 

Return on Equity

19.3%

19.3%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

20.9%

20.7%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.0%

0.0%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

13%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Aerospace & Defense

20%

Air Freight & Logistics

6   

Airlines

2   

Building Products

2   

Commercial Printing

1   

Construction & Engineering

3   

Construction & Farm Machinery & Heavy Trucks

8   

Diversified Commercial & Professional Services

3   

Electrical Components & Equipment

6   

Environmental & Facilities Services

2   

Human Resource & Employment Services

1   

Industrial Conglomerates

26   

Industrial Machinery

9   

Marine

1   

Office Services & Supplies

2   

Railroads

5   

Trading Companies & Distributors

2   

Trucking

1   

 

 

102

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Ten Largest Holdings 3 (% of total net assets)

 

 

General Electric Co.

19.9%

The Boeing Co.

3.8   

United Technologies Corp.

3.7   

3M Co.

3.3   

United Parcel Service, Inc.

2.7   

Caterpillar, Inc.

2.6   

Honeywell International Inc.

2.2   

Emerson Electric Co.

2.1   

Lockheed Martin Corp.

1.9   

FedEx Corp.

1.7   

Top Ten

43.9%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Industrials.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.
See page 83 for a glossary of investment terms.

 

103

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Industrials Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

24.95%

16.19%

$15,536

Industrials Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

24.64   

16.11   

15,505

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

13.22   

14,399

MSCI US IMI/Industrials

24.96   

15.74   

15,361

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Industrials Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

24.90%

9.38%

$112,519

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

9.85   

113,155

MSCI US IMI/Industrials

24.96   

9.55   

112,745

 

 

104

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Industrials Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

24.64%

55.05%

Industrials Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

24.95   

55.36   

MSCI US IMI/Industrials

24.96   

53.61   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

9/23/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

19.24%

17.19%

Net Asset Value

 

19.26   

17.23   

Admiral Shares 2

5/8/2006

19.24   

10.80   

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: September 23, 2004, for ETF Shares; May 8, 2006, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on page 50 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

105

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (99.4%)

 

 

Aerospace & Defense (20.3%)

 

 

 

The Boeing Co.

92,679

8,962

 

United Technologies Corp.

116,976

8,730

 

Honeywell International Inc.

91,293

5,126

 

Lockheed Martin Corp.

44,469

4,409

 

Raytheon Co.

55,175

3,384

 

General Dynamics Corp.

42,725

3,356

 

Northrop Grumman Corp.

41,145

3,244

 

Precision Castparts Corp.

16,990

2,214

 

L-3 Communications

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

15,483

1,525

 

Rockwell Collins, Inc.

20,801

1,433

 

Goodrich Corp.

14,758

932

*

BE Aerospace, Inc.

11,576

451

*

Spirit Aerosystems

 

 

 

Holdings Inc.

12,513

447

*

Alliant Techsystems, Inc.

4,159

438

 

DRS Technologies, Inc.

5,182

272

*

Hexcel Corp.

12,021

262

 

Curtiss-Wright Corp.

5,646

257

*

Ceradyne, Inc.

3,303

239

*

Teledyne Technologies, Inc.

4,265

213

*

Moog Inc.

4,687

200

*

Esterline Technologies Corp.

3,329

168

*

Orbital Sciences Corp.

7,590

167

 

Triumph Group, Inc.

2,146

157

*

AAR Corp.

4,881

153

*

Taser International Inc.

7,905

113

 

EDO Corp.

2,296

99

 

American Science &

 

 

 

Engineering, Inc.

1,254

91

 

 

106

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

 

 

Cubic Corp.

2,212

87

 

United Industrial Corp.

1,195

83

*

DynCorp International Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

3,571

77

 

HEICO Corp. Class A

1,566

57

*

MTC Technologies, Inc.

1,642

33

 

HEICO Corp.

534

24

*

GenCorp, Inc.

780

9

*

Argon ST, Inc.

208

4

*

Ionatron Inc.

488

2

 

 

 

47,418

Air Freight & Logistics (5.6%)

 

 

 

United Parcel Service, Inc.

83,443

6,330

 

FedEx Corp.

36,105

3,960

 

Expeditors International of

 

 

 

Washington, Inc.

26,403

1,166

 

C.H. Robinson Worldwide Inc.

20,499

1,005

*

Hub Group, Inc.

5,040

168

 

Forward Air Corp.

3,967

139

*

Atlas Air Worldwide

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

2,139

108

 

UTI Worldwide, Inc.

2,678

60

*

ABX Air, Inc.

8,482

58

 

Pacer International, Inc.

576

12

 

 

 

13,006

Airlines (1.8%)

 

 

 

Southwest Airlines Co.

97,579

1,474

*

AMR Corp.

29,967

734

*

UAL Corp.

14,417

684

*

Continental Airlines, Inc.

 

 

 

Class B

12,242

407

 

Skywest, Inc.

7,898

198

*

US Airways Group Inc.

6,114

189

*

JetBlue Airways Corp.

19,616

187

*

AirTran Holdings, Inc.

12,103

127

*

Republic Airways Holdings Inc.

4,603

88

*

Allegiant Travel Co.

1,908

55

*

Alaska Air Group, Inc.

624

15

*

ExpressJet Holdings, Inc.

716

3

 

 

 

4,161

Building Products (1.6%)

 

 

 

Masco Corp.

48,759

1,269

 

American Standard Cos., Inc.

22,629

833

 

Lennox International Inc.

7,388

266

*

USG Corp.

6,184

239

*

Armstrong Worldwide

 

 

 

Industries, Inc.

3,994

168

 

Simpson Manufacturing Co.

5,028

166

*

Owens Corning Inc.

5,727

143

*

NCI Building Systems, Inc.

2,674

124

 

Ameron International Corp.

1,161

111

 

 

107

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

 

*

Goodman Global, Inc.

4,193

98

 

Apogee Enterprises, Inc.

3,890

98

 

Gibraltar Industries Inc.

3,570

71

 

American Woodmark Corp.

1,552

47

*

PGT, Inc.

2,337

24

 

Universal Forest Products, Inc.

264

10

*

Griffon Corp.

416

7

*

Builders FirstSource, Inc.

268

4

*

Trex Co., Inc.

184

2

 

 

 

3,680

Commercial Services & Supplies (8.8%)

 

 

 

Waste Management, Inc.

65,934

2,484

 

Pitney Bowes, Inc.

27,491

1,228

 

R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co.

27,328

979

 

Republic Services, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

23,995

746

 

The Dun & Bradstreet Corp.

7,609

742

 

Manpower Inc.

10,525

739

 

Avery Dennison Corp.

12,241

732

 

Equifax, Inc.

18,221

702

 

Cintas Corp.

17,812

653

 

Robert Half International, Inc.

19,739

630

*

Stericycle, Inc.

11,099

554

*

Allied Waste Industries, Inc.

41,306

527

*

Corrections Corp. of America

15,469

397

*

Monster Worldwide Inc.

11,572

396

*

ChoicePoint Inc.

9,871

388

 

The Brink’s Co.

6,123

351

*

Covanta Holding Corp.

15,536

351

 

The Corporate

 

 

 

Executive Board Co.

4,837

329

*

FTI Consulting, Inc.

5,427

285

*

Copart, Inc.

9,288

272

*

Waste Connections, Inc.

8,745

266

 

Watson Wyatt & Co. Holdings

5,451

258

 

Deluxe Corp.

6,622

252

 

Brady Corp. Class A

6,435

251

 

Herman Miller, Inc.

8,045

233

 

IKON Office Solutions, Inc.

16,046

225

*

United Stationers, Inc.

3,751

221

*

IHS Inc. Class A

4,310

218

 

Mine Safety Appliances Co.

3,941

189

*

Geo Group Inc.

6,330

188

*

PHH Corp.

6,914

186

 

Resources Connection, Inc.

6,025

181

*

Acco Brands Corp.

6,693

152

*

Tetra Tech, Inc.

7,608

149

*

TeleTech Holdings, Inc.

5,087

149

 

Steelcase Inc.

8,255

146

*

Huron Consulting Group Inc.

2,201

145

*

Labor Ready, Inc.

6,509

136

 

 

108

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

 

 

ABM Industries Inc.

5,805

136

*

The Advisory Board Co.

2,337

134

*

CoStar Group, Inc.

2,406

132

*

Cenveo Inc.

6,722

132

*

Korn/Ferry International

5,650

125

*

Mobile Mini, Inc.

4,787

116

 

Administaff, Inc.

3,336

115

 

G & K Services, Inc. Class A

2,730

114

 

Healthcare Services

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

5,280

113

*

Heidrick &

 

 

 

Struggles International, Inc.

2,403

113

*

Navigant Consulting, Inc.

6,360

112

 

Interface, Inc.

6,198

112

*

Consolidated Graphics, Inc.

1,655

110

 

Rollins, Inc.

4,051

108

*

Clean Harbors Inc.

2,270

107

 

HNI Corp.

2,617

107

*

School Specialty, Inc.

2,815

103

*

M&F Worldwide Corp.

1,810

102

 

Knoll, Inc.

5,361

102

 

McGrath RentCorp

3,057

98

 

Viad Corp.

2,707

97

*

Layne Christensen Co.

1,813

89

 

Kelly Services, Inc. Class A

3,646

83

 

Comfort Systems USA, Inc.

5,646

82

*

CRA International Inc.

1,619

80

*

Kforce Inc.

4,879

74

 

Ennis, Inc.

3,401

74

*

Spherion Corp.

7,913

70

*

Kenexa Corp.

2,481

69

 

Bowne & Co., Inc.

3,663

62

 

CDI Corp.

2,045

58

*

Hudson Highland Group, Inc.

3,724

52

*

CBIZ Inc.

6,898

52

*

Pike Electric Corp.

2,700

51

*

Innerworkings, Inc.

3,438

49

 

Schawk, Inc.

2,226

48

*

LECG Corp.

2,905

45

*

First Advantage Corp. Class A

1,570

31

 

The Standard Register Co.

2,008

26

*

American Reprographics Co.

508

12

*

Volt Information Sciences Inc.

200

3

*

Sirva Inc.

808

1

 

 

 

20,529

Construction & Engineering (2.8%)

 

 

 

Fluor Corp.

10,909

1,387

*

Foster Wheeler Ltd.

8,587

1,017

*

Jacobs Engineering Group Inc.

14,809

979

*

KBR Inc.

21,037

691

*

Quanta Services, Inc.

20,723

586

 

 

109

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

 

*

Shaw Group, Inc.

10,116

506

*

URS Corp.

6,696

358

*

Washington Group

 

 

 

International, Inc.

3,698

313

*

EMCOR Group, Inc.

8,134

255

 

Granite Construction Co.

4,552

248

*

Perini Corp.

2,786

158

*

Insituform Technologies Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

424

7

 

 

 

6,505

Electrical Equipment (5.6%)

 

 

 

Emerson Electric Co.

98,622

4,855

 

Rockwell Automation, Inc.

19,500

1,374

 

Cooper Industries, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

23,122

1,183

 

Roper Industries Inc.

11,004

696

 

Ametek, Inc.

13,357

534

*

First Solar, Inc.

4,996

518

*

Thomas & Betts Corp.

7,422

411

*

General Cable Corp.

6,589

383

 

Hubbell Inc. Class B

6,439

349

*

SunPower Corp. Class A

4,670

319

 

Acuity Brands, Inc.

5,511

290

 

Belden Inc.

5,725

278

*

Genlyte Group, Inc.

3,271

237

 

Woodward Governor Co.

3,948

232

 

Baldor Electric Co.

5,271

219

*

GrafTech International Ltd.

12,560

211

 

Regal-Beloit Corp.

4,091

207

 

A.O. Smith Corp.

2,678

129

*

II-VI, Inc.

3,387

106

*

Evergreen Solar, Inc.

11,212

101

*

Superior Essex Inc.

2,771

98

 

Franklin Electric, Inc.

2,348

97

*

FuelCell Energy, Inc.

8,821

85

*

EnerSys

3,961

72

 

Encore Wire Corp.

2,508

65

 

Vicor Corp.

3,325

39

*

Energy Conversion

 

 

 

Devices, Inc.

1,317

34

*

Power-One, Inc.

1,080

5

*

Medis Technology Ltd.

364

4

*

Plug Power, Inc.

1,080

3

 

 

 

13,134

Industrial Conglomerates (26.1%)

 

 

 

General Electric Co.

1,191,337

46,307

 

3M Co.

84,281

7,669

 

Tyco International

61,070

2,697

 

Textron, Inc.

29,381

1,714

*

McDermott International, Inc.

13,789

1,324

 

Carlisle Co., Inc.

7,821

385

 

 

110

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

 

 

Teleflex Inc.

4,698

365

 

Walter Industries, Inc.

5,949

150

*

Sequa Corp. Class A

752

123

 

Raven Industries, Inc.

2,220

90

 

Tredegar Corp.

3,894

68

 

 

 

60,892

Machinery (17.7%)

 

 

 

Caterpillar, Inc.

79,825

6,048

 

Deere & Co.

28,082

3,821

 

Illinois Tool Works, Inc.

58,713

3,415

 

PACCAR, Inc.

29,221

2,500

 

Danaher Corp.

30,552

2,373

 

Ingersoll-Rand Co.

37,990

1,973

 

Eaton Corp.

18,461

1,739

 

Parker Hannifin Corp.

14,355

1,543

 

ITT Industries, Inc.

21,740

1,478

 

Cummins Inc.

12,264

1,452

 

Dover Corp.

25,296

1,250

*

Terex Corp.

12,800

1,022

 

SPX Corp.

7,109

640

 

Joy Global Inc.

14,704

638

 

The Manitowoc Co., Inc.

7,792

619

 

Pall Corp.

15,372

586

 

Harsco Corp.

10,518

585

 

Oshkosh Truck Corp.

9,271

537

 

Flowserve Corp.

7,203

514

*

AGCO Corp.

11,471

496

 

Pentair, Inc.

11,913

442

 

Kennametal, Inc.

4,894

395

 

IDEX Corp.

10,134

390

 

Trinity Industries, Inc.

10,120

380

 

Lincoln Electric Holdings, Inc.

5,137

370

 

The Timken Co.

10,182

362

 

Donaldson Co., Inc.

9,000

344

 

Graco, Inc.

8,332

337

 

The Toro Co.

5,079

300

 

Bucyrus International, Inc.

4,666

292

 

Crane Co.

6,049

271

*

Gardner Denver Inc.

6,731

269

 

CLARCOR Inc.

6,227

241

 

Wabtec Corp.

5,930

222

 

Actuant Corp.

3,520

215

 

Valmont Industries, Inc.

2,322

207

 

Nordson Corp.

3,908

196

 

Kaydon Corp.

3,653

193

 

Briggs & Stratton Corp.

6,394

187

 

Mueller Industries Inc.

4,815

167

*

The Middleby Corp.

1,988

146

 

Watts Water Technologies, Inc.

4,116

146

 

Albany International Corp.

3,442

134

 

Barnes Group, Inc.

4,188

132

 

 

111

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

 

*

EnPro Industries, Inc.

2,851

119

*

Astec Industries, Inc.

2,329

118

 

Mueller Water Products, Inc.

10,718

117

 

Robbins & Myers, Inc.

1,951

106

*

RBC Bearings Inc.

2,868

102

 

Federal Signal Corp.

6,465

99

 

Tennant Co.

2,297

97

*

Chart Industries, Inc.

3,486

94

 

NACCO Industries, Inc. Class A

772

91

 

CIRCOR International, Inc.

2,122

90

 

Cascade Corp.

1,176

87

 

Freightcar America Inc.

1,706

77

*

Blount International, Inc.

5,585

76

*

Columbus McKinnon Corp.

2,526

69

 

The Greenbrier Cos., Inc.

2,205

65

*

Accuride Corp.

4,133

54

 

Mueller Water Products, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

3,686

46

 

American Railcar Industries, Inc.

1,647

43

*

TurboChef Technologies, Inc.

2,992

38

*

ESCO Technologies Inc.

404

13

 

Wabash National Corp.

484

6

*

Commercial Vehicle Group Inc.

328

5

*

A.S.V., Inc.

292

4

 

Xerium Technologies Inc.

340

2

 

 

 

41,185

Marine (0.5%)

 

 

 

Alexander & Baldwin, Inc.

5,187

269

*

Kirby Corp.

6,460

247

*

American Commercial

 

 

 

Lines Inc.

8,047

208

 

Eagle Bulk Shipping Inc.

5,470

144

 

Genco Shipping and

 

 

 

Trading Ltd.

2,228

125

 

Horizon Lines Inc.

3,621

102

 

Quintana Maritime Ltd.

5,100

89

 

 

 

1,184

Road & Rail (6.7%)

 

 

 

Burlington Northern

 

 

 

Santa Fe Corp.

44,383

3,602

 

Union Pacific Corp.

31,795

3,547

 

Norfolk Southern Corp.

49,070

2,513

 

CSX Corp.

53,990

2,214

 

Ryder System, Inc.

7,687

421

*

Hertz Global Holdings Inc.

18,154

401

 

J.B. Hunt Transport

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

12,538

361

 

Laidlaw International Inc.

10,022

347

 

Landstar System, Inc.

7,051

303

*

Avis Budget Group, Inc.

12,929

300

*

Kansas City Southern

9,740

296

 

 

112

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

 

 

Con-way, Inc.

5,831

283

 

Knight Transportation, Inc.

7,911

145

 

Heartland Express, Inc.

8,428

131

*

Genesee & Wyoming Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

4,694

129

 

Werner Enterprises, Inc.

6,654

124

 

Arkansas Best Corp.

3,179

114

*

YRC Worldwide, Inc.

3,571

110

*

Old Dominion Freight Line, Inc.

3,748

108

*

Amerco, Inc.

1,063

67

*

Dollar Thrifty Automotive

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

372

11

 

 

 

15,527

Trading Companies & Distributors (1.8%)

 

 

 

W.W. Grainger, Inc.

8,853

811

 

Fastenal Co.

15,928

726

 

MSC Industrial Direct Co., Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

5,964

309

*

United Rentals, Inc.

9,316

304

*

WESCO International, Inc.

6,091

290

 

GATX Corp.

6,489

283

 

UAP Holding Corp.

6,630

198

 

Applied Industrial

 

 

 

Technology, Inc.

5,050

162

 

Watsco, Inc.

3,179

153

*

TransDigm Group, Inc.

3,001

122

 

Aircastle Ltd.

3,160

109

*

Williams Scotsman

 

 

 

International Inc.

3,799

104

 

Kaman Corp. Class A

3,121

103

*

Interline Brands, Inc.

3,939

95

*

Rush Enterprises, Inc. Class A

2,392

61

 

TAL International Group, Inc.

2,391

60

*

NuCo2, Inc.

2,227

59

*

H&E Equipment Services, Inc.

2,314

48

 

Electro Rent Corp.

3,002

44

 

Lawson Products, Inc.

920

34

*

Rush Enterprises, Inc. Class B

759

18

*

Beacon Roofing Supply, Inc.

684

8

 

Houston Wire & Cable Co.

260

5

 

Bluelinx Holdings Inc.

456

4

 

 

113

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

 

 

 

4,110

Transportation Infrastructure (0.1%)

 

 

Macquarie Infrastructure

 

 

Company LLC

5,348

216

Total Investments (99.4%)

 

 

(Cost $206,910)

 

231,547

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.6%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

4,059

Liabilities

 

(2,552)

 

 

1,507

Net Assets (100%)

 

233,054

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 1

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

206,945

Undistributed Net Investment Income

1,790

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(318)

Unrealized Appreciation

24,637

Net Assets

233,054

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 101,008 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

3,833

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$37.94

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 3,100,000 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

229,221

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$73.94

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

114

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

2,981

Interest 1

6

Total Income

2,987

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

29

Management and Administrative

 

Admiral Shares

3

ETF Shares

232

Marketing and Distribution

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

41

Custodian Fees

30

Auditing Fees

22

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

23

Total Expenses

380

Net Investment Income

2,607

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

7,876

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

25,565

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

36,048

 

 

115

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

2,607

952

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

7,876

774

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

25,565

(1,279)

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

36,048

447

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(4)

ETF Shares

(1,637)

(226)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(1,641)

(226)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

3,509

197

ETF Shares

75,257

103,172

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

78,766

103,369

Total Increase (Decrease)

113,173

103,590

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

119,881

16,291

End of Period 2

233,054

119,881

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $6,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $1,790,000 and $824,000.

 

116

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

Year

May 8,

 

Ended

2006 1 to

 

Aug. 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$30.72

$34.10

Investment Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

.51 2

.164 2

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

7.09

(3.544)

Total from Investment Operations

7.60

(3.380)

Distributions

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.38)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.38)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$37.94

$30.72

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 3

24.90%

–9.91%

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$4

$0.2

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.46%

1.35%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

13%

9%

 

 

117

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sept. 23,

 

Year Ended

2004 1 to

 

August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$59.85

$54.30

$48.79

Investment Operations

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

1.026 2

.842 2

.65

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

13.808

5.160

5.18

Total from Investment Operations

14.834

6.002

5.83

Distributions

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.744)

(.452)

(.32)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.744)

(.452)

(.32)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$73.94

$59.85

$54.30

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

24.95%

11.08%

11.94%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$229

$120

$16

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.50%

1.38%

1.30%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

13%

9%

11%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

4  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

118

 

 


Industrials Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Industrials Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $19,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.02% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification

 

119

 


 

Industrials Index Fund

may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $7,844,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized gains to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $1,838,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $301,000 to offset future net capital gains of $18,000 through August 31, 2014, and $283,000 through August 31, 2015.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $206,929,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $24,618,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $26,616,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $1,998,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $130,830,000 of investment securities and sold $52,370,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2005–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

3,732

102

 

197

6

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

2

 

Redeemed 1

(225)

(7)

 

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

3,509

95

 

197

6

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

104,732

1,500

 

109,102

1,800

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(29,475)

(400)

 

(5,930)

(100)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

75,257

1,100

 

103,172

1,700

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $4,000 and $0.

 

120

 


Information Technology Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

385

384

2,437

Median Market Cap

$64.2B

$64.2B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

25.8x

25.8x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

4.2x

4.2x

2.8x

Yield

 

0.6%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

0.4%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.5%

 

 

Return on Equity

17.0%

16.9%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

26.0%

26.0%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

1.7%

1.7%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

8%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Target Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

1.00

0.73

Beta

1.00

1.42

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Application Software

4%

Communications Equipment

16   

Computer Hardware

20   

Computer Storage & Peripherals

4   

Data Processing & Outsourced Services

7   

Electronic Equipment Manufacturers

2   

Electronic Manufacturing Services

2   

Home Entertainment Software

1   

Internet Software & Services

8   

IT Consulting & Other Services

2   

Office Electronics

1   

Semiconductor Equipment

3   

Semiconductors

14   

Systems Software

15   

Technology Distributors

1   

 

 

121

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

Microsoft Corp.

9.4%

Cisco Systems, Inc.

7.3   

International Business Machines Corp.

6.6   

Intel Corp.

5.7   

Hewlett-Packard Co.

5.0   

Apple Computer, Inc.

4.5   

Google Inc.

4.5   

Oracle Corp.

3.2   

QUALCOMM Inc.

2.5   

Dell Inc.

2.3   

Top Ten

51.0%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Information Technology.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 83.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

122

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Information Technology Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

Net Asset Value

23.10%

4.47%

$11,700

Information Technology Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

Market Price

22.76   

4.46   

11,699

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

9.76   

13,978

MSCI US IMI/Information Technology

23.34   

4.68   

11,786

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Information Technology Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

23.02%

7.99%

$130,203

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

11.45    

145,807

MSCI US IMI/Information Technology

23.34    

8.23    

131,205

 

 

123

 


Information Technology Index Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Information Technology Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

22.76%

16.99%

Information Technology Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

23.10   

17.00   

MSCI US IMI/Information Technology

23.34   

17.86   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

1/26/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

24.97%

4.18%

Net Asset Value

 

25.22   

4.20   

Admiral Shares 2

3/25/2004

25.19   

7.90   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: January 26, 2004, for ETF Shares; March 25, 2004, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on page 58 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

124

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (100.0%)

 

 

Communications Equipment (16.0%)

 

 

*

Cisco Systems, Inc.

1,037,271

33,110

 

QUALCOMM Inc.

284,763

11,359

 

Motorola, Inc.

395,705

6,707

 

Corning, Inc.

268,722

6,280

*

Juniper Networks, Inc.

91,440

3,010

 

Harris Corp.

22,812

1,388

*

Avaya Inc.

77,098

1,298

*

Tellabs, Inc.

70,799

747

*

CommScope, Inc.

10,136

574

*

Ciena Corp.

14,359

544

*

JDS Uniphase Corp.

34,921

508

*

F5 Networks, Inc.

13,795

482

*

Polycom, Inc.

15,096

458

*

Foundry Networks, Inc.

23,568

436

*

Andrew Corp.

27,150

382

*

ADC

 

 

 

Telecommunications, Inc.

20,016

366

 

ADTRAN Inc.

10,821

289

*

Arris Group Inc.

18,325

278

*

3Com Corp.

67,731

254

*

Sonus Networks, Inc.

42,860

248

*

Avocent Corp.

7,819

231

 

Plantronics, Inc.

8,064

229

*

Harris Stratex Networks, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

12,185

209

*

InterDigital, Inc.

8,992

208

*

Blue Coat Systems, Inc.

2,462

205

*

Dycom Industries, Inc.

6,921

204

*

Riverbed Technology, Inc.

4,107

182

*

Finisar Corp.

47,025

178

 

 

125

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

Comtech

 

 

 

Telecommunications Corp.

3,886

165

*

NETGEAR, Inc.

5,713

160

*

Sycamore Networks, Inc.

33,312

132

*

Tekelec

10,415

128

*

Powerwave

 

 

 

Technologies, Inc.

18,692

128

*

Harmonic, Inc.

12,663

126

*

ViaSat, Inc.

4,134

126

 

Black Box Corp.

2,952

121

*

Mastec Inc.

7,813

116

*

C-COR Inc.

8,157

94

*

Loral Space and

 

 

 

Communications Ltd.

2,193

88

*

Comtech Group Inc.

4,448

75

*

Extreme Networks, Inc.

19,162

66

*

Nextwave Wireless Inc.

9,733

64

*

Ixia

6,824

62

*

Hughes Communications Inc.

1,131

58

 

Bel Fuse, Inc. Class B

1,412

44

*

Packeteer, Inc.

5,887

43

*

Orbcomm, Inc

4,074

33

*

Optium Corp.

1,861

15

 

Bel Fuse, Inc. Class A

379

15

*

UTStarcom, Inc.

1,179

4

 

 

 

72,227

Computers & Peripherals (23.7%)

 

 

 

International Business

 

 

 

Machines Corp.

253,744

29,609

 

Hewlett-Packard Co.

459,553

22,679

*

Apple Inc.

147,780

20,465

*

Dell Inc.

368,473

10,409

*

EMC Corp.

374,788

7,368

*

Sun Microsystems, Inc.

612,612

3,284

 

Seagate Technology

93,212

2,407

*

SanDisk Corp.

38,986

2,186

*

Network Appliance, Inc.

63,651

1,773

*

NCR Corp.

30,342

1,510

*

Western Digital Corp.

37,762

882

*

Lexmark International, Inc.

16,669

621

 

Diebold, Inc.

11,133

488

*

Brocade Communications

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

67,095

470

*

QLogic Corp.

27,068

360

*

Emulex Corp.

14,684

287

*

Electronics for Imaging, Inc.

9,701

253

*

Palm, Inc.

15,958

240

*

Avid Technology, Inc.

7,005

216

*

Intermec, Inc.

8,476

208

*

Synaptics Inc.

4,075

176

 

Imation Corp.

5,922

172

 

 

126

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

Komag, Inc.

5,311

171

*

Novatel Wireless, Inc.

5,076

116

*

Quantum Corp.

32,930

106

*

Hutchinson Technology, Inc.

4,374

101

*

Gateway, Inc.

44,001

81

*

Adaptec, Inc.

20,053

75

*

Isilon Systems Inc.

3,069

31

*

Rackable Systems Inc.

344

5

 

 

 

106,749

Electronic Equipment & Instruments (4.7%)

 

*

Tyco Electronics Ltd.

84,061

2,931

*

Agilent Technologies, Inc.

69,142

2,517

*

Flextronics International Ltd.

103,416

1,178

 

Amphenol Corp.

30,282

1,093

*

Avnet, Inc.

25,150

989

*

CDW Corp.

10,661

918

*

Arrow Electronics, Inc.

20,901

877

 

Jabil Circuit, Inc.

32,514

722

*

Trimble Navigation Ltd.

19,941

704

*

Mettler-Toledo

 

 

 

International Inc.

6,695

631

*

Solectron Corp.

153,941

597

*

FLIR Systems, Inc.

10,580

521

*

Ingram Micro, Inc. Class A

25,976

510

 

Tektronix, Inc.

14,036

451

*

Anixter International Inc.

5,679

436

*

Itron, Inc.

4,739

402

*

Vishay Intertechnology, Inc.

28,968

383

*

Tech Data Corp.

9,328

364

 

Molex, Inc. Class A

13,623

339

 

National Instruments Corp.

10,230

323

*

Benchmark Electronics, Inc.

12,202

306

*

Dolby Laboratories Inc.

7,999

291

 

Molex, Inc.

11,009

288

*

Insight Enterprises, Inc.

8,232

195

*

Checkpoint Systems, Inc.

6,707

187

*

Plexus Corp.

7,827

186

*

Rofin-Sinar Technologies Inc.

2,619

182

 

Technitrol, Inc.

6,564

181

*

Coherent, Inc.

5,370

162

 

Daktronics, Inc.

5,715

157

*

L-1 Identity Solutions Inc.

9,207

151

 

AVX Corp.

8,717

137

 

Cognex Corp.

7,249

134

 

MTS Systems Corp.

3,099

131

*

Littelfuse, Inc.

3,806

127

*

Rogers Corp.

2,979

123

*

ScanSource, Inc.

4,380

121

*

Electro Scientific

 

 

 

Industries, Inc.

4,988

118

*

Cogent Inc.

7,987

115

 

 

127

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

KEMET Corp.

14,678

101

*

Brightpoint, Inc.

8,676

101

 

Park Electrochemical Corp.

3,264

97

*

Newport Corp.

6,642

92

 

Methode Electronics, Inc.

 

 

 

Class A

6,350

92

*

TTM Technologies, Inc.

7,239

85

 

Agilysys, Inc.

4,909

84

*

DTS Inc.

3,074

80

*

Universal Display Corp.

5,252

78

 

CTS Corp.

5,780

75

*

GSI Group, Inc.

6,809

66

*

Smart Modular

 

 

 

Technologies Inc.

5,504

60

*

SYNNEX Corp.

2,376

47

*

IPG Photonics Corp.

2,537

47

*

Mercury Computer

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

3,524

40

*

Multi-Fineline Electronix, Inc.

1,623

21

*

Sanmina-SCI Corp.

5,872

13

 

 

 

21,357

Internet Software & Services (8.5%)

 

 

*

Google Inc.

39,532

20,369

*

eBay Inc.

186,474

6,359

*

Yahoo! Inc.

207,761

4,722

*

VeriSign, Inc.

41,317

1,330

*

Akamai Technologies, Inc.

26,760

862

*

Equinix, Inc.

4,581

405

*

SINA.com

8,841

369

*

ValueClick, Inc.

16,656

334

*

Digital River, Inc.

6,845

317

*

j2 Global Communications, Inc.

8,450

287

*

VistaPrint Ltd.

6,781

223

*

DealerTrack Holdings Inc.

5,011

191

*

Omniture, Inc.

7,186

178

*

CNET Networks, Inc.

24,146

177

*

EarthLink, Inc.

21,019

160

 

United Online, Inc.

11,115

160

*

Websense, Inc.

7,650

157

*

Sohu.com Inc.

4,705

154

*

SAVVIS, Inc.

3,080

122

*

CMGI Inc.

78,350

122

*

RealNetworks, Inc.

19,181

121

*

Ariba, Inc.

12,774

112

*

Internap Network

 

 

 

Services Corp.

7,272

102

*

Vignette Corp.

5,163

101

*

Perficient, Inc.

4,136

96

*

Interwoven Inc.

7,370

96

*

SonicWALL, Inc.

10,640

91

*

Bankrate, Inc.

2,145

84

 

 

128

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

The Knot, Inc.

3,931

82

*

S1 Corp.

10,473

82

 

InfoSpace, Inc.

5,334

75

*

WebMD Health Corp. Class A

1,308

71

*

LoopNet, Inc.

3,122

60

*

iPass Inc.

10,530

47

*

DivX, Inc.

2,547

36

 

Marchex, Inc.

3,711

34

*

Liquidity Services, Inc.

2,593

29

*

Jupitermedia Corp.

3,975

24

 

Openwave Systems Inc.

1,177

5

 

 

 

38,346

IT Services (8.8%)

 

 

 

Automatic Data

 

 

 

Processing, Inc.

94,520

4,323

 

First Data Corp.

128,896

4,282

 

Accenture Ltd.

101,412

4,179

 

Paychex, Inc.

58,362

2,593

 

Western Union Co.

131,348

2,473

 

Electronic Data Systems Corp.

88,025

2,015

*

Cognizant Technology

 

 

 

Solutions Corp.

24,284

1,785

*

Computer Sciences Corp.

29,593

1,656

 

MasterCard, Inc. Class A

11,524

1,579

 

Fidelity National Information

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

32,893

1,559

*

Fiserv, Inc.

27,310

1,270

*

Alliance Data Systems Corp.

13,422

1,053

*

Iron Mountain, Inc.

32,084

907

*

Ceridian Corp.

24,492

839

*

Affiliated Computer

 

 

 

Services, Inc. Class A

15,696

785

*

DST Systems, Inc.

9,006

689

*

Hewitt Associates, Inc.

17,914

602

*

CheckFree Corp.

12,633

584

 

Global Payments Inc.

13,631

538

*

Unisys Corp.

58,890

434

 

Broadridge Financial

 

 

 

Solutions LLC

23,412

425

*

Convergys Corp.

23,464

393

 

Acxiom Corp.

12,552

308

*

VeriFone Holdings, Inc.

8,291

306

 

MoneyGram International, Inc.

14,338

305

*

eFunds Corp.

7,967

289

*

CACI International, Inc.

5,223

267

*

Gartner, Inc. Class A

11,633

257

*

Wright Express Corp.

6,876

254

*

SAIC, Inc.

13,575

249

*

MPS Group, Inc.

17,440

240

*

Perot Systems Corp.

15,179

237

*

SRA International, Inc.

7,155

202

 

 

129

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

BearingPoint, Inc.

32,751

192

*

Euronet Worldwide, Inc.

6,993

189

 

Total System Services, Inc.

6,682

185

*

CSG Systems International, Inc.

7,990

185

 

MAXIMUS, Inc.

3,692

158

 

Syntel, Inc.

3,865

134

*

ManTech International Corp.

3,200

114

*

Sapient Corp.

14,868

96

*

Sykes Enterprises, Inc.

5,484

90

*

Ciber, Inc.

9,504

75

 

Heartland Payment

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

2,502

75

*

Global Cash Access, Inc.

6,249

69

*

Forrester Research, Inc.

2,570

65

 

infoUSA Inc.

5,667

57

*

Ness Technologies Inc.

4,979

55

 

TNS Inc.

3,703

55

 

Gevity HR, Inc.

4,279

49

*

RightNow Technologies Inc.

2,971

44

*

Lionbridge Technologies, Inc.

9,513

39

*

Exlservice Holdings Inc.

1,541

29

 

 

 

39,832

Office Electronics (0.7%)

 

 

*

Xerox Corp.

161,397

2,765

*

Zebra Technologies Corp.

 

 

 

Class A

11,996

435

 

 

 

3,200

Semiconductors &

 

 

Semiconductor Equipment (17.7%)

 

 

 

Intel Corp.

992,607

25,560

 

Texas Instruments, Inc.

245,075

8,391

 

Applied Materials, Inc.

236,156

5,044

*

NVIDIA Corp.

58,892

3,013

*

Broadcom Corp.

80,560

2,779

*

MEMC Electronic

 

 

 

Materials, Inc.

35,297

2,168

 

Analog Devices, Inc.

55,902

2,062

 

KLA-Tencor Corp.

32,758

1,883

 

Maxim Integrated

 

 

 

Products, Inc.

54,589

1,638

 

Linear Technology Corp.

43,469

1,478

*

Micron Technology, Inc.

128,508

1,471

 

Altera Corp.

60,703

1,445

 

National Semiconductor Corp.

54,263

1,428

 

Microchip Technology, Inc.

36,792

1,417

*

Marvell Technology Group Ltd.

84,570

1,401

 

Xilinx, Inc.

52,912

1,353

*

LAM Research Corp.

23,093

1,239

*

Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.

93,288

1,213

*

LSI Corp.

131,556

906

 

Intersil Corp.

23,505

783

 

 

130

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

Varian Semiconductor

 

 

 

Equipment Associates, Inc.

14,074

783

*

Cypress Semiconductor Corp.

25,817

647

*

ON Semiconductor Corp.

49,539

581

*

Novellus Systems, Inc.

21,007

575

*

Integrated Device

 

 

 

Technology Inc.

33,763

528

*

Teradyne, Inc.

32,259

480

*

International Rectifier Corp.

12,343

425

*

Atmel Corp.

74,579

395

*

Fairchild Semiconductor

 

 

 

International, Inc.

20,912

392

*

Cree, Inc.

14,381

383

*

FormFactor Inc.

7,570

343

*

Silicon Laboratories Inc.

8,371

309

*

Microsemi Corp.

12,096

307

*

Tessera Technologies, Inc.

8,003

293

*

PMC Sierra Inc.

35,794

275

*

Atheros Communications, Inc.

8,991

269

*

Cymer, Inc.

6,341

251

*

Amkor Technology, Inc.

19,775

228

*

Semtech Corp.

12,328

220

*

Rambus Inc.

14,040

212

*

Skyworks Solutions, Inc.

26,105

206

*

RF Micro Devices, Inc.

32,905

196

*

OmniVision Technologies, Inc.

9,272

194

*

Entegris Inc.

19,407

183

*

ATMI, Inc.

5,962

180

*

Cabot Microelectronics Corp.

4,063

170

*

Brooks Automation, Inc.

11,938

169

*

Sigma Designs, Inc.

3,851

163

*

ANADIGICS, Inc.

9,847

162

*

FEI Co.

5,739

161

*

Diodes Inc.

4,993

151

*

Zoran Corp.

8,358

144

*

Applied Micro Circuits Corp.

50,529

144

*

Trident Microsystems, Inc.

9,658

142

*

SiRF Technology Holdings, Inc.

8,412

142

*

MKS Instruments, Inc.

6,267

138

*

Standard Microsystem Corp.

3,755

135

*

Spansion Inc. Class A

14,230

130

 

Micrel, Inc.

9,914

109

*

AMIS Holdings Inc.

10,445

108

*

TriQuint Semiconductor, Inc.

23,170

102

*

Advanced Energy

 

 

 

Industries, Inc.

6,062

98

*

Hittite Microwave Corp.

2,322

98

*

Lattice Semiconductor Corp.

19,288

96

*

Mattson Technology, Inc.

8,925

94

*

Conexant Systems, Inc.

82,869

93

*

Cirrus Logic, Inc.

13,528

92

 

 

131

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

Veeco Instruments, Inc.

4,999

88

*

Exar Corp.

6,471

86

*

DSP Group Inc.

4,941

86

*

Silicon Image, Inc.

14,457

84

*

Kulicke & Soffa

 

 

 

Industries, Inc.

9,671

83

*

Netlogic Microsystems Inc.

2,764

81

*

Axcelis Technologies, Inc.

17,175

81

*

Photronics, Inc.

6,737

78

 

Cohu, Inc.

3,662

72

*

Supertex, Inc.

1,981

71

*

Rudolph Technologies, Inc.

4,666

60

*

Advanced Analogic

 

 

 

Technologies, Inc.

6,281

57

*

Ultratech, Inc.

3,769

54

*

Actel Corp.

4,465

50

*

Silicon Storage

 

 

 

Technology, Inc.

15,873

50

*

Genesis Microchip Inc.

6,124

49

*

Asyst Technologies, Inc.

8,289

49

*

IXYS Corp.

4,682

48

*

Credence Systems Corp.

15,346

45

*

Verigy Ltd.

1,482

39

*

PDF Solutions, Inc.

3,726

36

*

Eagle Test Systems, Inc.

2,095

25

 

 

 

79,740

Software (19.9%)

 

 

 

Microsoft Corp.

1,471,581

42,279

*

Oracle Corp.

702,770

14,252

*

Adobe Systems, Inc.

100,148

4,281

*

Symantec Corp.

154,000

2,897

*

Electronic Arts Inc.

53,216

2,817

*

Autodesk, Inc.

39,151

1,813

 

CA, Inc.

71,814

1,809

*

Intuit, Inc.

54,678

1,493

 

*

Citrix Systems, Inc.

30,707

1,116

 

*

BMC Software, Inc.

34,703

1,063

 

*

NAVTEQ Corp.

16,641

1,048

 

*

Cadence Design

 

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

47,613

1,034

 

*

McAfee Inc.

27,153

971

 

*

Activision, Inc.

47,667

929

 

*

BEA Systems, Inc.

66,648

813

 

*

Synopsys, Inc.

24,476

669

 

*

salesforce.com, Inc.

15,474

626

 

*

Red Hat, Inc.

31,098

605

 

 

FactSet Research Systems Inc.

7,503

450

 

*

Compuware Corp.

55,149

447

 

*

ANSYS, Inc.

13,103

434

 

*

Novell, Inc.

57,690

429

 

*

MICROS Systems, Inc.

6,727

406

 

 

 

132

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

Nuance Communications, Inc.

21,530

405

 

Jack Henry & Associates Inc.

13,888

364

 

Fair Isaac, Inc.

9,813

363

*

Sybase, Inc.

15,500

357

*

Parametric Technology Corp.

19,013

335

*

THQ Inc.

10,955

315

*

TIBCO Software Inc.

35,977

285

*

Lawson Software, Inc.

23,964

235

*

Macrovision Corp.

9,008

214

*

Progress Software Corp.

6,998

214

*

Informatica Corp.

14,792

208

*

Take-Two Interactive

 

 

 

Software, Inc.

12,387

198

*

Mentor Graphics Corp.

14,020

196

*

Opsware, Inc.

13,753

195

 

Blackbaud, Inc.

7,443

188

*

Net 1 UEPS Technologies, Inc.

7,336

181

*

Blackboard Inc.

4,311

180

*

Aspen Technologies, Inc.

12,865

169

*

ACI Worldwide, Inc.

6,326

164

*

Quest Software, Inc.

11,273

164

*

VASCO Data Security

 

 

 

International, Inc.

4,681

147

*

Advent Software, Inc.

3,530

141

*

Wind River Systems Inc.

13,084

138

*

Manhattan Associates, Inc.

4,658

135

*

Concur Technologies, Inc.

4,961

133

*

SPSS, Inc.

3,190

130

*

The Ultimate Software

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

4,070

127

*

Epicor Software Corp.

8,807

117

*

MicroStrategy Inc.

1,615

112

 

Quality Systems, Inc.

2,981

110

*

JDA Software Group, Inc.

4,763

99

*

MSC Software Corp.

7,358

93

*

Commvault Systems, Inc.

4,680

89

*

Tyler Technologies, Inc.

5,568

83

*

Secure Computing Corp.

8,811

79

*

Ansoft Corp.

2,606

78

*

Borland Software Corp.

13,258

60

 

*

EPIQ Systems, Inc.

3,505

57

 

*

FalconStor Software, Inc.

4,882

54

 

*

InterVoice, Inc.

6,513

52

 

 

 

133

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

*

eSPEED, Inc. Class A

4,809

40

*

Sonic Solutions, Inc.

4,160

32

 

Renaissance Learning, Inc.

1,493

17

 

 

 

89,734

Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $403,849)

 

451,185

Temporary Cash Investment (0.0%)

 

 

1

Vanguard Market

 

 

 

Liquidity Fund, 5.247%

 

 

 

(Cost $68)

68,223

68

Total Investments (100.0%)

 

 

(Cost $403,917)

 

451,253

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.0%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

9,171

Liabilities

 

(9,033)

 

 

 

138

Net Assets (100%)

 

451,391

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 2

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

404,288

Undistributed Net Investment Income

970

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(1,203)

Unrealized Appreciation

47,336

Net Assets

451,391

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 408,705 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

12,240

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$29.95

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 7,504,506 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

439,151

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$58.52

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day

2  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

134

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

1,894

Interest 1

9

Total Income

1,903

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

  Investment Advisory Services

47

  Management and Administrative

 

    Admiral Shares

14

    ETF Shares

417

  Marketing and Distribution

 

    Admiral Shares

2

    ETF Shares

66

Custodian Fees

51

Auditing Fees

23

Shareholders’ Reports

 

    Admiral Shares

    ETF Shares

24

Total Expenses

644

Net Investment Income

1,259

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

295

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

53,390

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

54,944

 

 

135

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

1,259

464

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

295

2,551

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

53,390

(6,138)

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

54,944

(3,123)

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(14)

(4)

ETF Shares

(640)

(200)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(654)

(204)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

6,136

2,900

ETF Shares

214,370

123,535

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

220,506

126,435

Total Increase (Decrease)

274,796

123,108

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

176,595

53,487

End of Period 2

451,391

176,595

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $9,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $970,000 and $365,000.

 

136

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mar. 25,

 

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$24.40

$23.93

$20.72

$23.40

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.11 2

.084 2

.351 3

.01

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

5.50

.424

3.182

(2.69)

Total from Investment Operations

5.61

.508

3.533

(2.68)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.06)

(.038)

(.323)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.06)

(.038)

(.323)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$29.95

$24.40

$23.93

$20.72

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 4

23.02%

2.12%

17.05%

–11.45%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$12

$5

$2

$0.2

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

0.38%

0.33%

1.26% 3

0.12%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

8%

8%

7%

9%

 

 

137

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 26,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$47.66

$46.76

$40.46

$50.89

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.231 2

.175 2

.670 6

.03

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

10.765

.816

6.239

(10.46)

Total from Investment Operations

10.996

.991

6.909

(10.43)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.136)

(.091)

(.609)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.136)

(.091)

(.609)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$58.52

$47.66

$46.76

$40.46

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

23.10%

2.11%

17.07%

–20.50%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$439

$172

$51

$16

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

0.42%

0.36%

1.28% 6

0.12%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

8%

8%

7%

9%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.284 and 1.00%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

4  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

5  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

6  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $.553 and 1.00%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

138

 


Information Technology Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Information Technology Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $36,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.04% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification

 

139

 


 

Information Technology Index Fund

may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $1,091,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $1,142,000 to offset future net capital gains of $63,000 through August 31, 2013, $188,000 through August 31, 2014, $612,000 through August 31, 2015, and $279,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $403,978,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $47,275,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $58,799,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $11,524,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $243,473,000 of investment securities and sold $22,380,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

9,143

320

 

4,501

179

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

12

 

4

Redeemed 1

(3,019)

(108)

 

(1,605)

(68)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

6,136

212

 

2,900

111

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

214,370

3,900

 

146,601

3,005

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

 

(23,066)

(500)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

214,370

3,900

 

123,535

2,505

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $19,000 and $9,000.

 

140

 


Materials Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

120

120

2,437

Median Market Cap

$14.7B

$14.7B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

16.3x

16.3x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

2.9x

2.9x

2.8x

Yield

 

1.7%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

1.6%

 

 

ETF Shares

1.7%

 

 

Return on Equity

16.0%

16.1%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

31.0%

31.0%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.7%

0.7%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

6%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Target Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

1.00

0.58

Beta

1.00

1.34

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Aluminum

6%

Commodity Chemicals

3   

Construction Materials

4   

Diversified Chemicals

21   

Diversified Metals & Mining

7   

Fertilizers & Agricultural Chemicals

9   

Forest Products

3   

Gold

3   

Industrial Gases

8   

Metal & Glass Containers

4   

Paper Packaging

4   

Paper Products

5   

Precious Metals & Minerals

1   

Specialty Chemicals

10   

Steel

12   

 

 

141

 


Materials Index Fund

 

Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.

7.8%

Dow Chemical Co.

7.0   

Monsanto Co.

6.6   

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

5.8   

Alcoa Inc.

5.5   

Praxair, Inc.

4.2   

Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.

3.4   

Newmont Mining Corp. (Holding Co.)

3.3   

Nucor Corp.

2.8   

Weyerhaeuser Co.

2.5   

Top Ten

48.9%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Materials.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 83.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

142

 


Materials Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Materials Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

31.06%

16.68%

$17,413

Materials Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

30.81   

16.66   

17,399

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

9.76   

13,978

MSCI US IMI/Materials

31.19   

16.91   

17,537

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Materials Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

31.00%

15.66%

$167,614

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54    

9.82    

139,452

MSCI US IMI/Materials

31.19    

15.91    

168,920

 

 

143

 


Materials Index Fund

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Materials Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

30.81%

73.99%

Materials Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

31.06   

74.13   

MSCI US IMI/Materials

31.19   

75.37   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

1/26/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

33.12%

18.55%

Net Asset Value

 

33.20   

18.58   

Admiral Shares 2

2/11/2004

33.13   

17.51   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: January 26, 2004, for ETF Shares; February 11, 2004, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on page 65 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

144

 


Materials Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (100.0%)

 

 

Chemicals (51.7%)

 

 

 

E.I. du Pont de

 

 

 

Nemours & Co.

589,654

28,746

 

Dow Chemical Co.

606,998

25,876

 

Monsanto Co.

347,103

24,207

 

Praxair, Inc.

203,066

15,364

 

Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.

138,140

12,434

 

PPG Industries, Inc.

104,737

7,682

 

Lyondell Chemical Co.

145,236

6,733

 

Rohm & Haas Co.

90,635

5,125

 

Ecolab, Inc.

120,224

5,009

*

The Mosaic Co.

98,324

4,132

 

Sigma-Aldrich Corp.

84,349

3,779

 

Eastman Chemical Co.

53,728

3,587

 

Celanese Corp. Series A

90,544

3,252

 

Lubrizol Corp.

44,203

2,810

 

International Flavors &

 

 

 

Fragrances, Inc.

51,561

2,590

 

Huntsman Corp.

99,118

2,572

 

Nalco Holding Co.

92,093

2,302

 

Ashland, Inc.

36,066

2,156

 

Albemarle Corp.

51,962

2,103

 

Airgas, Inc.

45,419

2,099

 

FMC Corp.

23,278

2,095

 

CF Industries Holdings, Inc.

31,785

2,013

 

Cytec Industries, Inc.

29,034

1,928

 

RPM International, Inc.

77,119

1,746

 

Valspar Corp.

62,168

1,677

 

Cabot Corp.

41,095

1,658

*

Terra Industries, Inc.

59,213

1,538

*

Hercules, Inc.

70,635

1,471

 

 

145

 


 

Materials Index Fund

 

 

Chemtura Corp.

154,052

1,419

 

Scotts Miracle-Gro Co.

29,886

1,353

 

H.B. Fuller Co.

38,696

1,041

 

Olin Corp.

47,117

1,010

*

OM Group, Inc.

19,030

940

*

W.R. Grace & Co.

37,280

833

 

Minerals Technologies, Inc.

12,249

807

 

Sensient Technologies Corp.

28,531

773

*

Zoltek Cos., Inc.

18,029

744

 

Arch Chemicals, Inc.

15,531

673

 

Ferro Corp.

27,839

545

*

Rockwood Holdings, Inc.

16,540

530

*

PolyOne Corp.

56,619

455

 

Spartech Corp.

20,541

445

 

NewMarket Corp.

9,430

440

 

Koppers Holdings, Inc.

10,596

389

 

Innospec, Inc.

15,339

381

 

A. Schulman Inc.

14,627

315

 

Westlake Chemical Corp.

9,397

254

 

Georgia Gulf Corp.

10,610

159

 

Tronox Inc. Class B

14,120

142

 

American Vanguard Corp.

8,339

130

 

Tronox Inc.

12,270

126

*

Symyx Technologies, Inc.

10,180

91

 

 

Innophos Holdings Inc.

5,763

85

 

 

NL Industries, Inc.

6,390

67

 

 

 

 

190,831

 

Construction Materials (3.8%)

 

 

 

 

Vulcan Materials Co.

60,816

5,474

 

 

Martin Marietta Materials, Inc.

27,834

3,758

 

 

Florida Rock Industries, Inc.

31,591

1,975

 

 

Texas Industries, Inc.

16,842

1,242

 

 

Eagle Materials, Inc.

30,837

1,171

 

*

Headwaters Inc.

16,798

278

 

 

 

 

13,898

 

Containers & Packaging (8.2%)

 

 

 

*

Owens-Illinois, Inc.

98,707

3,970

 

 

Temple-Inland Inc.

67,554

3,721

 

 

Ball Corp.

59,293

3,106

 

 

Sealed Air Corp.

103,025

2,725

 

*

Crown Holdings, Inc.

104,287

2,505

 

*

Pactiv Corp.

84,969

2,485

 

 

Sonoco Products Co.

60,656

2,185

 

 

Bemis Co., Inc.

66,914

1,999

 

*

Smurfit-Stone Container Corp.

162,691

1,718

 

 

AptarGroup Inc.

41,859

1,521

 

 

Packaging Corp. of America

53,759

1,400

 

 

Greif Inc. Class A

15,094

879

 

 

Rock-Tenn Co.

23,077

669

 

 

Silgan Holdings, Inc.

12,479

638

 

 

Myers Industries, Inc.

17,944

382

 

 

 

146

 


 

Materials Index Fund

 

*

Graphic Packaging Corp.

64,279

306

 

Chesapeake Corp. of Virginia

7,790

76

 

 

 

30,285

Metals & Mining (28.5%)

 

 

 

Freeport-McMoRan

 

 

 

Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

243,072

21,249

 

Alcoa Inc.

554,880

20,270

 

Newmont Mining Corp.

 

 

 

(Holding Co.)

287,689

12,158

 

Nucor Corp.

192,848

10,202

 

United States Steel Corp.

75,658

7,148

 

Allegheny Technologies Inc.

58,689

5,833

*

AK Steel Holding Corp.

71,076

2,843

 

Chaparral Steel Co.

29,900

2,556

 

Steel Dynamics, Inc.

54,107

2,347

 

Reliance Steel &

 

 

 

Aluminum Co.

43,754

2,318

 

Commercial Metals Co.

72,309

2,089

 

Cleveland-Cliffs Inc.

26,293

2,005

 

Carpenter Technology Corp.

15,858

1,853

*

Titanium Metals Corp.

51,694

1,621

*

RTI International Metals, Inc.

14,723

1,026

 

Quanex Corp.

23,676

1,025

*

Century Aluminum Co.

20,351

1,001

 

Worthington Industries, Inc.

45,433

961

 

Schnitzer Steel

 

 

 

Industries, Inc. Class A

14,580

852

 

Metal Management, Inc.

16,818

789

 

Compass Minerals

 

 

 

International, Inc.

20,562

700

*

Apex Silver Mines Ltd.

37,406

649

*

Coeur d’Alene Mines Corp.

178,021

609

*

Hecla Mining Co.

76,704

575

 

AMCOL International Corp.

14,450

465

 

Royal Gold, Inc.

16,434

456

*

Brush Engineered

 

 

 

Materials Inc.

8,716

421

 

Kaiser Aluminum Corp.

6,184

420

 

Ryerson Tull, Inc.

10,788

360

 

A.M. Castle & Co.

4,818

140

*

Stillwater Mining Co.

11,167

105

 

 

 

105,046

Paper & Forest Products (7.8%)

 

 

 

Weyerhaeuser Co.

137,739

9,390

 

International Paper Co.

263,801

9,262

 

MeadWestvaco Corp.

117,645

3,716

*

Domtar Corp.

331,457

2,652

 

Louisiana-Pacific Corp.

66,621

1,248

 

Bowater Inc.

35,861

604

 

Glatfelter

27,472

405

 

Deltic Timber Corp.

6,848

392

 

 

147

 


 

Materials Index Fund

 

*

Buckeye Technology, Inc.

23,194

361

 

Wausau Paper Corp.

29,283

329

 

Neenah Paper Inc.

9,462

328

 

Schweitzer-Mauduit

 

 

 

International, Inc.

2,278

52

 

 

 

28,739

Total Investments (100.0%)

 

 

(Cost $344,527)

 

368,799

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.0%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

2,084

Liabilities

 

(1,907)

 

 

 

177

Net Assets (100%)

 

368,976

 

 

148

 


Materials Index Fund

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 1

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

343,753

Undistributed Net Investment Income

2,992

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(2,041)

Unrealized Appreciation

24,272

Net Assets

368,976

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 1,356,412 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

56,630

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$41.75

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 3,804,262 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

312,346

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$82.10

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

149

 


Materials Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

4,493

Interest 1

21

Total Income

4,514

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

  Investment Advisory Services

33

  Management and Administrative

 

    Admiral Shares

60

    ETF Shares

282

  Marketing and Distribution

 

    Admiral Shares

5

    ETF Shares

42

Custodian Fees

26

Auditing Fees

23

Shareholders’ Reports

 

    Admiral Shares

    ETF Shares

21

Total Expenses

492

Net Investment Income

4,022

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

12,404

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

22,936

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

39,362

 

 

150

 


Materials Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

4,022

1,761

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

12,404

362

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

22,936

5,554

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

39,362

7,677

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(270)

(135)

ETF Shares

(2,045)

(871)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(2,315)

(1,006)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

40,346

4,402

ETF Shares

183,943

39,604

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

224,289

44,006

Total Increase (Decrease)

261,336

50,677

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

107,640

56,963

End of Period 2

368,976

107,640

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $21,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $2,992,000 and $1,285,000.

 

151

 


Materials Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Feb. 11,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$32.37

$28.34

$26.53

$26.14

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.70 2

.672 2

.48

.24

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

9.25

3.853

1.83

.15

Total from Investment Operations

9.95

4.525

2.31

.39

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.57)

(.495)

(.50)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.57)

(.495)

(.50)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$41.75

$32.37

$28.34

$26.53

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 3

31.00%

16.08%

8.61%

1.49%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$57

$12

$7

$1

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.80%

2.13%

1.81%

1.93%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

6%

13%

12%

8%

 

 

152

 


Materials Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 26,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$63.65

$55.70

$52.13

$49.48

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

1.418 2

1.336 2

.915

.58

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

18.168

7.582

3.630

2.07

Total from Investment Operations

19.586

8.918

4.545

2.65

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(1.136)

(.968)

(.975)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(1.136)

(.968)

(.975)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$82.10

$63.65

$55.70

$52.13

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

31.06%

16.11%

8.62%

5.36%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$312

$95

$50

$21

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

1.84%

2.16%

1.83%

1.93%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 4

6%

13%

12%

8%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

4  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

153

 


Materials Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Materials Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $33,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.03% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification

 

154

 


 

Materials Index Fund

may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $13,763,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $3,080,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $1,905,000 to offset future net capital gains of $6,000 through August 31, 2014, $698,000 through August 31, 2015, and $1,201,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $344,662,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $24,137,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $33,207,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $9,070,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $280,818,000 of investment securities and sold $55,066,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund's financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

46,752

1,145

 

6,115

188

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

251

7

 

125

4

Redeemed 1

(6,657)

(171)

 

(1,838)

(58)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

40,346

981

 

4,402

134

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

224,099

2,804

 

51,474

800

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(40,156)

(500)

 

(11,870)

(200)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

183,943

2,304

 

39,604

600

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $68,000 and $5,000.

 

155

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

45

46

2,437

Median Market Cap

$16.6B

$121.6B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

28.0x

24.5x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

2.8x

2.3x

2.8x

Yield

 

2.8%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

2.2%

 

 

ETF Shares

2.3%

 

 

Return on Equity

10.0%

12.8%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

7.6%

3.0%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.0%

0.0%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

17%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.27%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.23%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

Alternative Carriers

8%

Integrated Telecommunication Services

61   

Wireless Telecommunication Services

31   

 

Ten Largest Holdings 3 (% of total net assets)

 

 

AT&T Inc.

19.8%

Verizon Communications Inc.

18.4   

Sprint Nextel Corp.

6.3   

Alltel Corp.

4.5   

American Tower Corp. Class A

3.7   

Qwest Communications International Inc.

3.2   

NII Holdings Inc.

2.9   

Crown Castle International Corp.

2.5   

Embarq Corp.

2.4   

Level 3 Communications, Inc.

2.0   

Top Ten

65.7%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Telecommunication Services.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

See page 83 for a glossary of investment terms.

 

156

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Telecommunication Services Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

Net Asset Value

24.81%

20.00%

$17,082

Telecommunication Services Index Fund ETF Shares

 

 

 

Market Price

24.32   

19.96   

17,062

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

13.22   

14,399

MSCI US IMI/Telecommunication Services

27.13   

18.35   

16,399

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Telecommunication Services Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

24.77%

20.82%

$159,657

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

11.45   

130,759

MSCI US IMI/Telecommunication Services

27.13   

20.38   

158,241

 

 

157

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, September 23, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Telecommunication Services Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

24.32%

70.62%

Telecommunication Services Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

24.81   

70.82   

MSCI US IMI/Telecommunication Services

27.13   

63.99   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

9/23/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

35.03%

22.46%

Net Asset Value

 

34.96    

22.49    

Admiral Shares 2

3/11/2005

34.90    

23.90    

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: September 23, 2004, for ETF Shares; March 11, 2005, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.
Note: See
Financial Highlights tables on page 71 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

158

 

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (99.7%)

 

 

Diversified Telecommunication Services (68.9%)

 

 

Alternative Carriers (8.1%)

 

 

*

Level 3

 

 

 

Communications, Inc.

1,225,264

6,408

*

Time Warner Telecom Inc.

175,570

3,854

*

Premiere Global

 

 

 

Services, Inc.

233,839

3,059

*

Cogent

 

 

 

Communications

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

118,922

2,969

*

Global Crossing Ltd.

135,257

2,575

*

Globalstar, Inc.

274,347

2,551

*

Vonage Holdings Corp.

1,112,741

2,348

*

Covad Communications

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

2,328,422

1,863

 

 

 

 

 

Integrated Telecommunication Services (60.8%)

 

 

AT&T Inc.

1,572,788

62,707

 

Verizon

 

 

 

Communications Inc.

1,388,945

58,169

*

Qwest Communications

 

 

 

International Inc.

1,133,598

10,146

 

Embarq Corp.

122,500

7,646

 

Windstream Corp.

431,398

6,160

 

CenturyTel, Inc.

110,456

5,300

 

Citizens Communications Co.

349,564

5,072

*

NeuStar, Inc. Class A

117,125

3,704

 

Golden Telecom, Inc.

53,338

3,660

 

NTELOS Holdings Corp.

118,410

3,171

*

Cbeyond Inc.

81,389

3,163

*

Cincinnati Bell Inc.

616,970

3,011

 

Surewest Communications

100,473

2,915

*

General Communication, Inc.

212,477

2,688

 

 

159

 


 

Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

 

Alaska Communications

 

 

 

Systems Holdings, Inc.

193,126

2,638

 

Iowa Telecommunications

 

 

 

Services Inc.

141,683

2,623

 

FairPoint

 

 

 

Communications, Inc.

156,127

2,612

 

North Pittsburgh

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

106,891

2,468

 

Consolidated

 

 

 

Communications

 

 

 

Holdings, Inc.

132,396

2,460

 

IDT Corp. Class B

228,315

2,055

 

IDT Corp.

12,335

102

 

 

 

218,097

Wireless Telecommunication Services (30.8%)

 

 

Sprint Nextel Corp.

1,054,920

19,959

 

Alltel Corp.

209,512

14,301

*

American Tower Corp.

 

 

 

Class A

294,603

11,672

*

NII Holdings Inc.

118,009

9,344

*

Crown Castle

 

 

 

International Corp.

214,212

7,874

*

Leap Wireless

 

 

 

International, Inc.

65,020

4,714

*

SBA Communications Corp.

128,548

4,187

*

Dobson

 

 

 

Communications Corp.

321,192

4,057

*

U.S. Cellular Corp.

37,124

3,610

 

Telephone & Data

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.

49,255

3,189

 

Telephone & Data

 

 

 

Systems, Inc.—

 

 

 

Special Common Shares

49,801

3,063

 

USA Mobility, Inc.

140,667

2,595

*

Centennial Communications

 

 

Corp. Class A

275,471

2,589

*

Syniverse Holdings Inc.

180,534

2,551

 

iPCS, Inc.

64,251

2,177

*

Fibertower Corp.

492,258

1,851

 

 

160

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

 

 

 

97,733

Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $305,833)

 

315,830

Temporary Cash Investment (0.0%)

 

 

1

Vanguard Market

 

 

 

Liquidity Fund, 5.247%

 

 

 

(Cost $63)

63,055

63

Total Investments (99.7%)

 

 

(Cost $305,896)

 

315,893

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.3%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

5,399

Liabilities

 

(4,399)

 

 

 

1,000

Net Assets (100%)

 

316,893

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 2

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

307,760

Undistributed Net Investment Income

4,342

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(5,206)

Unrealized Appreciation

9,997

Net Assets

316,893

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 1,241,023 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

50,899

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$41.01

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 3,300,000 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

265,994

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$80.60

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

2  See Note D in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

 

161

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

5,621

Interest 1

21

Total Income

5,642

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

34

Management and Administrative

 

Admiral Shares

69

ETF Shares

310

Marketing and Distribution

 

Admiral Shares

6

ETF Shares

44

Custodian Fees

29

Auditing Fees

22

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

25

Total Expenses

539

Expenses Paid Indirectly—Note C

(21)

Net Expenses

518

Net Investment Income

5,124

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

21,123

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

8,792

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

35,039

 

 

162

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

5,124

1,528

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

21,123

6,462

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

8,792

739

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

35,039

8,729

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(271)

(28)

ETF Shares

(1,761)

(623)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(2,032)

(651)

Capital Share Transactions—Note G

 

 

Admiral Shares

40,952

4,372

ETF Shares

165,408

47,662

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

206,360

52,034

Total Increase (Decrease)

239,367

60,112

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

77,526

17,414

End of Period 2

316,893

77,526

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $21,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $4,342,000 and $1,250,000.

 

 

163

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mar. 11,

 

Year Ended

2005 1 to

 

August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$33.29

$28.18

$26.75

Investment Operations

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.888 2

.861 2,3

.34 2

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

7.308

5.041

1.09

Total from Investment Operations

8.196

5.902

1.43

Distributions

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.476)

(.792)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.476)

(.792)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$41.01

$33.29

$28.18

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 4

24.77%

21.47%

5.35%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$51

$6

$1

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.27%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.17%

3.28% 3

2.70%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

17%

32%

41%

 

 

164

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sept. 23,

 

Year Ended

2004 1 to

 

August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$65.40

$55.35

$49.50

Investment Operations

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

1.741 2

2.040 2,6

1.30 2

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments

14.386

9.567

4.96

Total from Investment Operations

16.127

11.607

6.26

Distributions

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.927)

(1.557)

(.41)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(.927)

(1.557)

(.41)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$80.60

$65.40

$55.35

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

24.81%

21.49%

12.65%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$266

$72

$17

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.23%

0.25%

0.26%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.21%

3.31% 6

2.72%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

17%

32%

41%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $0.112 and 0.38%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from MCI in December 2005.

4  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

5  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

6  Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $0.219 and 0.38%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from MCI in December 2005.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

165

 


Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Telecommunication Services Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $28,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.03% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. The fund’s custodian bank has agreed to reduce its fees when the fund maintains cash on deposit in the non-interest-bearing custody account. For the year ended August 31, 2007, custodian fee offset arrangements reduced the fund’s expenses by $21,000 (an annual rate of 0.01% of average net assets).

D. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial

 

166

 


 

Telecommunication Services Index Fund

 

statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $25,473,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $4,419,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $4,681,000 to offset future net capital gains of $29,000 through August 31, 2014, $818,000 through August 31, 2015, and $3,834,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $306,401,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $9,492,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $18,898,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $9,406,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

E. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $368,852,000 of investment securities and sold $159,430,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

F. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

G. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

47,055

1,227

 

4,536

144

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

257

7

 

28

1

Redeemed 1

(6,360)

(161)

 

(192)

(6)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

40,952

1,073

 

4,372

139

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

285,319

3,700

 

139,818

2,300

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(119,911)

(1,500)

 

(92,156)

(1,500)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

165,408

2,200

 

47,662

800

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $110,000 and $2,000.

 

167

 


Utilities Index Fund

Fund Profile

As of August 31, 2007

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Target

Broad

 

Fund

Index 1

Index 2

Number of Stocks

87

87

2,437

Median Market Cap

$15.6B

$15.6B

$33.9B

Price/Earnings Ratio

17.7x

17.7x

17.3x

Price/Book Ratio

2.2x

2.1x

2.8x

Yield

 

3.0%

1.8%

Admiral Shares

2.9%

 

 

ETF Shares

3.0%

 

 

Return on Equity

13.1%

13.1%

18.8%

Earnings Growth Rate

11.2%

11.1%

21.5%

Foreign Holdings

0.0%

0.0%

0.0%

Turnover Rate

12%

Expense Ratio

 

Admiral Shares

0.26%

 

 

ETF Shares

0.22%

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

0%

 

Volatility Measures 3

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Target Index 1

Broad Index 2

R-Squared

1.00

0.13

Beta

1.00

0.45

 

Industry Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Electric Utilities

47%

Gas Utilities

8   

Independent Power Producers & Energy Traders

14   

Multi-Utilities

30   

Water Utilities

1   

 

 

168

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Ten Largest Holdings 4 (% of total net assets)

 

 

Exelon Corp.

8.1%

TXU Corp.

5.3   

Southern Co.

4.5   

Dominion Resources, Inc.

4.2   

Duke Energy Corp.

3.9   

FPL Group, Inc.

3.9   

Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc.

3.7   

Entergy Corp.

3.5   

FirstEnergy Corp.

3.2   

PPL Corp.

3.2   

Top Ten

43.5%

 

 

1  MSCI US IMI/Utilities.

2  MSCI US IMI/2500.

3  For an explanation of R-squared , beta , and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 83.

4  “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

169

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Performance Summary

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

Cumulative Performance: January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

Initial Investment of $10,000

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Annual Total Returns

Final Value

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

of a $10,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Utilities Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

14.37%

17.74%

$17,988

Utilities Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

14.06   

17.66   

17,942

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

9.76   

13,978

MSCI US IMI/Utilities

14.59   

17.97   

18,114

 

 

 

 

Final Value

 

 

 

of a $100,000

 

One Year

Since Inception 1

Investment

Utilities Index Fund Admiral Shares 2

14.33%

19.05%

$179,038

MSCI US IMI/2500

15.54   

11.39   

143,379

MSCI US IMI/Utilities

14.59   

19.31   

180,355

 

 

170

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%):

January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 


 

Cumulative Returns: ETF Shares, January 26, 2004–August 31, 2007

 

 

Cumulative

 

 

Since

 

One Year

Inception

Utilities Index Fund ETF Shares Market Price

14.06%

79.42%

Utilities Index Fund ETF Shares Net Asset Value

14.37   

79.88   

MSCI US IMI/Utilities

14.59   

81.14   

 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended June 30, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

 

Since

 

Inception Date

One Year

Inception

ETF Shares

1/26/2004

 

 

Market Price

 

25.64%

19.37%

Net Asset Value

 

25.62   

19.38   

Admiral Shares 2

4/28/2004

25.60   

20.92   

 

 

1  Performance for the fund and its comparative standards is calculated since the following inception dates: January 26, 2004, for ETF Shares; April 28, 2004, for Admiral Shares.

2  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on page 77 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

171

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Financial Statements

Statement of Net Assets

As of August 31, 2007

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (99.9%)

 

 

Electric Utilities (47.2%)

 

 

 

Exelon Corp.

448,819

31,718

 

Southern Co.

501,638

17,803

 

Duke Energy Corp.

840,364

15,412

 

FPL Group, Inc.

257,619

15,158

 

Entergy Corp.

131,624

13,639

 

FirstEnergy Corp.

203,399

12,497

 

PPL Corp.

257,522

12,428

 

American Electric

 

 

 

Power Co., Inc.

266,074

11,835

 

Edison International

206,525

10,886

 

Progress Energy, Inc.

163,454

7,499

*

Allegheny Energy, Inc.

110,570

5,707

*

Reliant Energy, Inc.

223,253

5,695

 

Pepco Holdings, Inc.

128,834

3,592

 

Northeast Utilities

103,126

2,851

 

Pinnacle West Capital Corp.

66,884

2,665

 

Sierra Pacific Resources

136,681

2,094

 

DPL Inc.

75,629

1,993

 

Great Plains Energy, Inc.

57,383

1,626

 

Westar Energy, Inc.

59,290

1,440

 

ITC Holdings Corp.

26,942

1,198

 

Portland General Electric Co.

41,709

1,109

 

IDACORP, Inc.

29,351

953

 

Hawaiian Electric

 

 

 

Industries Inc.

44,816

940

 

Cleco Corp.

39,826

918

 

Otter Tail Corp.

18,880

689

 

UniSource Energy Corp.

18,329

543

 

ALLETE, Inc.

12,592

530

*

El Paso Electric Co.

23,441

523

 

Empire District Electric Co.

20,361

467

 

 

172

 


 

Utilities Index Fund

 

 

MGE Energy, Inc.

14,158

466

 

UIL Holdings Corp.

9,918

307

 

 

 

185,181

Gas Utilities (8.2%)

 

 

 

Questar Corp.

115,043

5,749

 

Equitable Resources, Inc.

77,087

3,792

 

ONEOK, Inc.

70,386

3,298

 

Energen Corp.

45,470

2,442

 

National Fuel Gas Co.

52,915

2,346

 

AGL Resources Inc.

51,909

2,061

 

Southern Union Co.

67,969

2,029

 

UGI Corp. Holding Co.

70,887

1,811

 

Atmos Energy Corp.

51,758

1,455

 

Piedmont Natural Gas, Inc.

49,778

1,314

 

Nicor Inc.

30,044

1,249

 

WGL Holdings Inc.

32,846

1,080

 

New Jersey Resources Corp.

18,711

917

 

Northwest Natural Gas Co.

18,009

837

 

South Jersey Industries, Inc.

19,723

669

 

Southwest Gas Corp.

20,914

607

 

The Laclede Group, Inc.

13,750

449

 

 

 

32,105

Independent Power Producers &

 

 

Energy Traders (13.7%)

 

 

 

TXU Corp.

306,366

20,649

 

Constellation Energy

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

120,308

9,978

*

AES Corp.

433,572

7,852

*

Mirant Corp.

165,622

6,454

*

NRG Energy, Inc.

155,079

5,907

*

Dynegy, Inc.

305,860

2,474

 

Ormat Technologies Inc.

10,284

443

 

 

 

53,757

Multi-Utilities (29.9%)

 

 

 

Dominion Resources, Inc.

194,171

16,540

 

Public Service Enterprise

 

 

 

Group, Inc.

169,230

14,383

 

PG&E Corp.

238,443

10,611

 

Sempra Energy

162,950

8,967

 

Consolidated Edison Inc.

180,502

8,292

 

Ameren Corp.

138,134

7,014

 

DTE Energy Co.

117,479

5,617

 

Xcel Energy, Inc.

262,347

5,407

 

Wisconsin Energy Corp.

78,035

3,458

 

NiSource, Inc.

182,870

3,445

 

CenterPoint Energy Inc.

203,343

3,298

 

SCANA Corp.

73,953

2,838

 

Energy East Corp.

105,447

2,814

 

MDU Resources Group, Inc.

102,682

2,778

 

Alliant Energy Corp.

73,136

2,770

 

Integrys Energy Group, Inc.

50,499

2,534

 

CMS Energy Corp.

149,797

2,445

 

NSTAR

71,268

2,335

 

 

173

 


 

Utilities Index Fund

 

 

TECO Energy, Inc.

139,870

2,216

 

OGE Energy Corp.

54,840

1,849

 

Puget Energy, Inc.

77,976

1,819

 

Vectren Corp.

51,046

1,394

 

Black Hills Corp.

24,667

1,016

 

PNM Resources Inc.

43,131

997

*

Aquila, Inc.

250,014

995

 

NorthWestern Corp.

23,961

643

 

Avista Corp.

28,876

565

 

CH Energy Group, Inc.

10,631

503

 

 

 

117,543

Water Utilities (0.9%)

 

 

Aqua America, Inc.

88,474

2,120

California Water

 

 

Service Group

13,230

512

American States Water Co.

11,492

449

SJW Corp.

9,268

318

 

 

3,399

Total Investments

 

 

(Cost $388,571)

 

391,985

Other Assets and Liabilities (0.1%)

 

 

Other Assets—Note B

 

6,372

Liabilities

 

(5,798)

 

 

574

Net Assets (100%)

 

392,559

 

 

174

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

At August 31, 2007, net assets consisted of: 1

 

 

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

389,370

Undistributed Net Investment Income

2,189

Accumulated Net Realized Losses

(2,414)

Unrealized Appreciation

3,414

Net Assets

392,559

 

 

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 2,654,707 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

107,788

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$40.60

 

 

 

 

ETF Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 3,519,298 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

284,771

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

ETF Shares

$80.92

 

 

•  See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements .

*  Non-income-producing security.

1  See Note C in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

 

175

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Year Ended

 

August 31, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends

9,236

Interest 1

21

Total Income

9,257

Expenses

 

The Vanguard Group—Note B

 

Investment Advisory Services

49

Management and Administrative

 

Admiral Shares

174

ETF Shares

354

Marketing and Distribution

 

Admiral Shares

13

ETF Shares

53

Custodian Fees

32

Auditing Fees

22

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Admiral Shares

1

ETF Shares

19

Total Expenses

717

Net Investment Income

8,540

Realized Net Gain (Loss) on

 

Investment Securities Sold

29,429

Change in Unrealized Appreciation

 

(Depreciation) of Investment Securities

(17,088)

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

Resulting from Operations

20,881

 

 

176

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

8,540

5,138

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

29,429

1,881

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

(17,088)

8,794

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

20,881

15,813

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Admiral Shares

(2,008)

(1,331)

ETF Shares

(5,532)

(3,232)

Realized Capital Gain

 

 

Admiral Shares

ETF Shares

Total Distributions

(7,540)

(4,563)

Capital Share Transactions—Note F

 

 

Admiral Shares

50,850

19,104

ETF Shares

93,508

79,989

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

144,358

99,093

Total Increase (Decrease)

157,699

110,343

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

234,860

124,517

End of Period 2

392,559

234,860

 

 

1  Interest income from an affiliated company of the fund was $21,000.

2   Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $2,189,000 and $1,189,000.

 

177

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Financial Highlights

 

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Apr. 28,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$36.47

$34.03

$26.70

$25.03

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

1.080

1.080 2

.972 2

.36

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments 3

4.089

2.378

7.623

1.31

Total from Investment Operations

5.169

3.458

8.595

1.67

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(1.039)

(1.018)

(1.265)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(1.039)

(1.018)

(1.265)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$40.60

$36.47

$34.03

$26.70

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return 4

14.33%

10.48%

32.87%

6.67%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$108

$52

$30

$1

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.26%

0.28%

0.28%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.70%

3.26%

3.34%

3.82%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

12%

9%

7%

7%

 

 

178

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jan. 26,

 

 

2004 1 to

 

Year Ended August 31,

Aug. 31,

For a Share Outstanding Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$72.68

$67.80

$53.14

$49.64

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

2.180

2.214 2

2.036 2

1.11

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments 6

8.156

4.704

15.115

2.39

Total from Investment Operations

10.336

6.918

17.151

3.50

Distributions

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(2.096)

(2.038)

(2.491)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

Total Distributions

(2.096)

(2.038)

(2.491)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$80.92

$72.68

$67.80

$53.14

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

14.37%

10.52%

32.93%

7.05%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$285

$183

$95

$43

Ratio of Total Expenses to Average Net Assets

0.22%

0.25%

0.26%

0.28%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to Average Net Assets

2.74%

3.29%

3.36%

3.82%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate 5

12%

9%

7%

7%

 

 

1  Inception.

2  Calculated based on average shares outstanding.

3  Includes increases from redemption fees of $.02, $.04, $.00, and $.00.

4  Total returns do not reflect the 2% fee assessed on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, or the account service fee that may be applicable to certain accounts with balances below $10,000.

5  Excludes the value of portfolio securities received or delivered as a result of in-kind purchases or redemptions of the fund’s capital shares, including ETF Creation Units.

6  Includes increases from redemption fees of $.03, $.06, $.01, and $.00.

*  Annualized.

See accompanying Notes , which are an integral part of the Financial Statements .

 

179

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Utilities Index Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard World Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Admiral Shares and ETF Shares. Admiral Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. ETF Shares are listed for trading on the American Stock Exchange; they can be purchased and sold through a broker.

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices.

Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value.

2. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

3. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

4. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold. Fees assessed on redemptions of Admiral Shares are credited to paid-in capital.

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

B. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost investment advisory, corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At August 31, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $36,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 0.04% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

C. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes.

 

180

 


Utilities Index Fund

 

During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund realized $30,561,000 of net capital gains resulting from in-kind redemptions—in which shareholders exchanged fund shares for securities held by the fund rather than for cash. Because such gains are not taxable to the fund, and are not distributed to shareholders, they have been reclassified from accumulated net realized losses to paid-in capital.

For tax purposes, at August 31, 2007, the fund had $2,341,000 of ordinary income available for distribution. The fund had available realized losses of $1,621,000 to offset future net capital gains of $62,000 through August 31, 2013, $62,000 through August 31, 2014, $1,181,000 through August 31, 2015, and $316,000 through August 31, 2016.

At August 31, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $389,364,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $2,621,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $15,123,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $12,502,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

D. During the year ended August 31, 2007, the fund purchased $337,409,000 of investment securities and sold $192,406,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

E. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements, and is effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning September 1, 2007. Management has analyzed the fund’s tax positions taken on federal income tax returns for all open tax years (tax years ended August 31, 2004–2007) for purposes of implementing FIN 48, and has concluded that as of August 31, 2007, no provision for income tax would be required in the fund’s financial statements.

F. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were (see table below):

 

 

Year Ended August 31,

 

 

2007

 

 

2006

 

Amount

Shares

 

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

 

($000)

(000)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

70,180

1,711

 

31,057

924

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

1,829

47

 

1,186

36

Redeemed 1

(21,159)

(529)

 

(13,139)

(404)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

50,850

1,229

 

19,104

556

ETF Shares

 

 

 

 

 

Issued

250,373

3,003

 

93,087

1,316

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

 

Redeemed

(156,865)

(2,000)

 

(13,098)

(200)

Net Increase (Decrease)—ETF Shares

93,508

1,003

 

79,989

1,116

 

 

1  Net of redemption fees of $155,000, and $200,000.

 

181

 


Report of Independent Registered

Public Accounting Firm

 

To the Trustees of Vanguard World Funds and the Shareholders of Vanguard Consumer Discretionary Index Fund, Vanguard Consumer Staples Index Fund, Vanguard Energy Index Fund, Vanguard Financials Index Fund, Vanguard Health Care Index Fund, Vanguard Industrials Index Fund, Vanguard Information Technology Index Fund, Vanguard Materials Index Fund, Vanguard Telecommunication Services Index Fund and Vanguard Utilities Index Fund:

In our opinion, the accompanying statements of net assets, and the related statements of operations and of changes in net assets and the financial highlights present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Vanguard Consumer Discretionary Index Fund, Vanguard Consumer Staples Index Fund, Vanguard Energy Index Fund, Vanguard Financials Index Fund, Vanguard Health Care Index Fund, Vanguard Industrials Index Fund, Vanguard Information Technology Index Fund, Vanguard Materials Index Fund, Vanguard Telecommunication Services Index Fund and Vanguard Utilities Index Fund (the “Funds”) at August 31, 2007, and the results of each of their operations for the year then ended, the changes in each of their net assets for each of the two years in the period then ended and the financial highlights for each of the periods indicated, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These financial statements and financial highlights (hereafter referred to as “financial statements”) are the responsibility of the Funds’ management; our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits. We conducted our audits of these financial statements in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits, which included confirmation of securities at August 31, 2007 by correspondence with the custodian and by agreement to the underlying ownership records for Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

 

 

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

 

October 10, 2007

 

 

182

 


Special 2007 tax information (unaudited) for Vanguard U.S. Sector Index Funds

 

This information for the fiscal year ended August 31, 2007, is included pursuant to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

The funds distributed qualified dividend income to shareholders during the fiscal year as follows:

 

 

Qualified Dividend

Index Fund

Income ($000)

Consumer Discretionary

572

Consumer Staples

3,936

Energy

5,036

Financials

4,852

Health Care

5,030

Industrials

1,640

Information Technology

653

Materials

2,315

Telecommunication Services

2,032

Utilities

7,540

 

For corporate shareholders, the percentage of investment income (dividend income plus short-term gains, if any) that qualifies for the dividends-received deduction is as follows:

 

Index Fund

Percentage

Consumer Discretionary

100.0%

Consumer Staples

100.0   

Energy

100.0   

Financials

89.6   

Health Care

100.0   

Industrials

100.0   

Information Technology

100.0   

Materials

100.0   

Telecommunication Services

100.0   

Utilities

100.0   

 

 

183

 


Your Fund’s After-Tax Returns

This table presents returns for your fund both before and after taxes. The after-tax returns are shown in two ways: (1) assuming that an investor owned the fund during the entire period and paid taxes on the fund’s distributions, and (2) assuming that an investor paid taxes on the fund’s distributions and sold all shares at the end of each period.

Calculations are based on the highest individual federal income tax and capital gains tax rates in effect at the times of the distributions and the hypothetical sales. State and local taxes were not considered. After-tax returns reflect any qualified dividend income, using actual prior-year figures and estimates for 2007. (In the example, returns after the sale of fund shares may be higher than those assuming no sale. This occurs when the sale would have produced a capital loss. The calculation assumes that the investor received a tax deduction for the loss.)

The table shows returns, based on the net asset value, for ETF Shares only; returns for other share classes will differ. Please note that your actual after-tax returns will depend on your tax situation and may differ from those shown. Also note that if you own the fund in a tax-deferred account, such as an individual retirement account or a 401(k) plan, this information does not apply to you. Such accounts are not subject to current taxes.

Finally, keep in mind that a fund’s performance—whether before or after taxes—does not guarantee future results.

 

Average Annual Total Returns: U.S. Sector Index Funds

 

 

Periods Ended August 31, 2007

 

 

 

One

Since

 

Year

Inception 1

Consumer Discretionary ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

15.69%

5.74%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

15.56   

5.66   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

10.38   

4.93   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Consumer Staples ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

10.38%

9.57%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

10.13   

9.33   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

7.05   

8.21   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Energy ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

26.09%

28.75%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

25.89   

28.59   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

17.17   

25.16   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Financials ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

2.97%

7.01%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

2.59   

6.64   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

2.36   

5.96   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Health Care ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

7.69%

5.31%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

7.51   

5.22   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

5.21   

4.55   

 

 

184

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Industrials ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

24.95%

16.19%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

24.74   

16.04   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

16.45   

14.00   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information Technology ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

23.10%

4.47%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

23.05   

4.39   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

15.07   

3.81   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Materials ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

31.06%

16.68%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

30.75   

16.45   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

20.52   

14.50   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Telecommunication Services ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

24.81%

20.00%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

24.58   

19.71   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

16.40   

17.33   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Utilities ETF

 

 

Returns Before Taxes

14.37%

17.74%

Returns After Taxes on Distributions

13.92   

17.26   

Returns After Taxes on Distributions and Sale of Fund Shares

9.91   

15.41   

 

 

1  For Consumer Discretionary, Consumer Staples, Financials, Health Care, Information Technology, Materials, and Utilities, January 26, 2004; for Energy, Industrials, and Telecommunication Services, September 23, 2004.

 

185

 


About Your Fund’s Expenses

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

A fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. This figure is known as the expense ratio. The examples on this page are intended to help you understand the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period.

The adjacent table illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

• Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The “Ending Account Value” shown is derived from the fund’s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period.”

• Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return. This section is intended to help you compare your fund’s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

Note that the expenses shown in the table are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include the 2% fee on redemptions of shares held for less than one year, nor do they include the account service fee described in the prospectus. If such fees were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not carry a “sales load.”

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

 

186

 


Based on actual fund return

Six months ended August 31, 2007

 

 

Beginning

Ending

Expenses

 

 

Account Value

Account Value

Paid During

Index Fund

Share Class

2/28/2007

8/31/2007

Period 1

Consumer Discretionary

Admiral

$1,000.00

$980.09

$1.30

 

ETF

1,000.00

980.40

1.00

Consumer Staples

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,046.30

$1.29

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,046.78

1.03

Energy

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,217.01

$1.40

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,217.22

1.12

Financials

Admiral

$1,000.00

$944.06

$1.23

 

ETF

1,000.00

944.10

0.98

Health Care

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,035.42

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,035.41

0.97

Industrials

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,114.24

$1.33

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,114.73

1.07

Information Technology

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,122.56

$1.34

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,122.79

1.07

Materials

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,077.14

$1.36

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,077.43

1.10

Telecommunication Services

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,063.54

$1.40

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,063.75

1.14

Utilities

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,019.19

$1.27

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,019.58

1.02

 

 

187

 


Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return

 

 

 

Six months ended August 31, 2007

 

 

Beginning

Ending

Expenses

 

 

Account Value

Account Value

Paid During

Index Fund

Share Class

2/28/2007

8/31/2007

Period 1

Consumer Discretionary

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.89

$1.33

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.20

1.02

Consumer Staples

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.95

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.20

1.02

Energy

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.95

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.20

1.02

Financials

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.95

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.20

1.02

Health Care

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.95

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.25

0.97

Industrials

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.95

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.20

1.02

Information Technology

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.95

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.20

1.02

Materials

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.89

$1.33

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.15

1.07

Telecommunication Services

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.84

$1.38

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.10

1.12

Utilities

Admiral

$1,000.00

$1,023.95

$1.28

 

ETF

1,000.00

1,024.20

1.02

 

1  The calculations are based on expenses incurred in the most recent six-month period. The fund’s annualized six-month expense ratios for that period are 0.26% for the Consumer Discretionary Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.20% for the ETF Shares; 0.25% for the Consumer Staples Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.20% for the ETF Shares; 0.25% for the Energy Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.20% for the ETF Shares; 0.25% for the Financials Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.20% for the ETF Shares; 0.25% for the Health Care Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.19% for the ETF Shares; 0.25% for the Industrials Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.20% for the ETF Shares; 0.25% for the Information Technology Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.20% for the ETF Shares; 0.26% for the Materials Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.21% for the ETF Shares; 0.27% for the Telecommunication Services Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.22% for the ETF Shares; 0.25% for the Utilities Index Fund Admiral Shares and 0.20% for the ETF Shares. The dollar amounts shown as “Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense ratio multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

 

188

 


Trustees Approve Advisory Arrangement

 

The board of trustees of the Vanguard U.S. Sector Index Funds has renewed the funds’ investment advisory arrangement with The Vanguard Group, Inc. Vanguard—through its Quantitative Equity Group—serves as the investment advisor for the funds. The board determined that continuing the funds’ internalized management structure was in the best interests of the funds and their shareholders.

The board based its decision upon an evaluation of the advisor’s investment staff, portfolio management process, and performance. The trustees considered the factors discussed below, among others. However, no single factor determined whether the board approved the agreement. Rather, it was the totality of the circumstances that drove the board’s decision.

Nature, extent, and quality of services

The board considered the quality of the funds’ investment management over both the short and long term, and took into account the organizational depth and stability of the advisor. Vanguard has been managing investments for more than two decades. George U. Sauter, Vanguard managing director and chief investment officer, has been in the investment management business since 1985 and has led the Quantitative Equity Group since 1987. The Quantitative Equity Group adheres to a sound, disciplined investment management process; the team has considerable experience, stability, and depth.

The board concluded that Vanguard’s experience, stability, depth, and performance, among other factors, warranted continuation of the advisory arrangement.

Investment performance

The board considered the short- and long-term performance of the funds, including any periods of outperformance or underperformance of their target benchmarks and peer groups. The board noted that the funds have performed in line with expectations, and that their results have been consistent with their investment strategies. Information about the funds’ most recent performance can be found in the Performance Summary sections of this report.

 

Cost

The funds’ expense ratios were far below the average expense ratios charged by funds in their respective peer groups. The funds’ advisory expense ratios were also well below their peer-group averages. Information about the funds’ expense ratios appears in the About Your Fund’s Expenses section of this report as well as in the Financial Statements sections.

 

The board does not conduct a profitability analysis of Vanguard because of Vanguard’s unique “at-cost” structure. Unlike most other mutual fund management companies, Vanguard is owned by the funds it oversees, and produces “profits” only in the form of reduced expenses for fund shareholders.

The benefit of economies of scale

The board concluded that the funds’ low-cost arrangement with Vanguard ensures that the funds will realize economies of scale as they grow, with the cost to shareholders declining as fund assets increase.

The board will consider whether to renew the advisory arrangement again after a one-year period.

 

189

 


Glossary

 

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. A fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition in the next column). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

Earnings Growth Rate. The average annual rate of growth in earnings over the past five years for the stocks now in a fund.

Expense Ratio. The percentage of a fund’s average net assets used to pay its annual administrative and advisory expenses. These expenses directly reduce returns to investors.

Foreign Holdings. The percentage of a fund represented by stocks or depositary receipts of companies based outside the United States.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

Median Market Cap. An indicator of the size of companies in which a fund invests; the midpoint of market capitalization (market price x shares outstanding) of a fund’s stocks, weighted by the proportion of the fund’s assets invested in each stock. Stocks representing half of the fund’s assets have market capitalizations above the median, and the rest are below it.

 

Price/Book Ratio. The share price of a stock divided by its net worth, or book value, per share. For a fund, the weighted average price/book ratio of the stocks it holds.

Price/Earnings Ratio. The ratio of a stock’s current price to its per-share earnings over the past year. For a fund, the weighted average P/E of the stocks it holds. P/E is an indicator of market expectations about corporate prospects; the higher the P/E, the greater the expectations for a company’s future growth.

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0.

Return on Equity. The annual average rate of return generated by a company during the past five years for each dollar of shareholder’s equity (net income divided by shareholder’s equity). For a fund, the weighted average return on equity for the companies whose stocks it holds.

Short-Term Reserves. The percentage of a fund invested in highly liquid, short-term securities that can be readily converted to cash.

Turnover Rate. An indication of the fund’s trading activity. Funds with high turnover rates incur higher transaction costs and may be more likely to distribute capital gains (which may be taxable to investors). The turnover rate excludes in-kind transactions, which have minimal impact on costs.

Yield. A snapshot of a fund’s income from interest and dividends. The yield, expressed as a percentage of the fund’s net asset value, is based on income earned over the past 30 days and is annualized, or projected forward for the coming year. The index yield is based on the current annualized rate of income provided by securities in the index.

 

190

 


The People Who Govern Your Fund

 

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals.

Our independent board members bring distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service to their task of working with Vanguard officers to establish the policies and oversee the activities of the funds. Among board members’ responsibilities are selecting investment advisors for the funds; monitoring fund operations, performance, and costs; reviewing contracts; nominating and selecting new trustees/directors; and electing Vanguard officers.

Each trustee serves a fund until its termination; or until the trustee’s retirement, resignation, or death; or otherwise as specified in the fund’s organizational documents. Any trustee may be removed at a shareholders’ meeting by a vote representing two-thirds of the net asset value of all shares of the fund together with shares of other Vanguard funds organized within the same trust. The table below shows information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. The mailing address of the trustees and officers is P.O. Box 876, Valley Forge, PA 19482.

 

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer, and Trustee

 

 

John J. Brennan 1

 

Born 1954

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since May 1987;

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer,

Chairman of the Board and

and Director/Trustee of The Vanguard Group, Inc.,

Chief Executive Officer

and of each of the investment companies served

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

by The Vanguard Group.

 

 

Independent Trustees

 

 

 

Charles D. Ellis

 

Born 1937

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since January 2001

Applecore Partners (pro bono ventures in education);

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Senior Advisor to Greenwich Associates (international

 

business strategy consulting); Successor Trustee

 

of Yale University; Overseer of the Stern School of

 

Business at New York University; Trustee of the

 

Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.

 

 

Rajiv L. Gupta

 

Born 1945

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since December 2001 2

Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Board Member

 

of the American Chemistry Council; Director of

 

Tyco International, Ltd. (diversified manufacturing

 

and services) since 2005; Trustee of Drexel

 

University and of the Chemical Heritage

 

Foundation.

 

 

 

 

 


Amy Gutmann

 

Born 1949

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since June 2006

President of the University of Pennsylvania since

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

2004; Professor in the School of Arts and Sciences,

 

Annenberg School for Communication, and

 

Graduate School of Education of the University

 

of Pennsylvania since 2004; Provost (2001–2004)

 

and Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics

 

and the University Center for Human Values

 

(1990–2004), Princeton University; Director of

 

Carnegie Corporation of New York since 2005

 

and of Schuylkill River Development Corporation

 

and Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce

 

since 2004.

 

 

JoAnn Heffernan Heisen

 

Born 1950

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since July 1998

Corporate Vice President and Chief Global Diversity

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Officer since 2006, Vice President and Chief

 

Information Officer (1997–2005), and Member of

 

the Executive Committee of Johnson & Johnson

 

(pharmaceuticals/consumer products); Director of

 

the University Medical Center at Princeton and

 

Women’s Research and Education Institute.

 

 

André F. Perold

 

Born 1952

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since December 2004

George Gund Professor of Finance and Banking,

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Harvard Business School; Senior Associate Dean,

 

Director of Faculty Recruiting, and Chair of Finance

 

Faculty, Harvard Business School; Director and

 

Chairman of UNX, Inc. (equities trading firm) since

 

2003; Chair of the Investment Committee of

 

HighVista Strategies LLC (private investment firm)

 

since 2005.

 

 

Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.

 

Born 1941

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since January 1993

Chairman, President, Chief Executive Officer,

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

and Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (forklift

 

trucks/housewares/lignite); Director of Goodrich

 

Corporation (industrial products/aircraft systems

 

and services).

 

 

J. Lawrence Wilson

 

Born 1936

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Trustee since April 1985

Retired Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Director

 

of Cummins Inc. (diesel engines) and

 

AmerisourceBergen Corp. (pharmaceutical

 

distribution); Trustee of Vanderbilt University

 

and of Culver Educational Foundation.

 

 

Executive Officers 1

 

 

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Born 1957

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Treasurer since July 1998

Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.; Treasurer

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of each of the investment companies served by

 

The Vanguard Group.

 

 

 

 

 


Heidi Stam

 

Born 1956

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years:

Secretary since July 2005

Managing Director of The Vanguard Group, Inc.,

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

since 2006; General Counsel of The Vanguard

 

Group since 2005; Secretary of The Vanguard

 

Group, and of each of the investment companies

 

served by The Vanguard Group, since 2005;

 

Principal of The Vanguard Group (1997–2006).

 

 

 

 

Vanguard Senior Management Team

R. Gregory Barton

Paul A. Heller

Mortimer J. Buckley

F. William McNabb, III

Ralph K. Packard

Kathleen C. Gubanich

Michael S. Miller

George U. Sauter

 

 

Founder

 

John C. Bogle

 

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996

 

 

1  Officers of the funds are “interested persons” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940.

2  December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.

More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information , available from The Vanguard Group.

 

 


 

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P. O. Box 2600

Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

 

Connect with Vanguard ® > www.vanguard.com

 

 

Fund Information > 800-662-7447

Vanguard , Admiral , Connect with Vanguard , Vanguard ETF ,

 

and the ship logo are trademarks of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739

All other marks are the exclusive property of their respective owners.

 

 

Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036

 

 

The funds or securities referred to herein are not sponsored,

Text Telephone for People

endorsed, or promoted by MSCI, and MSCI bears no liability

With Hearing Impairment > 800-952-3335

with respect to any such funds or securities. For any such funds

 

or securities, the prospectus or the Statement of Additional

 

Information contains a more detailed description of the limited

 

relationship MSCI has with The Vanguard Group and any

 

related funds.

This material may be used in conjunction with

 

the offering of shares of any Vanguard fund

 

only if preceded or accompanied by the fund’s

All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc. or

current prospectus.

Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.

 

 

 

You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting guidelines

 

by visiting our website, www.vanguard.com, and searching for

 

“proxy voting guidelines,” or by calling Vanguard at 800-662-2739.

 

They are also available from the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov. In

 

addition, you may obtain a free report on how your fund voted the

 

proxies for securities it owned during the 12 months ended June 30. To

 

get the report, visit either www.vanguard.com or www.sec.gov.

 

 

 

You can review and copy information about your fund at the SEC’s

 

Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C. To find out more about

 

this public service, call the SEC at 202-551-8090. Information about

 

your fund is also available on the SEC’s website, and you can

 

receive copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a request in

 

either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to publicinfo@sec.gov or

 

via regular mail addressed to the Public Reference Section,

 

Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© 2007 The Vanguard Group, Inc.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.

 

 

 

Q4830 102007

 

 

 

 


 

Item 2 : Code of Ethics. The Registrant has adopted a code of ethics that applies to the Registrant’s principal executive officer, principal financial officer, principal accounting officer or controller or persons performing similar functions. The Code of Ethics was amended during the reporting period covered by this report to make certain technical, non-material changes.

 

Item 3 : Audit Committee Financial Expert. The following members of the Audit Committee have been determined by the Registrant’s Board of Trustees to be Audit Committee Financial Experts serving on its Audit Committee, and to be independent: Charles D. Ellis, Rajiv L. Gupta, JoAnn Heffernan Heisen, André F. Perold, Alfred M. Rankin, Jr., and J. Lawrence Wilson.

 

Item 4 : Principal Accountant Fees and Services.

(a)

Audit Fees.

Audit Fees of the Registrant

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007: $300,000

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2006: $272,000

Aggregate Audit Fees of Registered Investment Companies in the Vanguard Group.

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007: $2,835,320

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2006: $2,347,620

(b)  

Audit-Related Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007: $630,400

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2006: $530,000

Includes fees billed in connection with assurance and related services provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

(c)  

Tax Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007: $215,900

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2006: $101,300

Includes fees billed in connection with tax compliance, planning and advice services provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group and related to income and excise taxes.

(d)  

All Other Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007: $0

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2006: $0

Includes fees billed for services related to risk management and privacy matters. Services were provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

(e)     (1) Pre-Approval Policies. The policy of the Registrant’s Audit Committee is to consider and, if appropriate, approve before the principal accountant is engaged for such services, all specific audit and non-audit services provided to: (1) the Registrant; (2) The Vanguard Group, Inc.; (3) other entities

 


controlled by The Vanguard Group, Inc. that provide ongoing services to the Registrant; and (4) other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group. In making a determination, the Audit Committee considers whether the services are consistent with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.

In the event of a contingency situation in which the principal accountant is needed to provide services in between scheduled Audit Committee meetings, the Chairman of the Audit Committee would be called on to consider and, if appropriate, pre-approve audit or permitted non-audit services in an amount sufficient to complete services through the next Audit Committee meeting, and to determine if such services would be consistent with maintaining the accountant’s independence. At the next scheduled Audit Committee meeting, services and fees would be presented to the Audit Committee for formal consideration, and, if appropriate, approval by the entire Audit Committee. The Audit Committee would again consider whether such services and fees are consistent with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.

The Registrant’s Audit Committee is informed at least annually of all audit and non-audit services provided by the principal accountant to the Vanguard complex, whether such services are provided to: (1) the Registrant; (2) The Vanguard Group, Inc.; (3) other entities controlled by The Vanguard Group, Inc. that provide ongoing services to the Registrant; or (4) other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

(2) No percentage of the principal accountant’s fees or services were approved pursuant to the waiver provision of paragraph (c)(7)(i)(C) of Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X.

(f)     For the most recent fiscal year, over 50% of the hours worked under the principal accountant’s engagement were not performed by persons other than full-time, permanent employees of the principal accountant.

(g)  

Aggregate Non-Audit Fees.

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2007: $215,900

Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 2006: $101,300

Includes fees billed for non-audit services provided to the Registrant, The Vanguard Group, Inc., Vanguard Marketing Corporation, and other registered investment companies in the Vanguard Group.

(h)     For the most recent fiscal year, the Audit Committee has determined that the provision of all non-audit services was consistent with maintaining the principal accountant’s independence.

Item 5 : The Registrant is a listed issuer as defined in Rule 10A-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”). The Registrant has a separately-designated standing audit committee established in accordance with Section 3(a)(58)(A) of the Exchange Act. The Registrant’s audit committee members are: Charles D. Ellis, Rajiv L. Gupta, Amy Gutmann, JoAnn Heffernan Heisen, André F. Perold, Alfred M. Rankin, Jr., and J. Lawrence Wilson.

 

Item 6 : Not Applicable.

 

Item 7 : Not Applicable.

 

Item 8 : Not Applicable.

 

Item 9 : Not Applicable.

 

Item 10 : Not Applicable.

 

Item 11 : Controls and Procedures.

 


(a) Disclosure Controls and Procedures. The Principal Executive and Financial Officers concluded that the Registrant's Disclosure Controls and Procedures are effective based on their evaluation of the Disclosure Controls and Procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report.

(b) Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. There were no significant changes in Registrant’s Internal Control Over Financial Reporting or in other factors that could significantly affect this control subsequent to the date of the evaluation, including any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.

 

Item 12 : Exhibits.

 

 

(a)

Code of Ethics.

 

(b)

Certifications.

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 

 

VANGUARD WORLD FUNDS

BY: /s/ HEIDI STAM
(HEIDI STAM)
JOHN J. BRENNAN*
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

Date: October 18, 2007

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

 

VANGUARD WORLD FUNDS

BY: /s/ HEIDI STAM
(HEIDI STAM)
JOHN J. BRENNAN*
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

 

Date: October 18, 2007

 


VANGUARD WORLD FUNDS

BY: /s/ HEIDI STAM
(HEIDI STAM)
THOMAS J. HIGGINS*
TREASURER

 

Date: October 18, 2007

 

*By Power of Attorney. See File Number 333-145624, filed on August 22, 2007. Incorporated by Reference.