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Multi-Asset / Allocation

2015 Target Date Retirement Strategy (CGTD2015)


  • STRATEGY ASSETS ($M)
    $5,354.7
    As of 6/30/25
  • Inception date
    2/28/07
  • YTD return (gross/net %)1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
    7.77/7.58
    As of 6/30/25
  • Benchmark
    S & P Target Date 2015 Index tooltip: The S&P Target Date Indexes are a series of unmanaged indexes composed of different allocations to stocks, bonds, and short-term investments that reflect reductions in potential risk over time.
  • PORTFOLIO TURNOVER (%) tooltip: Portfolio turnover is the portion of a portfolio's holdings sold and replaced with new securities annually, usually expressed as a percentage of the portfolio's total assets. For example, a portfolio with a turnover of 25% holds assets for an average of about four years, while a portfolio with a turnover of 100% holds assets for one year.
    6
  • Yield to worst tooltip: Lower of Yield to Maturity or the bond's total return if put or call options are exercised prior to maturity but no default occurs. 11
    4.7/4.3
    As of 6/30/25
  • EFFECTIVE DURATION tooltip: Effective duration is a duration calculation for bonds that takes into account that expected cash flows will fluctuate as interest rates change.
    5.0
    As of 6/30/25
  • Total holdings
    2,810
    As of 6/30/25
  • Committee Members7
    8

Overview

Key information

Investment Objectives
Depending on the proximity to its target date, the strategy will seek to achieve the following objectives to varying degrees: growth, income and conservation of capital. The strategy will increasingly emphasize income and conservation of capital by investing a greater portion of its assets in bond, equity income and balanced strategies as it passes its target date. In this way, the strategy seeks to balance total return and stability over time.

TDSC_N
Target Date Solutions Committee7

Portfolio managers' years of experience are as of the previous calendar year end.
Michelle Black
30 Years of Investment Industry Experience
23 Years with Capital Group
David Hoag
37 Years of Investment Industry Experience
33 Years with Capital Group
Samir Mathur
32 Years of Investment Industry Experience
12 Years with Capital Group
Raj Paramaguru
20 Years of Investment Industry Experience
12 Years with Capital Group

Returns

returns

Investment results1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

Total returns for periods ended 6/30/25 (%)
  • Gross
  • Net
  • Index
Returns table
STRATEGY1M 3M YTD1Y3Y5Y7Y10Y15YLifetime
Index data refers to the S & P Target Date 2015 Index tooltip: The S&P Target Date Indexes are a series of unmanaged indexes composed of different allocations to stocks, bonds, and short-term investments that reflect reductions in potential risk over time..
Strategy inception: 02/28/2007. Index lifetime is based on inception date of the strategy.
Returns greater than one year are annualized.

Success metrics4

As of 6/30/25 (updated quarterly)
0
Gross success rate (%) tooltip: The success rate is the percentage of time when the return of a portfolio is greater than the return of its respective index. It is calculated by dividing the number of periods the portfolio outpaced the index by the total number of periods.
100
0
Net success rate (%) tooltip: The success rate is the percentage of time when the return of a portfolio is greater than the return of its respective index. It is calculated by dividing the number of periods the portfolio outpaced the index by the total number of periods.
100
Average rolling return (gross/net %) tooltip: Average rolling return provides the average return for the portfolio across all periods within the specified timeframe.6.33/5.96
Average rolling Index return (gross/net %) tooltip: Average rolling index return provides the average return for the index across all periods within the specified timeframe.5.40/5.40
Average outpaced rolling return (gross/net %) tooltip: Average outpaced rolling return is the average percentage the portfolio outpaced the index in periods where the portfolio return was greater than the index for the specified timeframe.1.74/1.62
Average lagging rolling return (gross/net %) tooltip: Average lagged rolling return is the average percentage the portfolio lagged the index in periods where the portfolio return was less than the index for the specified timeframe.—/-1.41
Average excess rolling return (gross/net %) tooltip: Average excess rolling return is the average of the excess return between the portfolio and the index across all periods for the specified timeframe.0.93/0.56
Index data refers to the S & P Target Date 2015 Index tooltip: The S&P Target Date Indexes are a series of unmanaged indexes composed of different allocations to stocks, bonds, and short-term investments that reflect reductions in potential risk over time..

Risk measures4, 10

As of 6/30/25 (updated monthly)
Standard deviation
Standard deviation tooltip: Annualized standard deviation (based on monthly returns) is a common measure of absolute volatility that tells how returns over time have varied from the mean. A lower number signifies lower volatility.
CGTD2015 (gross/net %)8.57/8.57
S & P Target Date 2015 Index tooltip: The S&P Target Date Indexes are a series of unmanaged indexes composed of different allocations to stocks, bonds, and short-term investments that reflect reductions in potential risk over time.
Sharpe ratio
Sharpe ratio tooltip: Sharpe ratios use standard deviation and excess return to determine reward per unit of risk. The higher the number, the better the portfolio's historical risk-adjusted performance.
CGTD2015 (gross/net %)0.52/0.47
S & P Target Date 2015 Index tooltip: The S&P Target Date Indexes are a series of unmanaged indexes composed of different allocations to stocks, bonds, and short-term investments that reflect reductions in potential risk over time.0.44
R-squared (gross/net) tooltip: R-squared is a measure of the correlation between a particular return and that of a benchmark index. A measure of 100 indicates that all of the return can be explained by movements in the benchmark. Generally the higher the R-squared measure, the more reliable the beta measurement will be.98/98
Alpha (gross/net) tooltip: Alpha is a measure of the difference between a portfolio's actual returns and its expected results, given its level of risk as measured by beta. A positive alpha figure indicates the portfolio has performed better than its beta would predict. In contrast, a negative alpha indicates the portfolio has underperformed, given the expectations established by beta.0.58/0.23
Beta (gross/net) tooltip: Beta relatively measures sensitivity to market movements over a specified period of time. The beta of the market (represented by the benchmark index) is equal to 1; a beta higher than 1 implies that a return was more volatile than the market. A beta lower than 1 suggests that a return was less volatile than the market. Generally the higher the R-squared measure, the more reliable the beta measurement will be. 1.01/1.01
Information ratio (gross/net) tooltip: The information ratio represents the excess return generated (over the market) per unit of relative risk as measured by tracking error.0.54/0.26
Downside capture ratio (gross/net) tooltip: Ratio of a fund/model/composite's return during periods when the index was down, divided by the return of the index during those periods. For example, during periods when the index was down, a down-capture ratio greater than 100 indicates the fund/model/composite produced a lower return than the index.102/103
Upside capture ratio (gross/net) tooltip: Ratio of a fund/model/composite's return during periods when the index was up, divided by the return of the index during those periods. For example, an up-capture ratio greater than 100 indicates the fund/model/composite produced a higher return than the index during periods when the index was up.105/104
Tracking error (gross/net %) tooltip: The tracking error is the standard deviation of the difference between the returns of an investment and its benchmark.1.34/1.34
S&P 500 correlation (gross/net) tooltip: Correlation describes the strength of the association between a return and a benchmark. Correlation is shown on a scale from 1 to -1. The higher the positive correlation, the more closely the return and the benchmark moved relative to one another. The lower the negative correlation, the more the return and the benchmark diverged from one another.0.89/0.89
MSCI ACWI correlation (gross/net) tooltip: Correlation describes the strength of the association between a return and a benchmark. Correlation is shown on a scale from 1 to -1. The higher the positive correlation, the more closely the return and the benchmark moved relative to one another. The lower the negative correlation, the more the return and the benchmark diverged from one another.0.95/0.95
Data calculated against the S & P Target Date 2015 Index tooltip: The S&P Target Date Indexes are a series of unmanaged indexes composed of different allocations to stocks, bonds, and short-term investments that reflect reductions in potential risk over time.unless noted otherwise.

Portfolio Composition

Current allocations8

Equity19.6
Fixed Income50.0
Actual Allocations
Equity19.6
American Mutual5.9
World Growth and Income4.8
Washington Mutual Investors4.0
Investment Company of America3.0
Fundamental Investors1.9
Fixed Income50.0
U.S. Intermediate-Term Fixed Income9.2
U.S. Core Fixed Income9.1
U.S. Inflation Linked7.9
U.S. Mortgage6.1
U.S. Short-Term Fixed Income5.2
Multi-Sector Fixed Income4.0
Core Plus Total Return4.0
U.S. High Yield2.7
Global Fixed Income1.8
U.S. Government0.0
As of 6/30/25 (updated monthly)
Equity19.6
Fixed Income50.0
Target Allocations
Equity19.6
American Mutual5.9
World Growth and Income4.8
Washington Mutual Investors4.0
Investment Company of America3.0
Fundamental Investors1.9
Fixed Income50.0
U.S. Intermediate-Term Fixed Income9.2
U.S. Core Fixed Income9.1
U.S. Inflation Linked7.9
U.S. Mortgage6.1
U.S. Short-Term Fixed Income5.3
Core Plus Total Return4.0
Multi-Sector Fixed Income3.9
U.S. High Yield2.7
Global Fixed Income1.8
U.S. Government0.0
As of 6/30/25 (updated quarterly)
The allocations shown are as of the time of publication, and are subject to the oversight committee's discretion. The investment adviser anticipates assets will be invested within a range that deviates no more than 10% above or below the allocations shown in the prospectus/characteristics statement. Underlying funds may be added or removed during the year. Visit capitalgroup.com for current allocations.

Asset mix8

As of 6/30/25 (updated monthly)
U.S. Equities29.8%
Non-U.S. Equities10%
U.S Bonds49.5%
Non-U.S. Bonds5.5%
Cash, Equivalents & Other95.2%
Asset mix table
U.S. Equities
29.8%
Non-U.S. Equities
10.0%
U.S Bonds
49.5%
Non-U.S. Bonds
5.5%
Cash, Equivalents & Other 9
5.2%

Key statistics

As of 6/30/25 (updated monthly)
Key statistics
CGTD2015
Yield to worst tooltip: Lower of Yield to Maturity or the bond's total return if put or call options are exercised prior to maturity but no default occurs. (gross/net %)11
4.7/4.3
Yield to maturity tooltip: A bond's total return if held to maturity and no default occurs or options are exercised. Assumes coupons are paid on time and accounts for their present value. Assumes principal is returned at maturity. (gross/net %)11
4.7/4.4
Average coupon tooltip: The average coupon is the weighted average coupon rate of all the bond holdings. (gross/net %)11
4.1/3.7
Effective duration tooltip: Effective duration is a duration calculation for bonds that takes into account that expected cash flows will fluctuate as interest rates change. (years)
5.0
Spread duration tooltip: A measure of fixed income securities' sensitivity to spread movement. (years)
2.7
Option adjusted spread tooltip: Option-adjusted spread is a yield-spread calculation used to value securities with embedded options. (bps)
73.9
Duration times spread tooltip: A measure of fixed income securities' spread exposure, taking into account both spread duration and credit spread exposure. (bps)
284

Portfolio exposures8

As of 6/30/25 (updated monthly)
Rating exposure
CGTD2015 (%)
Equities39.6
Convertibles0.3
AAA/Aaa5.9
AA/Aa31.7
A5.5
BBB/Baa5.3
BB/Ba3.8
B1.7
CCC & Below0.5
Unrated1.1
Other130.0
Cash & equivalents124.5

Resources


For institutional investors and registered investment advisors only. Not for use with the public.
Figures shown are past results and are not predictive of results in future periods. Current and future results may be lower or higher than those shown. Investing for short periods makes losses more likely. Prices and returns will vary, so investors may lose money. View strategy returns.
Investments are not FDIC-insured, nor are they deposits of or guaranteed by a bank or any other entity, so they may lose value.
Important information about objectives, risks, charges and expenses for collective investment trusts is contained in the Characteristics Statement, which can be obtained from Capital Group or participants' plan provider or employer.
Data based on the representative account of the Capital Group 2015 Target Date Retirement Composite, unless otherwise noted.
Bond ratings, which typically range from AAA/Aaa (highest) to D (lowest), are assigned by credit rating agencies such as Standard & Poor's, Moody's and/or Fitch, as an indication of an issuer's creditworthiness. For most funds, unless otherwise noted below, if agency ratings differ, a security will be considered to have received the highest of those ratings, consistent with applicable investment policies. Securities in the Unrated category have not been rated by any of the rating agencies referenced above; however, the investment adviser performs its own credit analysis and assigns comparable ratings that are used for compliance with applicable investment policies.
Investments in mortgage-related securities involve additional risks, such as prepayment risk.
The use of derivatives involves a variety of risks, which may be different from, or greater than, the risks associated with investing in traditional securities, such as stocks and bonds.
Lower rated bonds are subject to greater fluctuations in value and risk of loss of income and principal than higher rated bonds.
The return of principal for bond portfolios and for portfolios with significant underlying bond holdings is not guaranteed. Investments are subject to the same interest rate, inflation and credit risks associated with the underlying bond holdings.
While not directly correlated to changes in interest rates, the values of inflation-linked bonds generally fluctuate in response to changes in real interest rates and may experience greater losses than other debt securities with similar durations.
Investing outside the United States involves risks, such as currency fluctuations, periods of illiquidity and price volatility. These risks may be heightened in connection with investments in developing countries.
Allocations may not achieve investment objectives. The portfolios' risks are related to the risks of the underlying funds as described herein, in proportion to their allocations.
Although the target date portfolios are managed for investors on a projected retirement date time frame, the allocation strategy does not guarantee that investors' retirement goals will be met. Investment professionals manage the portfolio, moving it from a more growth-oriented strategy to a more income-oriented focus as the target date gets closer. The target date is the year that corresponds roughly to the year in which an investor is assumed to retire and begin taking withdrawals. Investment professionals continue to manage each portfolio for approximately 30 years after it reaches its target date.
There have been periods when the results lagged the index(es) and/or average(s). The indexes are unmanaged and, therefore, have no expenses. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.
Each S&P Index ("Index") shown is a product of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and/or its affiliates and has been licensed for use by Capital Group. Copyright © 2025 S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, a division of S&P Global, and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Redistribution or reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited without written permission of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC.
All Capital Group trademarks mentioned are owned by The Capital Group Companies, Inc., an affiliated company or fund. All other company and product names mentioned are the property of their respective companies.
Portfolios are managed, so holdings will change. Holdings mentioned and their results are not representative of other holdings in the portfolio or the portfolio's results.
Totals may not reconcile due to rounding.
Investment results assume all distributions are reinvested and reflect applicable fees and expenses.
1.
YTD (year-to-date return): For the period from January 1 of the current year to the date shown or from inception date if first offered after January 1 of the current year.
2.
When applicable, returns for less than one year are not annualized, but calculated as cumulative total returns.
3.
Gross composite results do not reflect the deduction of fees and expenses; results would have been lower if they were subject to fees and expenses.
4.
Data reflect the Capital Group 2015 Target Date Retirement Composite.
5.
Composite net results are calculated by deducting from the gross results a model fee equal to the highest management fees for applicable composite members. Actual fees may vary depending on, among other things, the applicable fee schedule and portfolio size.
6.
Composite returns are net of withholding taxes on dividends, interest and capital gains. Actual withholding tax rates vary according to the country of denomination and tax status of each portfolio.
7.
Reflects current team at the time of publication. Years of experience in investment industry and Capital Group are as of the most recent year end.
8.
Figures are based on holdings of the underlying funds, if applicable, as of date shown.
9.
May include investments in money market or similar funds managed by a third party or similar investments managed by the investment adviser or its affiliates that are not offered to the public.
10.
Risk measures net of fees are calculated using a model fee equal to the highest management fee for applicable composite members deducted from the gross results, which do not reflect the deduction of fees and expenses.
11.
Based on the representative account for the applicable composite. Refer to composite results disclosures for descriptions of fees used to calculate yield measures shown. Defaults by fixed income issuers would result in different, lower realized yields. Past results are not predictive of results in future periods.
12.
Includes cash, short-term securities, other assets less liabilities, and may include accrued income. It may also include investments in money market or similar funds managed by the investment adviser or its affiliates that are not offered to the public.
13.
Rating exposure ”Other” may include equities, rights, warrants, preferreds, convertibles, forwards and FX (foreign exchange) options.
Use of this website is intended for U.S. residents only.
Collective Investment Trusts (CITs) are available for investment only to certain qualified retirement plans. Capital Group CITs are maintained by Capital Bank and Trust Company (“trustee”), which has retained an affiliate to serve as investment adviser to the trustee.
Advisory services offered through Capital Research and Management Company (CRMC) and its RIA affiliates.
Average outpaced rolling return
Average outpaced rolling return is the average percentage the portfolio outpaced the index in periods where the portfolio return was greater than the index for the specified timeframe.
Effective duration
Effective duration is a duration calculation for bonds that takes into account that expected cash flows will fluctuate as interest rates change.
Average coupon
The average coupon is the weighted average coupon rate of all the bond holdings.
Index Correlation
Correlation describes the strength of the association between a return and a benchmark. Correlation is shown on a scale from 1 to -1. The higher the positive correlation, the more closely the return and the benchmark moved relative to one another. The lower the negative correlation, the more the return and the benchmark diverged from one another.
Beta
Beta relatively measures sensitivity to market movements over a specified period of time. The beta of the market (represented by the benchmark index) is equal to 1; a beta higher than 1 implies that a return was more volatile than the market. A beta lower than 1 suggests that a return was less volatile than the market. Generally the higher the R-squared measure, the more reliable the beta measurement will be.
Success Rate
The success rate is the percentage of time when the return of a portfolio is greater than the return of its respective index. It is calculated by dividing the number of periods the portfolio outpaced the index by the total number of periods.
Option adjusted spread
Option-adjusted spread is a yield-spread calculation used to value securities with embedded options.
Information ratio
The information ratio represents the excess return generated (over the market) per unit of relative risk as measured by tracking error.
Average rolling return
Average rolling return provides the average return for the portfolio across all periods within the specified timeframe.
Average lagging rolling return
Average lagged rolling return is the average percentage the portfolio lagged the index in periods where the portfolio return was less than the index for the specified timeframe.
Bond Statistic Net Coupon
The average coupon is the weighted average coupon rate of all the bond holdings.
Standard deviation
Annualized standard deviation (based on monthly returns) is a common measure of absolute volatility that tells how returns over time have varied from the mean. A lower number signifies lower volatility.
Total Return Swap
A total return swap (TRS) is a contract between a total return payer and total return receiver. The payer usually pays the total return of agreed security to the receiver and receives a fixed/floating rate payment in exchange. The agreed (or referenced) security can be a bond, index, equity, loan, or commodity.
Credit Default Swap Index
The credit default swap index (CDX) is a benchmark financial instrument made up of credit default swaps (CDS) that have been issued by North American or emerging markets companies. Credit default swaps act like insurance policies offering a buyer protection in case of the borrower's default.
Upside capture ratio
Ratio of a fund/model/composite's return during periods when the index was up, divided by the return of the index during those periods. For example, an up-capture ratio greater than 100 indicates the fund/model/composite produced a higher return than the index during periods when the index was up.
Bond Statistic Net Yield to Maturity
A bond's total return if held to maturity and no default occurs or options are exercised. Assumes coupons are paid on time and accounts for their present value. Assumes principal is returned at maturity.
Duration times spread
A measure of fixed income securities' spread exposure, taking into account both spread duration and credit spread exposure.
Currency Weighting Short Breakdown
The exposure to a specific currency before taking into consideration any forward currency contracts that may increase or decrease that currency's exposure.
Spread duration
A measure of fixed income securities' sensitivity to spread movement.
Downside capture ratio
Ratio of a fund/model/composite's return during periods when the index was down, divided by the return of the index during those periods. For example, during periods when the index was down, a down-capture ratio greater than 100 indicates the fund/model/composite produced a lower return than the index.
Tracking error
The tracking error is the standard deviation of the difference between the returns of an investment and its benchmark.
Average rolling index return
Average rolling index return provides the average return for the index across all periods within the specified timeframe.
Bond Statistic Net Yield to Worst
Lower of Yield to Maturity or the bond's total return if put or call options are exercised prior to maturity but no default occurs.
Average excess rolling return
Average excess rolling return is the average of the excess return between the portfolio and the index across all periods for the specified timeframe.
Yield to worst
Lower of Yield to Maturity or the bond's total return if put or call options are exercised prior to maturity but no default occurs.
Sharpe ratio
Sharpe ratios use standard deviation and excess return to determine reward per unit of risk. The higher the number, the better the portfolio's historical risk-adjusted performance.
S&P Target Date 2015 Index
The S&P Target Date Indexes are a series of unmanaged indexes composed of different allocations to stocks, bonds, and short-term investments that reflect reductions in potential risk over time.
Alpha
Alpha is a measure of the difference between a portfolio's actual returns and its expected results, given its level of risk as measured by beta. A positive alpha figure indicates the portfolio has performed better than its beta would predict. In contrast, a negative alpha indicates the portfolio has underperformed, given the expectations established by beta.
Yield to maturity
A bond's total return if held to maturity and no default occurs or options are exercised. Assumes coupons are paid on time and accounts for their present value. Assumes principal is returned at maturity.
R-squared
R-squared is a measure of the correlation between a particular return and that of a benchmark index. A measure of 100 indicates that all of the return can be explained by movements in the benchmark. Generally the higher the R-squared measure, the more reliable the beta measurement will be.
Portfolio turnover
Portfolio turnover is the portion of a portfolio's holdings sold and replaced with new securities annually, usually expressed as a percentage of the portfolio's total assets. For example, a portfolio with a turnover of 25% holds assets for an average of about four years, while a portfolio with a turnover of 100% holds assets for one year.