Fund overview & performance

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Canada Life Mutual Funds

CAN Core Balanced Growth Plus 100/100 (PP)

January 31, 2026

A fund that aims to find balance between long-term growth and consistent income.

Is this fund right for you?

  • You want your money to grow over the longer term.
  • You want to invest mainly in Canadian and foreign equity funds of Canada Life with a smaller portion in its Canadian fixed-income funds.
  • You're comfortable with a low to moderate level of risk.

RISK RATING

Risk Rating: Low to Moderate

How is the fund invested? (as of December 31, 2025)

Asset allocation (%)
Name Percent
Canadian Equity 39.0
Domestic Bonds 27.9
US Equity 18.9
International Equity 10.3
Cash and Equivalents 2.5
Foreign Bonds 0.7
Income Trust Units 0.7
Geographic allocation (%)
Name Percent
Canada 68.9
United States 19.8
United Kingdom 1.8
Ireland 1.3
Japan 1.3
France 1.2
Switzerland 0.9
Netherlands 0.7
Germany 0.5
Other 3.6
Sector allocation (%)
Name Percent
Fixed Income 28.6
Financial Services 19.5
Technology 11.3
Energy 7.2
Basic Materials 6.8
Consumer Services 4.7
Industrial Services 4.0
Industrial Goods 3.5
Healthcare 3.4
Other 11.0

Growth of $10,000 (since inception)

Period:

For the period 07/09/2018 through 01/31/2026 tr.with $10,000 CAD investment, The value of the investment would be $17,264

Fund details (as of December 31, 2025)

Top holdings (%)
Top holdings Percent (%)
Canada Government 3.25% 01-Jun-2035 3.9
Royal Bank of Canada 3.7
Toronto-Dominion Bank 2.4
Ontario Province 3.95% 02-Dec-2035 1.5
Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd 1.4
Bank of Montreal 1.4
Shopify Inc Cl A 1.4
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce 1.4
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd 1.3
Microsoft Corp 1.3
Total allocation in top holdings 19.7
Portfolio characteristics
Portfolio characteristics Value
Standard deviation 7.38%
Dividend yield 2.04%
Yield to maturity 3.85%
Duration (years) 7.39%
Coupon 4.06%
Average credit rating A+
Average market cap (million) $571,847.1

Understanding returns

Annual compound returns (%)

Short term
1 MO 3 MO YTD 1 YR
1.12 9.00 1.12 12.30
Long term
3 YR 5 YR 10 YR INCEPTION
11.51 9.05 - 7.49

Calendar year returns (%)

2025 - 2022
2025 2024 2023 2022
14.49 14.11 9.91 -8.28
2021 - 2018
2021 2020 2019 2018
14.75 5.81 14.64 -

Range of returns over five years (August 01, 2018 - January 31, 2026)

Best return / Worst return
Best return Best period end date Worst return
Worst period end date
10.28% Oct 2025 4.04% Sep 2023
Summary
Average return % of periods with positive returns Number of positive periods Number of negative periods
7.17% 100 31 0

Q4 2025 Fund Commentary

Commentary and opinions are provided by Portfolio Solutions Group.

Market commentary

Global equities gained over the fourth quarter of 2025 and outperformed global bonds, which posted a small gain (all returns are in Canadian-dollar terms on a total-return basis). Stocks gained in large part due to the U.S. Federal Reserve Board (Fed) lowering interest rates over the quarter. However, returns were muted over concerns that artificial intelligence (AI) spending may be entering bubble territory.

The U.S. equity market advanced, posting a low-single-digit return. The health care sector was the strongest-performing sector. Canadian equities posted a gain and outperformed U.S. equities, getting a strong performance from the materials sector. EAFE equities advanced, underperforming Canadian equities but outperforming U.S. equities. Equities in the U.K. and Japan contributed to the performance of EAFE equities. Emerging markets equities also gained and slightly underperformed their developed market peers, with equities in Taiwan and India contributing to performance.

The FTSE Canada Universe Bond Index declined over the quarter. As government yields moved higher, government bond prices declined. Government bonds underperformed corporate bonds, which posted a small gain. Corporate bond prices benefited from narrowing credit spreads (the difference in yield between corporate and government bonds). Communication services sector bonds posted the largest increase in the corporate bonds sleeve. High-yield bond prices rose on a total-return basis and outperformed investment-grade corporate bonds.

The Bank of Canada, the Fed and the Bank of England lowered their policy interest rates. The European Central Bank held steady on its key interest rates, while the Bank of Japan raised its policy interest rate. The yield on 10-year Government of Canada bonds rose from 3.18% to 3.43%. Sovereign bond yields in the U.S., the U.K., Germany and Japan also increased.

Performance

An allocation to Canadian Core Plus Bond contributed to performance because of its overweight to credit given tightening credit spreads and a higher running yield. An allocation to U.S. Value Stock also contributed to performance.

An allocation to Canadian Focused Dividend detracted from performance because of its allocation to, and stock selection in, the materials, utilities, energy and information technology sectors. U.S. Growth Fund also detracted from performance because of stock selection in the industrials, information technology, financials and materials sectors. An allocation to Canadian Equity also detracted from performance.

Portfolio activity

The portfolio manager did not make any change to the Portfolio during the quarter.

Outlook

In the portfolio manager's view, the final quarter of 2025 reinforced a stark divergence in global growth. The U.S. economy remains the anchor, with AI?driven productivity gains offsetting softer labour trends, while Canada, Europe and the U.K. continue to hover near stagnation.

Looking ahead, five forces shape the path into 2026. First, AI is delivering real?economy benefits even as equity leadership narrows and valuations stretch, increasing the risk that equity weakness spills into credit and tightens broader financial conditions. Second, China is stuck in low growth and persistent deflation, with policy focused on self?sufficiency and manufacturing scale over household demand, which exports disinflation through goods prices and keeps domestic yields anchored. Third, global trade remains fragmented as industrial policy, investment controls and regional supply chains reshape flows. This is an especially important watchpoint for Canada given sensitivity to U.S. policy and the North American trade framework review. Fourth, central banks are easing monetary policy cautiously, modestly in the U.S. and Canada, with more room in Europe and the U.K., while Japan may continue gradual tightening. Central banks may lean on liquidity operations or slower balance?sheet runoff to stabilize bond markets if conditions turn disorderly. Fifth, fiscal pressures are building, making policy credibility and refinancing capacity decisive for market pricing.

We believe equity markets still reflect optimism, particularly in the U.S., where AI?linked earnings support elevated multiples, but concentration and sentiment extremes raise caution flags. Commodities remain mixed, with structural demand supporting gold and oil softer on ample supply. Private?credit growth and funding?market functioning warrant close attention as potential transmission channels for stress.

Our focus remains resilience over precision, balancing U.S. exposure with broad diversification, maintaining liquidity and incorporating alternative income to navigate an environment where risks build quietly but can break suddenly.

We keep core U.S. equity exposure, while reducing dependence on narrow leadership through global diversification and multi?factor strategies, and by tilting toward domestic?demand and structural?growth themes less reliant on global trade flows. In fixed income, we pair high?quality duration with alternative income, such as private credit and mortgages, for yield and duration management, while elevating underwriting standards and liquidity buffers given potential vulnerabilities in private credit and the possibility of disorderly interest-rate moves.

Liquidity and flexibility remain central, allowing portfolios to absorb shocks tied to AI investment cycles, fiscal credibility shifts, bond?market volatility or trade?policy adjustments. Key risk monitors include equity?to?credit spillover, upside inflation surprises that slow the pace of easing, bond?market functioning, North American trade developments and fiscal signalling in high?refinancing jurisdictions.

A constructive upside remains in view. If AI?driven productivity gains broaden across services and diffuse internationally, inflation pressures would ease, real incomes would strengthen and fiscal dynamics would improve, an important scenario to capture in allocation and rebalancing plans even if it is not the base case.

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CAN Core Balanced Growth Plus 100/100 (PP)

CAN Core Balanced Growth Plus 100/100 (PP)

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ID Effective date Price ($) Income Capital gain Total distribution