Vanguard STAR Fund

The Vanguard STAR fund (VGSTX) is a balanced fund composed of 60% stocks, 40% bonds. Vanguard notes that it is "the only Vanguard fund that has a required minimum investment of $1,000"—most have a minimum of $3,000, some even higher. Therefore, it is sometimes suggested in the Bogleheads forum as a suitable mutual fund for investors who are just getting started and cannot meet a $3,000 minimum.

The STAR fund is a fund-of-funds. The STAR fund invests in eleven Vanguard mutual funds, all of which are actively managed. It has an expense ratio of 0.34%, typical of Vanguard's expense ratios for its active funds and low by general industry standards, but high compared to index funds, and no Admiral shares are offered. As a 60/40 balanced fund, it might be compared to Vanguard Balanced Index Fund, Vanguard Wellington Fund, Vanguard LifeStrategy Moderate Growth Fund, and whichever Vanguard Target Retirement fund has close to a similar allocation--as of 2011, Target Retirement 2015.

It was created in 1985. In 1987 the New York Times noted
 * In the past two years, a number of firms have revived the 1960's fund-of-funds approach, in which a money manager invests in a variety of mutual funds, rather than directly in stocks or bonds... The Vanguard Group was one of the first organizations to revive the fund-of-funds concept when it offered its STAR Fund, which invests in shares of Vanguard's other mutual funds.

According to posters in the Bogleheads forum, STAR is an acronym for "Special Tax-Advantaged Retirement," although it was never limited to retirement accounts; it is one of a group of seven Vanguard funds each of which is formally a "portfolio" within a single "trust," an arcane fact of no practical importance.

Links to Bogleheads' Forum discussions
[url=http://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=68637]Vanguard STAR® Funds, PLURAL?[/url]