What Is VWRA?
VWRA is the ticker symbol for the Vanguard FTSE All-World UCITS ETF (Accumulating), one of the broadest and most diversified equity ETFs available to Singapore investors. Managed by Vanguard — the world’s second-largest asset manager with over US$9 trillion in assets under management — this fund tracks the FTSE All-World Index, which covers approximately 90–95% of the investable global equity market capitalisation.
The fund holds over 3,700 stocks across 49 countries, spanning both developed markets (US, Europe, Japan, UK, Australia) and emerging markets (China, India, Brazil, Taiwan). Its top holdings include the world’s largest companies: Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, and Alphabet. Geographic allocation is roughly 60% US, 10% Europe, 7% Japan, and the remainder spread across Asia-Pacific and emerging markets.
VWRA is domiciled in Ireland and listed on the London Stock Exchange in USD. For Singapore investors, the Ireland domicile is a key advantage: under the Ireland–US Double Taxation Agreement, US dividend withholding tax is reduced from 30% to 15%. Since Singapore has no capital gains tax and no tax on foreign-sourced income for individuals, the only tax drag is this reduced 15% withholding on the US equity portion — which is automatically handled within the fund. The “Accumulating” structure means all dividends are reinvested internally, so there are no distributions to worry about and no reinvestment friction.
How Compound Interest Works with VWRA
Compound interest — or more precisely, compound growth — is what transforms regular investing into serious wealth building. The concept is straightforward: your investment returns generate their own returns in subsequent years. With VWRA, this compounding happens automatically because the fund reinvests all dividends back into the portfolio.
The basic compound growth formula is: FV = PV × (1 + r)^n, where FV is future value, PV is present value, r is the annual return rate, and n is the number of years. For DCA investors, each monthly contribution starts its own compounding clock, and the combined effect over 20–30 years is dramatic.
Historically, global equities have returned approximately 8–10% per annum over long periods. VWRA, since its inception in July 2019, has delivered an annualised return of roughly 8–9% through early 2026 (though this period includes significant volatility from COVID-19 and subsequent recovery). The FTSE All-World Index, which VWRA tracks, has a longer track record of approximately 8.5% annualised returns over 20+ years.
To put this in practical terms: if you invest $500 per month into VWRA with an 8.5% expected annual return, after 20 years your total contributions of $125,000 would grow to approximately $310,000 — meaning compound growth added roughly $185,000 on top of what you put in. After 30 years, the same $500/month ($185,000 contributed) would grow to approximately $780,000. That is the power of compounding over time.
VWRA vs IWDA vs CSPX for Singapore Investors
The three most popular global equity ETFs among Singapore investors are VWRA, IWDA, and CSPX. All three are Ireland-domiciled, accumulating (or distributing variants exist), and available on major Singapore brokerages. Here is how they compare:
| Feature |
VWRA |
IWDA |
CSPX |
| Index |
FTSE All-World |
MSCI World |
S&P 500 |
| Holdings |
3,700+ (DM + EM) |
1,500+ (DM only) |
500 (US only) |
| TER |
0.22% |
0.20% |
0.07% |
| Emerging Markets |
Yes (~12%) |
No |
No |
| Fund Size (AUM) |
~US$15B |
~US$80B |
~US$90B |
| Best For |
Maximum diversification |
Developed markets focus |
US market conviction |
VWRA offers the broadest diversification by including emerging markets — countries like China, India, and Taiwan that are absent from IWDA and CSPX. The TER difference between VWRA (0.22%) and CSPX (0.07%) is just 0.15 percentage points per year, which on a $100,000 portfolio amounts to about $150 annually. Over 30 years, this fee gap can compound to several thousand dollars, as shown in our ETF comparison panel above — but you are paying for significantly broader diversification and reduced single-country risk.
For most Singapore investors building a core long-term portfolio, VWRA or IWDA are the go-to choices. If you want a truly global, one-fund solution that covers both developed and emerging markets, VWRA is hard to beat. If you prefer to concentrate on developed markets and save 0.02% in fees, IWDA is the alternative. CSPX makes sense if you have high conviction in the US market or are pairing it with other region-specific ETFs.
Singapore investors have several excellent brokerage options for purchasing VWRA on the London Stock Exchange. The right platform depends on your investment amount, frequency, and whether you prioritise low fees or convenience. Here are the top options as of 2026:
Interactive Brokers (IBKR) is the gold standard for Singapore ETF investors. With commissions as low as US$1.50 per trade on the LSE, no custody fees, and access to fractional shares, IBKR is the cheapest option for regular DCA investors. The platform also supports multi-currency accounts, letting you hold GBP or USD directly without forced conversion. IBKR is best for investors who plan to buy monthly and want to minimise total costs.
moomoo Singapore has emerged as a strong contender with commission-free or low-cost trading promotions. Standard LSE commissions are around US$0.99 per trade, making it competitive with IBKR. The mobile app is user-friendly, and moomoo frequently offers welcome bonuses for new sign-ups. It is a good choice for beginners or investors who prefer a modern app experience.
Saxo Markets charges approximately US$8 per LSE trade, which is higher than IBKR but comes with a polished platform and excellent research tools. Saxo is better suited for investors making larger, less frequent purchases where the per-trade commission is a smaller percentage of the total amount.
FSMOne (iFAST) charges around S$10 per LSE trade. While more expensive per trade, FSMOne is a familiar Singapore-based platform and offers a Regular Savings Plan (RSP) for selected ETFs, though VWRA RSP availability should be confirmed on their platform. Check our Endowus referral page and Syfe referral page if you prefer robo-advisor access to similar global equity exposure with automated rebalancing.
Using SRS and CPF to Invest in VWRA
Singapore’s Supplementary Retirement Scheme (SRS) is a voluntary savings scheme that provides immediate tax relief on contributions. For Singapore Citizens and PRs, the annual SRS contribution cap is $15,300 (2026), and contributions are deductible from taxable income. If your marginal tax rate is 15%, a full $15,300 SRS contribution saves you $2,295 in income tax annually.
SRS funds can be invested in a range of approved instruments, including ETFs listed on the SGX. However, VWRA is listed on the London Stock Exchange, not the SGX, which means you cannot directly purchase VWRA using SRS funds through most SRS operators. SRS-eligible ETFs are generally limited to those listed on SGX, such as the Nikko AM STI ETF or SPDR STI ETF. To get global equity exposure with SRS money, consider SGX-listed feeders or use platforms like Endowus, which offers SRS investing into global equity funds (including Dimensional and PIMCO funds) with similar diversification objectives. Check our SRS Tax Savings Calculator to see how much you can save.
Similarly, CPF Investment Scheme (CPFIS) restricts investments to approved instruments, and LSE-listed ETFs like VWRA are not on the CPFIS-approved list. CPF OA funds can only be invested in CPFIS-included products such as selected unit trusts, ILPs, and SGX-listed ETFs. For CPF-based investing, consider the four CPFIS-approved ETFs on SGX, or use platforms that offer CPF-compatible global equity funds. Visit our CPF OA/SA Calculator to model your CPF allocation strategy.
VWRA as a Long-Term Wealth Building Strategy
VWRA is particularly well-suited as the core holding in a long-term, passive wealth building strategy — what many Singapore investors call a “Bogleheads” or “lazy portfolio” approach. The idea is simple: invest regularly in a single, broadly diversified, low-cost global equity ETF and hold it for decades, ignoring short-term market noise.
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) into VWRA on a monthly basis is the most common execution strategy. By investing a fixed amount each month regardless of market conditions, you naturally buy more units when prices are low and fewer when prices are high. Over time, this smooths out your average purchase price and removes the emotional burden of trying to time the market. Our DCA Investment Calculator can help you model different monthly contribution amounts.
For retirement planning specifically, VWRA’s global diversification provides a strong foundation. A Singapore investor starting at age 30, contributing $500/month to VWRA until age 55 (25 years), would accumulate approximately $470,000 at an 8.5% return — and over $750,000 if they continued to age 60. Combined with CPF savings and any property equity, this can form a robust retirement nest egg. Use our Retirement Planning Calculator to map out your full retirement projection, and explore our Passive Income Guide for strategies to generate cash flow from your accumulated wealth.
The key to success with VWRA is consistency and time. Start early, invest regularly, keep costs low (IBKR or moomoo for minimum commissions), and let compound interest do the heavy lifting. The calculator above is your first step — model different scenarios and find the contribution level that works for your budget and goals.