Fund overview & performance

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Canada Life Mutual Funds

CAN Balanced Income 75/100 (P)

April 30, 2026

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

Is this fund right for you?

  • You want investment income and you want your money to grow over time.
  • You want to invest in Canadian fixed-income funds (target: no more than 45 per cent) and Canadian and foreign equity 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 March 31, 2026)

Asset allocation (%)
Name Percent
Domestic Bonds 42.4
Canadian Equity 33.0
US Equity 13.8
International Equity 8.3
Foreign Bonds 1.8
Cash and Equivalents 0.8
Other -0.1
Geographic allocation (%)
Name Percent
Canada 76.2
United States 13.9
Multi-National 8.3
Philippines 0.1
Other 1.5
Sector allocation (%)
Name Percent
Exchange Traded Fund 55.0
Fixed Income 44.2
Cash and Cash Equivalent 0.8

Growth of $10,000 (since inception)

Period:

For the period 07/09/2018 through 04/30/2026 tr.with $10,000 CAD investment, The value of the investment would be $16,416

Fund details (as of March 31, 2026)

Top holdings (%)
Top holdings Percent (%)
Canada Life Canadian Large Cap Equity Index ETF 33.0
Canada Life US Large Cap Equity Index ETF 13.8
Canada Life International Equity Index ETF 8.3
Canada Government 1.25% 01-Jun-2030 1.5
Ontario Province 4.60% 02-Jun-2039 1.0
Canada Government 0.50% 01-Dec-2030 1.0
Canada Government 2.00% 01-Dec-2051 0.8
Canada Government 3.00% 01-Jun-2034 0.8
Canada Government 2.75% 01-Dec-2055 0.7
Canada Government 1.00% 01-Jun-2027 0.6
Total allocation in top holdings 61.5
Portfolio characteristics
Portfolio characteristics Value
Standard deviation 7.13%
Dividend yield -
Yield to maturity 3.67%
Duration (years) 6.85%
Coupon 3.24%
Average credit rating AA
Average market cap (million) -

Understanding returns

Annual compound returns (%)

Short term
1 MO 3 MO YTD 1 YR
2.49 3.75 3.07 15.96
Long term
3 YR 5 YR 10 YR INCEPTION
10.57 6.20 - 6.55

Calendar year returns (%)

2025 - 2022
2025 2024 2023 2022
12.44 12.56 9.56 -12.00
2021 - 2018
2021 2020 2019 2018
10.64 9.46 14.82 -

Range of returns over five years (August 01, 2018 - April 30, 2026)

Best return / Worst return
Best return Best period end date Worst return
Worst period end date
7.87% Mar 2025 3.31% Sep 2023
Summary
Average return % of periods with positive returns Number of positive periods Number of negative periods
5.67% 100 34 0

Q1 2026 Fund Commentary

Commentary and opinions are provided by Portfolio Solutions Group.

Market commentary

Global equities declined over the first quarter of 2026 and underperformed global bonds, which posted a small loss. (All returns are in Canadian-dollar terms on a total-return basis.) Global equities lost momentum as tensions in the Middle East escalated, causing economic uncertainty. The conflict largely closed off the Strait of Hormuz to oil shipments, which sent oil prices higher, raising concerns about inflation and whether central banks will need to lift interest rates this year.

The U.S. equity market declined, posting a low single-digit loss. The financials sector was the weakest-performing sector. Canadian equities increased and outperformed U.S. equities, getting robust performance from the energy sector. EAFE equities posted a small gain, underperforming Canadian equities but outperforming U.S. equities. Equities in the U.K. and Japan performed well. Emerging markets equities also gained and outperformed their developed market peers, with equities in Brazil and Mexico performing well.

The FTSE Canada Universe Bond Index posted a total return of 0.2% over the quarter. Government bond prices increased, while government yields edged higher. Government bonds outperformed corporate bonds, which posted a small gain. Corporate bond prices were hindered from widening credit spreads (the difference in yield between corporate and government bonds). Securitization bonds posted the largest increase in the corporate bond sector. High-yield bond prices rose on a total-return basis and outperformed investment-grade corporate bonds.

Global bond yields moved higher over the quarter, and global bond prices posted a small loss. The Bank of Canada, U.S. Federal Reserve Board, Bank of England, European Central Bank and Bank of Japan all held their policy interest rates steady over the quarter. The yield on 10-year Government of Canada bonds rose from 3.43% to 3.47%. Sovereign bond yields in the U.S., the U.K., Germany and Japan also increased.

Performance

All underlying funds are passively managed, tracking their respective regional asset class indices. The underlying funds are held in proportion to the benchmark weight of their regional asset class. The sub-advisor does not make asset class or regional positioning calls.

Portfolio activity

The sub-advisor did not make any changes to the Portfolio during the quarter.

Outlook

The first quarter of 2026 marked a transition in market leadership, with supply issues and geopolitical risks overtaking demand cycles as the primary drivers of volatility. Escalating tensions in the Middle East pushed oil prices sharply higher, reviving inflation concerns and increasing uncertainty around economic growth without yet showing clear evidence of economic deterioration. While headline volatility has eased at times, elevated implied volatility suggests markets are increasingly pricing a wider range of outcomes as global fragmentation, energy constraints and supply chokepoints weigh on investor confidence.

In this environment, the sub-advisor’s focus remains on portfolio resilience. The sub-advisor continues to emphasize broad diversification across regions and return drivers, avoiding overreliance on a smooth disinflation or predictable easing path. Core exposure to structural growth themes such as artificial intelligence remains important, but the sub-advisor is mindful of rising concentration risk and greater macro sensitivity in earnings expectations.

Within portfolios, alternatives, including managed futures, volatility strategies and risk parity, play a growing role in navigating shifting correlations. Fixed income remains a useful stabilizer, although less reliable than in past cycles, reinforcing the need for broader sources of diversification and liquidity as buffers against episodic shocks.

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CAN Balanced Income 75/100 (P)

CAN Balanced Income 75/100 (P)

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