-----BEGIN PRIVACY-ENHANCED MESSAGE----- Proc-Type: 2001,MIC-CLEAR Originator-Name: webmaster@www.sec.gov Originator-Key-Asymmetric: MFgwCgYEVQgBAQICAf8DSgAwRwJAW2sNKK9AVtBzYZmr6aGjlWyK3XmZv3dTINen TWSM7vrzLADbmYQaionwg5sDW3P6oaM5D3tdezXMm7z1T+B+twIDAQAB MIC-Info: RSA-MD5,RSA, Il02m2fvyvKGKZHmKNpiGx0tsl7ZfiS9B8MPuqSYF0nIeTJcvkHVNPAhx9BS0TcD saUzrnQOwjespHH/MIl3IQ== 0000932471-07-000897.txt : 20070621 0000932471-07-000897.hdr.sgml : 20070621 20070621144037 ACCESSION NUMBER: 0000932471-07-000897 CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE: N-CSRS PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT: 15 CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT: 20070430 FILED AS OF DATE: 20070621 DATE AS OF CHANGE: 20070621 EFFECTIVENESS DATE: 20070621 FILER: COMPANY DATA: COMPANY CONFORMED NAME: VANGUARD WINDSOR FUNDS CENTRAL INDEX KEY: 0000107606 IRS NUMBER: 510082711 STATE OF INCORPORATION: DE FISCAL YEAR END: 1031 FILING VALUES: FORM TYPE: N-CSRS SEC ACT: 1940 Act SEC FILE NUMBER: 811-00834 FILM NUMBER: 07933471 BUSINESS ADDRESS: STREET 1: PO BOX 2600 STREET 2: V37 CITY: VALLEY FORGE STATE: PA ZIP: 19482 BUSINESS PHONE: 6106696289 MAIL ADDRESS: STREET 1: PO BOX 2600 STREET 2: V37 CITY: VALLEY FORGE STATE: PA ZIP: 19482 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: VANGUARD WINDSOR FUNDS/ DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 20011121 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: VANGUARD/WINDSOR FUNDS INC DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19931203 FORMER COMPANY: FORMER CONFORMED NAME: WINDSOR FUNDS INC DATE OF NAME CHANGE: 19920703 0000107606 S000004417 Vanguard Windsor Fund C000012178 Investor Shares VWNDX C000012179 Admiral Shares VWNEX 0000107606 S000004418 Vanguard Windsor II Fund C000012180 Investor Shares VWNFX C000012181 Admiral Shares VWNAX N-CSRS 1 windsorfinal.htm VANGUARD WINDSOR FUNDS

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM N-CSR

CERTIFIED SHAREHOLDER REPORT
OF
REGISTERED MANAGEMENT COMPANY


Investment Company Act file number: 811-834

Name of Registrant: Vanguard Windsor Funds

Address of Registrant: P.O. Box 2600
Valley Forge, PA 19482

Name and address of agent for service: Heidi Stam, Esquire
P.O. Box 876
Valley Forge, PA 19482

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (610) 669-1000


Date of fiscal year end: October 31

Date of reporting period: November 1, 2006 - April 30, 2007

Item 1: Reports to Shareholders


 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard® Windsor Fund

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

> Semiannual Report

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

April 30, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

>

For the six months ended April 30, 2007, Vanguard Windsor Fund outperformed its benchmarks and the broad U.S. stock market, with the fund’s Investor Shares gaining 10.1%.

 

>

A number of the fund’s top ten holdings produced healthy returns, a tribute to the stock-selection skills of Windsor’s advisors.

 

>

The fund’s allocations to the consumer-oriented and information technology sectors garnered solid gains.

 

 

 

 

Contents

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

1

Chairman’s Letter

2

Advisors’ Report

6

Fund Profile

9

Performance Summary

10

Financial Statements

11

About Your Fund’s Expenses

23

Trustees Approve Advisory Agreements

25

Glossary

27

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.

 

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

 

 

 

Six Months Ended April 30, 2007

 

 

 

Ticker

Total

 

Symbol

Returns

Vanguard Windsor Fund

 

 

Investor Shares

VWNDX

10.1%

Admiral™ Shares1

VWNEX

10.2

Russell 1000 Value Index

 

9.8

Average Multi-Cap Value Fund2

 

9.7

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

 

9.1

 

 

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance

October 31, 2006–April 30, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Distributions Per Share

 

Starting

Ending

Income

Capital

 

Share Price

Share Price

Dividends

Gains

Vanguard Windsor Fund

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$19.27

$19.47

$0.151

$1.529

Admiral Shares

65.04

65.72

0.539

5.159

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 A lower-cost class of shares available to many longtime shareholders and to those with significant investments in the fund.

2 Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

 

1

 

 


 

Chairman’s Letter

 

Dear Shareholder,

 

For the six-month period ended April 30, 2007, the Investor Shares of Vanguard Windsor Fund returned 10.1%, and the lower-cost Admiral Shares gained 10.2%. The fund outperformed both of its value benchmarks and bested the broad U.S. stock market by 1 percentage point.

 

Windsor Fund’s relatively large weighting in the information technology sector and its holdings in consumer-oriented sectors helped the fund excel. Strong showings by a number of its major holdings—among them Cisco Systems, Arrow Electronics, and Alcoa—were major contributors to your fund’s six-month gain.

 

Stocks soared to a new high in the final month of the period

The U.S. stock market was particularly volatile during the fiscal half-year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average crept up gradually through the first three months, fell steeply in late February, then recovered in March and climbed steadily through April. The Dow closed above 13,000 for the first time on April 25, and gained 5.9% overall for the month, its best single-month performance since December 2003.

 

During the period, the market was buoyed by economic reports that showed slower, but broadly based, growth in the domestic economy, and by strong profit reports from a host of blue-chip companies. Once again, international stocks outperformed

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2

 

 

U.S. equities. In a marked turnaround from recent years, large-capitalization stocks outpaced small-cap issues.

 

The bond market produced modest half-year gains

The Federal Reserve Board maintained its target for the federal funds rate at 5.25% throughout the six-month period. The inversion of the yield curve continued, with yields of long-term bonds remaining lower than short-term yields. As inflation fears abated, the premium generally paid for long-term bonds—and for the longer commitment of capital—diminished.

 

Money market instruments continued to be a bright spot in the fixed income firmament, returning 2.5% for the half-year, as measured by the Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index. The yield of 3-month U.S. Treasuries was 4.8% at the end of the period. For the six months, the broad taxable bond market returned 2.6%, while municipal bonds posted a return of 1.6%.

 

Sound stock selection helped Windsor outpace the market

In accordance with Windsor Fund’s deep-value style of investing, the fund’s two investment advisors seek out companies that are financially solid but temporarily out of favor with investors. During the six-month period, many of the deeply discounted stocks your fund favors flourished, and the fund outperformed its benchmark index, the average return of its peer group, and the broad U.S. stock market.

 

 

Market Barometer

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Returns

 

 

Periods Ended April 30, 2007

 

Six Months

One Year

Five Years1

Stocks

 

 

 

Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps)

9.1%

15.2%

9.1%

Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps)

6.9

7.8

11.1

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index (Entire market)

9.1

14.5

9.7

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International)

16.1

19.7

18.3

 

 

 

 

Bonds

 

 

 

Lehman Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market)

2.6%

7.4%

5.1%

Lehman Municipal Bond Index

1.6

5.8

5.2

Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index

2.5

5.0

2.6

 

 

 

 

CPI

 

 

 

Consumer Price Index

2.4%

2.6%

2.8%

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Annualized.

 

 

3

 

 

Several of the fund’s largest holdings had excellent half-year returns. Top-ten holdings Cisco Systems (+11%), Alcoa (+24%), and Goodrich (+30%), all made significant contributions. On the other hand, Bank of America, the fund’s third-largest holding, returned –3% for the period. A number of the fund’s large airline stocks also struggled.

 

Windsor’s managers select equities primarily on the basis of each stock’s individual merits, not its membership or weighting in a benchmark—and, as a result, the fund’s sector weightings can vary considerably from those of the Russell 1000 Value Index. During the past six months, the advisors’ stock selections led to heavy weightings in the consumer discretionary and information technology sectors, which added considerably to the fund’s performance.

 

Superior stock selection in the consumer staples sector also boosted the fund’s overall gain. The advisors’ selections underperformed the benchmark in the energy, industrials, and financials sectors, although the penalties were modest.

 

Windsor’s reliance on two investment advisors continues to serve the fund well. Wellington Management Company and AllianceBernstein independently manage their portions of the portfolio, and their distinct investment approaches add considerably to the fund’s diversification.

 

 

Annualized Expense Ratios1

 

 

 

Your fund compared with its peer group

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average

 

Investor

Admiral

Multi-Cap

 

Shares

Shares

Value Fund

Windsor Fund

0.32%

0.22%

1.31%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Fund expense ratios reflect the six months ended April 30, 2007. Peer-group expense ratio is derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and captures information through year-end 2006.

 

 

4

 

 

A balanced strategy positions you for the long term

At Vanguard, we always encourage shareholders to evaluate their investments from a long-term perspective. In our view, a stock fund like Windsor should be part of a carefully considered, balanced portfolio with an asset allocation that reflects your personal appetite for risk, your time horizon, and your investment goals.

 

Over time, a well-diversified portfolio that holds both value and growth stock funds, as well as bond and money market funds, can help position you to reap the rewards of the markets’ best-performing assets while muting the impact of the worst-performing ones. With its low expenses and long-term focus on value investing, Vanguard Windsor Fund can play an important role in such an investment plan.

 

Thank you for investing with Vanguard.

 

Sincerely,

 


 

John J. Brennan

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

May 14, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5

 

 

Advisors’ Report

 

During the fiscal half-year ended April 30, 2007, the Investor Shares of Vanguard Windsor Fund returned 10.1%, and the lower-cost Admiral Shares returned 10.2%. This performance reflected the combined efforts of your fund’s two independent advisors. The use of two advisors provides exposure to distinct, yet complementary, investment approaches, enhancing the fund’s diversification.

 

The advisors, the percentage of fund assets each manages, and brief descriptions of their investment strategies are presented in the table below. The advisors have also prepared a discussion of the investment environment during the six-month period and of how their portfolio positioning reflects this assessment.

 

Wellington Management Company, LLP

 

Portfolio Manager:

David R. Fassnacht, CFA

Senior Vice President and Partner

 

Our contrarian approach entails maintaining a long-term investment horizon while looking for value amid shorter-term market price dislocations. As a consequence, during periods of market uncertainty, such as those that occurred during the late spring and early summer of 2006, many of our cheap stocks have a tendency to become cheaper. These periods of market pressure give us an opportunity to add to existing holdings and uncover new ideas.

 

 

Vanguard Windsor Fund Investment Advisors

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fund Assets Managed

 

Investment Advisor

%

$ Million

Investment Strategy

Wellington Management

67

16,696

An opportunistic, contrarian investment approach that

Company, LLP

 

 

seeks to identify significantly undervalued securities

 

 

 

utilizing bottom-up fundamental analysis. As part of

 

 

 

its long-term strategy, the advisor seeks to take

 

 

 

advantage of short- and intermediate-term market-

 

 

 

price dislocations that result from the market’s

 

 

 

shorter-term focus.

AllianceBernstein L.P.

30

7,317

A value focus that couples rigorous fundamental

 

 

 

company research with quantitative risk controls

 

 

 

to capture value opportunities.

Cash Investments1

3

734

 

 

 

 

 

1 These short-term reserves are invested by Vanguard in equity index products to simulate investment in stocks. Each advisor also may maintain a modest cash position.

 

 

6

 

 

 

Among sectors, the materials group was a big contributor to our six-month performance, as holdings such as Alcoa, Owens-Illinois, and Celanese all rebounded strongly. Technology distribution companies Arrow Electronics and Avnet, which we purchased aggressively in mid-2006, also performed robustly. Other important successes during the period included R.H. Donnelley, Goodrich, Unilever, and Deere & Co.

 

The most significant shortfall came from our airline holdings, US Airways and UAL, which were hurt by the combination of poor winter weather, spiking jet fuel prices, and weakening consumer demand. Our underweight positions in the solidly performing energy and utilities sectors also modestly dragged on the portfolio’s performance relative to the benchmark index.

 

In recent months, many stocks within the consumer discretionary sector have come under selling pressure. Many companies in this group have seen their earnings hurt by fallout from the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble and news about excesses in consumer lending. Although we anticipate continued earnings pressure through 2008 for companies dependent on U.S. housing or consumer durables, we are seeing more attractive value opportunities in this sector—for example, Home Depot, Circuit City, Ford, and Centex, all of which we purchased in recent months.

 

We are keeping an eye on growing inflationary pressures created by rapidly rising food commodity prices, a tight labor market, and a weak U.S. dollar. We believe these pressures are likely to prevent the Federal Reserve Board from reducing short-term interest rates anytime soon. The current implosion of the U.S. subprime mortgage industry is bound to curtail residential construction, but we expect the overall economy to remain resilient. Our biggest concern remains the possibility of an extraneous shock to the global economy that would cause a rapid contraction in liquidity. We continue to monitor companies’ need for external capital in order to mitigate the fund’s exposure to this risk.

 

AllianceBernstein L.P.

 

Portfolio Managers:

Marilyn G. Fedak, CFA

Chief Investment Officer and Chair of the U.S. Equity Investment Policy Group

 

John D. Phillips, Jr., CFA

Senior Portfolio Manager

 

The benign economic conditions of the past few years, coupled with generally high corporate profitability—and the belief that these conditions can persist indefinitely—have heightened investors’ appetite for risk, as evidenced by unusually low levels of market volatility, shrinking risk premiums in both the equity and fixed income markets, and compressed valuation spreads.

 

 

 

 

 

 

7

 

 

In this environment, investors have been willing to pay higher multiples than usual for companies at or near peak cyclical earnings, and have been less willing to pay a normal premium for higher and more stable long-term earnings growth potential. The resulting compression in stock valuations has limited the value opportunity.

 

Our research and experience show that when valuation spreads are narrow, the return potential on any individual investment is likely to be modest and the vulnerability to forecast error large. With such asymmetry in possible outcomes, it is simply not prudent to be overly concentrated in any one stock or sector. In this regard, we are keeping our portfolio risk low. No one can say what will eventually disrupt the market’s complacency. But when that change comes and deep-value opportunities become more plentiful, we will adjust our risk profile accordingly.

 

For now, we continue to rely on our bottom-up research to find the opportunities that do exist. One value theme that has emerged recently lies in mega-cap stocks, which are attractively valued after years of underperformance versus smaller-cap stocks. To capture this opportunity, our portfolio retains a sizable tilt toward mega-caps. As of April 30, the largest 50 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index made up 52% of our portfolio, versus an average of not quite 33% over the past eight years.

 

The mega-cap bargains we own include such prominent consumer staples players as Procter & Gamble, PepsiCo, and Altria, as well as financial services giants such as global insurer American International Group and the three largest banks in the United States—Citigroup, Bank of America, and JPMorgan Chase. Our holdings also include blue chips such as Microsoft and General Electric, which have been ignored by investors in recent years despite huge cash flows that are being returned to shareholders.

 

We also have identified a number of classic value opportunities farther down the capitalization spectrum. These include Sara Lee and Federated Department Stores, which have executed successful business restructurings that our analyses suggest are not yet reflected in their stock prices. Black & Decker became a bargain amid investor worries about the slowing housing market, an outlook that we view as overly gloomy. A shift to outsource most of its manufacturing has made the company’s cost structure much less sensitive to swings in the housing cycle. The company’s new product line, which is based on a breakthrough battery technology, should fuel earnings growth over the long term.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

8

 

 

Fund Profile

As of April 30, 2007

 

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index1

Index2

Number of Stocks

143

599

4,921

Median Market Cap

$57.2B

$50.3B

$32.1B

Price/Earnings Ratio

17.5x

14.7x

18.0x

Price/Book Ratio

2.3x

2.2x

2.9x

Yield

 

2.4%

1.7%

Investor Shares

1.3%

 

 

Admiral Shares

1.4%

 

 

Return on Equity

16.4%

17.6%

18.0%

Earnings Growth Rate

18.0%

19.4%

20.8%

Foreign Holdings

15.6%

0.0%

1.0%

Turnover Rate

41%3

Expense Ratio

 

Investor Shares

0.32%3

 

 

Admiral Shares

022%3

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

1%

 

 

Sector Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index1

Index2

Consumer Discretionary

12%

9%

12%

Consumer Staples

7

8

8

Energy

7

14

10

Financials

22

35

22

Health Care

12

7

11

Industrials

9

7

11

Information Technology

17

3

15

Materials

6

4

4

Telecommunication Services

5

6

3

Utilities

1

7

4

Other

1

0

0

Short-Term Reserves

1%

 

 

Volatility Measures4

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Comparative Index1

Broad Index2

R-Squared

0.86

0.92

Beta

1.13

1.00

 

 

 

 

 

Ten Largest Holdings5 (% of total net assets)

 

 

 

 

Cisco Systems, Inc.

communications equipment

4.0%

Sanofi-Aventis

pharmaceuticals

3.5

Bank of America Corp.

diversified financial services

3.5

Microsoft Corp.

systems software

3.2

Wyeth

pharmaceuticals

3.2

Sprint Nextel Corp.

wireless telecommunication services

3.0

Citigroup, Inc.

diversified financial services

2.2

Comcast Corp.

broadcasting and cable TV

2.0

Goodrich Corp.

aerospace and defense

1.9

Alcoa Inc.

aluminum

1.8

Top Ten

 

28.3%

 

 

Investment Focus

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Russell 1000 Value Index.

2 Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index.

3 Annualized.

4 For an explanation of R-squared, beta, and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 27.

5 “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

 

9

 

 

Performance Summary

 

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): October 31, 1996–April 30, 2007

 


 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended March 31, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

Inception Date

One Year

Five Years

Ten Years

Investor Shares

10/23/1958

14.57%

8.56%

9.47%

Admiral Shares

11/12/2001

14.69

8.66

9.852

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Six months ended April 30, 2007.

2 Return since inception.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on pages 17 and 18 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

 

10

 

 

Financial Statements (unaudited)

 

Statement of Net Assets

As of April 30, 2007

 

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (96.8%)1

 

 

Consumer Discretionary (11.4%)

 

 

*

Comcast Corp.

 

 

 

Special Class A

18,855,600

497,788

*2

R.H. Donnelley Corp.

5,557,705

434,001

 

Home Depot, Inc.

9,047,100

342,614

*

Viacom Inc. Class B

6,002,500

247,603

 

Time Warner, Inc.

11,361,600

234,390

 

McDonald’s Corp.

2,765,000

133,494

 

Circuit City Stores, Inc.

6,134,800

107,052

 

CBS Corp.

3,215,000

102,141

 

Clear Channel Communications, Inc.

2,508,800

88,887

 

Ford Motor Co.

10,453,000

84,042

 

DaimlerChrysler AG

930,000

74,874

 

Centex Corp.

1,617,100

72,398

 

Federated Department Stores, Inc.

1,600,000

70,272

*

Lear Corp.

1,549,118

56,884

 

VF Corp.

528,836

46,437

*

Office Depot, Inc.

1,233,722

41,478

*

Cablevision Systems NY Group Class A

1,175,400

38,530

 

BorgWarner, Inc.

468,800

36,524

 

Black & Decker Corp.

394,177

35,760

 

Limited Brands, Inc.

1,270,000

35,014

 

Autoliv, Inc.

600,000

34,890

*

Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc.

323,100

4,097

*

Comcast Corp. Class A

127,474

3,398

 

 

 

2,822,568

Consumer Staples (7.0%)

 

 

 

Japan Tobacco, Inc.

69,175

337,871

 

Unilever NV

9,090,839

277,425

 

Bunge Ltd.

2,839,800

215,143

 

Altria Group, Inc.

2,049,800

141,272

 

The Procter & Gamble Co.

1,704,000

109,584

 

Safeway, Inc.

2,891,600

104,965

 

The Kroger Co.

3,291,350

97,128

 

The Clorox Co.

1,280,000

85,862

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

Sara Lee Corp.

4,450,000

73,025

 

PepsiCo, Inc.

1,090,000

72,038

 

Kellogg Co.

1,060,000

56,085

 

Avon Products, Inc.

1,292,700

51,449

 

Unilever NV ADR

1,639,400

50,002

 

Kraft Foods Inc.

1,418,510

47,478

 

Molson Coors Brewing Co. Class B

135,000

12,728

 

 

 

1,732,055

Energy (6.7%)

 

 

 

ExxonMobil Corp.

5,269,008

418,254

 

Chevron Corp.

2,683,478

208,748

 

ConocoPhillips Co.

2,458,798

170,518

 

GlobalSantaFe Corp.

2,588,400

165,476

*

Newfield Exploration Co.

2,954,300

129,251

 

Total SA ADR

1,567,800

115,531

 

EnCana Corp.

1,958,238

102,710

 

Petroleo Brasileiro Series A ADR

834,300

74,436

*

Petro-Canada (New York Shares)

1,662,900

73,716

 

BP PLC ADR

1,025,000

69,003

 

Petro-Canada

1,330,000

59,136

 

Petroleo Brasileiro ADR

564,800

57,175

 

 

 

1,643,954

Financials (21.6%)

 

 

 

Capital Markets (3.6%)

 

 

 

UBS AG (New York Shares)

6,583,300

427,256

*

E*TRADE Financial Corp.

9,091,100

200,731

 

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

1,800,000

162,414

 

The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

335,000

73,234

*

TD Ameritrade Holding Corp.

2,347,800

40,030

 

 

 

 

 

Commercial Banks (1.2%)

 

 

 

National City Corp.

2,362,600

86,353

 

SunTrust Banks, Inc.

830,000

70,069

 

Commerce Bancorp, Inc.

1,978,400

66,158

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

Wells Fargo & Co.

1,020,000

36,608

 

Wachovia Corp.

487,162

27,057

 

 

 

 

 

Consumer Finance (1.4%)

 

 

 

Capital One Financial Corp.

4,638,300

344,440

 

 

 

 

 

Diversified Financial Services (7.4%)

 

 

 

Bank of America Corp.

16,794,098

854,820

 

Citigroup, Inc.

10,220,946

548,047

 

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

4,903,100

255,452

 

CIT Group Inc.

2,823,100

168,398

 

 

 

 

 

Insurance (6.7%)

 

 

 

American International Group, Inc.

6,102,700

426,640

 

ACE Ltd.

4,931,100

293,203

 

Aegon NV

9,046,865

186,720

 

MetLife, Inc.

1,773,100

116,493

 

PartnerRe Ltd.

1,405,600

101,231

 

The Allstate Corp.

1,365,700

85,110

 

The Travelers Cos., Inc.

1,416,917

76,655

 

XL Capital Ltd. Class A

980,000

76,420

 

Genworth Financial Inc.

1,910,000

69,696

 

The Hartford Financial Services Group Inc.

566,200

57,299

 

Everest Re Group, Ltd.

439,500

44,231

 

IPC Holdings Ltd.

1,319,600

39,562

 

MBIA, Inc.

550,000

38,258

 

RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd.

657,250

35,590

 

Fidelity National Financial, Inc. Class A

275,000

7,010

 

 

 

 

 

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance (1.3%)

 

 

 

Fannie Mae

2,319,000

136,635

 

Freddie Mac

1,650,000

106,887

 

Countrywide Financial Corp.

2,354,800

87,316

*

Dime Bancorp Inc.— Litigation Tracking Warrants

7,457,300

2,461

 

 

 

5,348,484

Health Care (11.1%)

 

 

 

Wyeth

14,075,600

781,196

 

Sanofi-Aventis ADR

10,575,000

484,969

 

Sanofi-Aventis

4,259,623

389,912

 

Astellas Pharma Inc.

6,386,300

279,366

 

Pfizer Inc.

9,005,000

238,272

 

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

6,768,900

195,350

 

Aetna Inc.

2,906,700

136,266

 

Merck & Co., Inc.

2,422,300

124,603

 

AmerisourceBergen Corp.

1,359,800

67,976

 

McKesson Corp.

650,000

38,240

 

 

 

2,736,150

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Industrials (9.0%)

 

 

2

Goodrich Corp.

8,224,600

467,486

 

Tyco International Ltd.

11,151,800

363,883

*2

UAL Corp.

8,805,500

294,104

 

General Electric Co.

7,330,000

270,184

 

Deere & Co.

2,286,300

250,121

 

American Standard Cos., Inc.

2,701,100

148,723

*

US Airways Group Inc.

3,349,900

123,745

 

Northrop Grumman Corp.

1,160,000

85,388

 

Ingersoll-Rand Co.

1,635,000

73,003

*

US Airways Group Private Placement

1,471,675

54,364

 

Eaton Corp.

537,800

47,977

 

SPX Corp.

564,012

39,977

 

 

 

2,218,955

Information Technology (15.9%)

 

 

*

Cisco Systems, Inc.

37,143,500

993,217

 

Microsoft Corp.

26,238,600

785,584

*2

Arrow Electronics, Inc.

9,283,217

366,873

*

Flextronics International Ltd.

22,984,400

256,276

 

Seagate Technology

11,151,581

247,008

 

LM Ericsson Telephone Co. ADR Class B

6,234,300

237,963

*

Symantec Corp.

10,600,000

186,560

*

Corning, Inc.

7,578,200

179,755

*

Nortel Networks Corp.

6,006,500

137,429

 

Texas Instruments, Inc.

3,309,700

113,754

 

International Business Machines Corp.

980,000

100,166

*

Sun Microsystems, Inc.

18,664,600

97,429

 

KLA-Tencor Corp.

1,550,300

86,119

*

Nokia Corp. ADR

1,550,000

39,138

*

Solectron Corp.

10,387,300

34,797

*

Sanmina-SCI Corp.

8,423,608

29,061

 

Accenture Ltd.

700,000

27,370

*

Unisys Corp.

3,349,200

26,258

 

 

 

3,944,757

Materials (5.7%)

 

 

 

Alcoa Inc.

12,890,568

457,486

 

E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.

7,975,500

392,155

*

Owens-Illinois, Inc.

5,275,800

158,749

*

Smurfit-Stone Container Corp.

10,678,463

128,675

^

Arcelor Mittal Class A New York Registered Shares

1,640,000

87,609

 

Chemtura Corp.

7,697,300

84,901

 

Celanese Corp. Series A

1,669,450

55,376

 

Dow Chemical Co.

1,222,500

54,536

 

 

 

1,419,487

 

 

 

 

 

 

12

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Telecommunication Services (5.2%)

 

 

 

Sprint Nextel Corp.

37,633,882

753,807

 

Verizon Communications Inc.

6,930,242

264,597

 

AT&T Inc.

3,835,717

148,519

 

Embarq Corp.

1,547,341

92,902

*

Crown Castle International Corp.

850,100

29,192

 

 

 

1,289,017

Utilities (1.1%)

 

 

 

Entergy Corp.

1,009,600

114,226

 

Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

831,425

74,097

 

American Electric Power Co., Inc.

1,055,300

52,997

*

Allegheny Energy, Inc.

800,000

42,768

 

 

 

284,088

Other (1.2%)

 

 

3

Miscellaneous

 

291,036

 

 

 

 

Exchange-Traded Funds (0.9%)

 

 

4

Vanguard Value ETF

1,689,100

120,484

4^

Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF

696,000

102,402

 

 

 

222,886

Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $18,452,481)

 

23,953,437

Temporary Cash Investments (3.6%)1

 

 

Money Market Fund (2.2%)

 

 

5

Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 5.259%

521,754,848

521,755

5

Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 5.259%—Note G

19,114,570

19,115

 

 

 

 

 

 

Face

Market

 

 

Amount

Value

 

 

($000)

($000)

 

Repurchase Agreement (1.3%)

 

 

 

Banc of America Securities, LLC 5.240%, 5/1/07

 

 

 

(Dated 4/30/07,Repurchase Value

 

 

 

$310,545,000, collateralized by Federal National

 

 

 

Mortgage Assn.5.000%, 5/1/35)

310,500

310,500

 

U.S. Agency Obligation (0.1%)

 

 

6

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.

 

 

7

5.197%, 7/9/07

30,000

29,707

 

Total Temporary Cash Investments

 

 

 

(Cost $881,075)

 

881,077

 

Total Investments (100.4%)

 

 

 

(Cost $19,333,556)

 

24,834,514

 

Other Assets and Liabilities—Net (–0.4%)

 

(87,369)

 

Net Assets (100%)

 

24,747,145

 

 

 

 

 

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 

 

 

Assets

 

 

 

Investments in Securities, at Value

 

24,834,514

 

Receivables for Investment Securities Sold

 

63,172

 

Receivables for Capital Shares Issued

 

13,903

 

Other Assets—Note C

 

36,405

 

Total Assets

 

24,947,994

 

Liabilities

 

 

 

Payables for Investment Securities Purchased

 

78,630

 

Security Lending Collateral Payable to Brokers—Note G

 

19,115

 

Payables for Capital Shares Redeemed

 

23,163

 

Other Liabilities

 

79,941

 

Total Liabilities

 

200,849

 

Net Assets

 

24,747,145

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

13

 

 

At April 30, 2007, net assets consisted of:8

 

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

17,944,852

Undistributed Net Investment Income

77,528

Accumulated Net Realized Gains

1,203,503

Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

 

Investment Securities

5,500,958

Futures Contracts

20,310

Foreign Currencies

(6)

Net Assets

24,747,145

 

 

Investor Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 768,137,277 outstanding $.001

 

par value shares of beneficial interest

 

(unlimited authorization)

14,955,243

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Investor Shares

$19.47

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 149,000,359 outstanding $.001

 

par value shares of beneficial interest

 

(unlimited authorization)

9,791,902

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$65.72

 

 

 

 

 

• See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.

* Non-income-producing security.

^

Part of security position is on loan to broker-dealers. See Note G in Notes to Financial Statements.

1 The fund invests a portion of its cash reserves in equity markets through the use of index futures contracts. After giving effect to futures investments, the fund’s effective common stock and temporary cash investment positions represent 98.9% and 1.5%, respectively, of net assets. See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements.

2 Considered an affiliated company of the fund as the fund owns more than 5% of the outstanding voting securities of such company. See Note I in Notes to Financial Statements.

3 Securities representing up to 5% of the market value of unaffiliated securities are permitted to be combined and reported as “miscellaneous securities” provided that they have been held for less than one year and not previously reported by name.

4 Considered an affiliated company of the fund as the issuer is another member of The Vanguard Group.

5 Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

6 The issuer operates under a congressional charter; its securities are neither issued nor guaranteed by the U.S. government. If needed, access to additional funding from the U.S. Treasury (beyond the issuer’s line of credit) would require congressional action.

7 Securities with a value of $29,707,000 have been segregated as initial margin for open futures contracts.

8 See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

ADR—American Depositary Receipt.

 

 

 

14

 

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

 

Six Months Ended

 

April 30, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends1,2

202,410

Interest2

22,297

Security Lending

529

Total Income

225,236

Expenses

 

Investment Advisory Fees—Note B

 

Basic Fee

14,675

Performance Adjustment

(883)

The Vanguard Group—Note C

 

Management and Administrative

 

Investor Shares

13,449

Admiral Shares

4,130

Marketing and Distribution

 

Investor Shares

1,271

Admiral Shares

723

Custodian Fees

182

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Investor Shares

100

Admiral Shares

19

Trustees’ Fees and Expenses

15

Total Expenses

33,681

Expenses Paid Indirectly—Note D

(411)

Net Expenses

33,270

Net Investment Income

191,966

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

 

Investment Securities Sold2

1,186,489

Futures Contracts

39,144

Foreign Currencies

567

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

1,226,200

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

 

Investment Securities

899,135

Futures Contracts

63

Foreign Currencies

21

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

899,219

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

2,317,385

 

 

 

 

1 Dividends are net of foreign withholding taxes of $4,061,000.

2 Dividend income, interest income, and realized net gain (loss) from affiliated companies of the fund were $5,846,000, $11,362,000, and $40,675,000, respectively.

 

 

15

 

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

 

Six Months Ended

Year Ended

 

April 30,

October 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

191,966

337,353

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

1,226,200

1,980,297

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

899,219

1,604,186

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

2,317,385

3,921,836

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Investor Shares

(109,629)

(192,991)

Admiral Shares

(75,193)

(128,970)

Realized Capital Gain1

 

 

Investor Shares

(1,110,085)

(1,113,365)

Admiral Shares

(719,706)

(659,656)

Total Distributions

(2,014,613)

(2,094,982)

Capital Share Transactions—Note H

 

 

Investor Shares

626,354

147,757

Admiral Shares

691,222

730,142

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

1,317,576

877,899

Total Increase (Decrease)

1,620,348

2,704,753

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

23,126,797

20,422,044

End of Period2

24,747,145

23,126,797

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Includes fiscal 2007 and 2006 short-term gain distributions totaling $0 and $226,319,000, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.

2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $77,528,000 and $69,817,000.

 

 

16

 

 

Financial Highlights

 

 

Windsor Fund Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Six Months

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ended

 

 

 

For a Share Outstanding

April 30,

Year Ended October 31,

Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$19.27

$17.81

$16.75

$15.23

$11.81

$14.27

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.153

.277

.2651

.214

.17

.164

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

1.727

3.007

1.163

1.501

3.42

(2.143)

Total from Investment Operations

1.880

3.284

1.428

1.715

3.59

(1.979)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.151)

(.265)

(.280)

(.195)

(.17)

(.169)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(1.529)

(1.559)

(.088)

(.312)

Total Distributions

(1.680)

(1.824)

(.368)

(.195)

(.17)

(.481)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$19.47

$19.27

$17.81

$16.75

$15.23

$11.81

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

10.12%

19.72%

8.54%

11.30%

30.66%

–14.55%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$14,955

$14,140

$12,871

$15,130

$13,733

$11,012

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets2

0.32%*

0.36%

0.37%

0.39%

0.48%

0.45%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

1.55%*

1.50%

1.47%1

1.32%

1.27%

1.16%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

41%*

38%

32%

28%

23%

30%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $0.03 and 0.17%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

2 Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of (0.01%), 0.02%, 0.04%, 0.04%, 0.08%, and 0.08%.

*

Annualized.

 

 

17

 

 

 

Windsor Fund Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Six Months

 

 

 

 

Nov. 12,

 

Ended

 

 

20011 to

For a Share Outstanding

April 30,

Year Ended October 31,

Oct. 31,

Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$65.04

$60.12

$56.56

$51.41

$39.88

$50.00

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.548

1.00

.9682

.787

.605

.556

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

5.830

10.15

3.896

5.082

11.537

(9.030)

Total from Investment Operations

6.378

11.15

4.864

5.869

12.142

(8.474)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.539)

(.97)

(1.007)

(.719)

(.612)

(.592)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(5.159)

(5.26)

(.297)

(1.054)

Total Distributions

(5.698)

(6.23)

(1.304)

(.719)

(.612)

(1.646)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$65.72

$65.04

$60.12

$56.56

$51.41

$39.88

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

10.18%

19.85%

8.62%

11.46%

30.72%

–17.61%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$9,792

$8,987

$7,551

$4,195

$3,321

$2,214

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets3

0.22%*

0.25%

0.27%

0.28%

0.37%

0.40%*

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

1.65%*

1.61%

1.57%2

1.43%

1.36%

1.22%*

Portfolio Turnover Rate

41%*

38%

32%

28%

23%

30%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Inception.

2 Net investment income per share and the ratio of net investment income to average net assets include $0.110 and 0.17%, respectively, resulting from a special dividend from Microsoft Corp. in November 2004.

3 Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of (0.01%), 0.02%, 0.04%, 0.04%, 0.08%, and 0.08%.

*

Annualized.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

 

18

 

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Windsor Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard Windsor Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Investor Shares and Admiral Shares. Investor Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. Admiral Shares are designed for investors who meet certain administrative, service, tenure, and account-size criteria.

 

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

 

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued at their fair values calculated according to procedures adopted by the board of trustees. These procedures include obtaining quotations from an independent pricing service, monitoring news to identify significant market- or security-specific events, and evaluating changes in the values of foreign market proxies (for example, ADRs, futures contracts, or exchange-traded funds), between the time the foreign markets close and the fund’s pricing time. When fair-value pricing is employed, the prices of securities used by a fund to calculate its net asset value may differ from quoted or published prices for the same securities. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value. Temporary cash investments acquired over 60 days to maturity are valued using the latest bid prices or using valuations based on a matrix system (which considers such factors as security prices, yields, maturities, and ratings), both as furnished by independent pricing services. Other temporary cash investments are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value.

 

2. Foreign Currency: Securities and other assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated into U.S. dollars using exchange rates obtained from an independent third party as of the fund’s pricing time on the valuation date. Realized gains (losses) and unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investment securities include the effects of changes in exchange rates since the securities were purchased, combined with the effects of changes in security prices. Fluctuations in the value of other assets and liabilities resulting from changes in exchange rates are recorded as unrealized foreign currency gains (losses) until the assets or liabilities are settled in cash, at which time they are recorded as realized foreign currency gains (losses).

 

3. Futures Contracts: The fund uses index futures contracts to a limited extent, with the objective of maintaining full exposure to the stock market while maintaining liquidity. The fund may purchase or sell futures contracts to achieve a desired level of investment, whether to accommodate portfolio turnover or cash flows from capital share transactions. The primary risks associated with the use of futures contracts are imperfect correlation between changes in market values of stocks held by the fund and the prices of futures contracts, and the possibility of an illiquid market.

 

Futures contracts are valued at their quoted daily settlement prices. The aggregate principal amounts of the contracts are not recorded in the Statement of Net Assets. Fluctuations in the value of the contracts are recorded in the Statement of Net Assets as an asset (liability) and in the Statement of Operations as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) until the contracts are closed, when they are recorded as realized futures gains (losses).

 

 

 

19

 

 

4. Repurchase Agreements: The fund may invest in repurchase agreements. Securities pledged as collateral for repurchase agreements are held by a custodian bank until the agreements mature. Each agreement requires that the market value of the collateral be sufficient to cover payments of interest and principal; however, in the event of default or bankruptcy by the other party to the agreement, retention of the collateral may be subject to legal proceedings.

 

5. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

 

6. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

 

7. Security Lending: The fund may lend its securities to qualified institutional borrowers to earn additional income. Security loans are required to be secured at all times by collateral at least equal to the market value of securities loaned. The fund invests cash collateral received in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, and records a liability for the return of the collateral, during the period the securities are on loan. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less expenses associated with the loan.

 

8. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

 

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

 

B. Wellington Management Company, LLP, and AllianceBernstein L.P. each provide investment advisory services to a portion of the fund for a fee calculated at an annual percentage rate of average net assets managed by the advisor. The basic fees of each advisor are subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance for the preceding three years relative to a designated market index: for Wellington Management Company, LLP, the S&P 500 Index; and for AllianceBernstein L.P., the Russell 1000 Value Index.

 

The Vanguard Group manages the cash reserves of the fund on an at-cost basis.

 

For the six months ended April 30, 2007, the aggregate investment advisory fee represented an effective annual basic rate of 0.12% of the fund’s average net assets before a decrease of $883,000 (0.01%) based on performance.

 

C. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At April 30, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $2,216,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 2.22% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

 

20

 

 

D. The fund has asked its investment advisors to direct certain security trades, subject to obtaining the best price and execution, to brokers who have agreed to rebate to the fund part of the commissions generated. Such rebates are used solely to reduce the fund’s management and administrative expenses. The fund’s custodian bank has also agreed to reduce its fees when the fund maintains cash on deposit in the non-interest-bearing custody account. For the six months ended April 30, 2007, these arrangements reduced the fund’s management and administrative expenses by $411,000.

 

E. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes. The fund’s tax-basis capital gains and losses are determined only at the end of each fiscal year.

 

During the six months ended April 30, 2007, the fund realized net foreign currency gains of $567,000, which increased distributable net income for tax purposes; accordingly, such gains have been reclassified from accumulated net realized gains to undistributed net investment income.

 

At April 30, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $19,333,556,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $5,500,958,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $5,733,654,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $232,696,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

At April 30, 2007, the aggregate settlement value of open futures contracts expiring in June 2007 and the related unrealized appreciation (depreciation) were:

 

 

 

 

 

($000)

 

 

Aggregate

Unrealized

 

Number of

Settlement

Appreciation

Futures Contracts

Long Contracts

Value

(Depreciation)

S&P 500 Index

661

245,958

11,804

E-mini S&P 500 Index

2,790

207,632

6,278

S&P MidCap 400 Index

135

59,279

2,228

 

 

Unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on open futures contracts is required to be treated as realized gain (loss) for tax purposes.

 

F. During the six months ended April 30, 2007, the fund purchased $4,731,961,000 of investment securities and sold $5,013,766,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

 

G. The market value of securities on loan to broker-dealers at April 30, 2007, was $18,559,000, for which the fund received cash collateral of $19,115,000.

 

 

 

21

 

 

H. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were:

 

 

 

Six Months Ended

Year Ended

 

April 30, 2007

October 31, 2006

 

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

($000)

(000)

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

Issued

677,521

35,497

1,159,762

64,777

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

1,186,362

63,476

1,264,434

73,315

Redeemed

(1,237,529)

(64,626)

(2,276,439)

(126,975)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Investor Shares

626,354

34,347

147,757

11,117

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

Issued

670,055

10,289

1,018,466

16,817

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

726,269

11,519

716,143

12,308

Redeemed

(705,102)

(10,981)

(1,004,467)

(16,557)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

691,222

10,827

730,142

12,568

 

 

I. Certain of the fund’s investments are in companies that are considered to be affiliated companies of the fund because the fund owns more than 5% of the outstanding voting securities of the company. Transactions during the period in securities of these companies were as follows:

 

 

 

 

 

Current Period Transactions

 

 

October 31, 2006

 

Proceeds from

 

April 30, 2007

 

Market

Purchases

Securities

Dividend

Market

 

Value

at Cost

Sold

Income

Value

 

($000)

($000)

($000)

($000)

($000)

Arrow Electronics, Inc.

371,949

125,557

366,873

Goodrich Corp.

360,819

17,280

15,209

3,343

467,486

Lear Corp.

186,399

177,099

n/a1

R.H. Donnelley Corp.

347,867

26,916

51,835

434,001

UAL Corp.

307,686

76,513

61,325

294,104

 

1,574,720

 

 

3,343

1,562,464

 

 

J. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN

48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements. FIN 48 will be effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning November 1, 2007. Management is in the process of analyzing the fund’s tax positions for purposes of implementing FIN 48; based on the analysis completed to date, management does not believe the adoption of FIN 48 will result in any material impact to the fund’s financial statements.

 

1 At April 30, 2007, the security is still held but the issuer is no longer an affiliated company of the fund.

 

 

 

 

22

 

 

About Your Fund’s Expenses

 

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

 

A fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. This figure is known as the expense ratio. The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period.

 

The table below illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

 

• Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The “Ending Account Value” shown is derived from the fund’s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

 

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period.”

 

• Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return. This section is intended to help you compare your fund’s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

 

 

Six Months Ended April 30, 2007

 

 

 

 

Beginning

Ending

Expenses

 

Account Value

Account Value

Paid During

Windsor Fund

10/31/2006

4/30/2007

Period1

Based on Actual Fund Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,101.20

$1.67

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,101.77

1.15

Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,023.21

$1.61

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,023.70

1.10

 

 

1 The calculations are based on expenses incurred in the most recent six-month period. The fund’s annualized six-month expense ratios for that period are 0.32% for Investor Shares and 0.22% for Admiral Shares. The dollar amounts shown as “Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense ratio multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

 

 

23

 

 

Note that the expenses shown in the table on page 23 are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include any account service fee described in the prospectus. If such a fee were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not charge transaction fees, such as purchase or redemption fees, nor does it carry a “sales load.”

 

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

 

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

24

 

 

Trustees Approve Advisory Agreements

 

The board of trustees of Vanguard Windsor Fund has renewed the fund’s investment advisory agreements with Wellington Management Company, LLP, and AllianceBernstein L.P. The board determined that retention of the advisors was in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders.

 

The board approved a change to the process for the quarterly calculation of the fund’s asset-based advisory base fee schedules. The calculations will be based on the average daily net assets managed by each advisor rather than the average month-end net assets.

 

The board also approved changes to Wellington Management’s performance adjustment schedule. The performance schedule will now be based on a “linear” rather than a “step” approach. The board concluded that this change would better align the interests of Wellington Management with those of the fund shareholders because the advisor’s compensation will be more closely linked to its performance.

 

The board based its decisions upon an evaluation of each advisor’s investment staff, portfolio management process, and performance. The trustees considered the factors discussed below, among others. However, no single factor determined whether the board approved the agreements. Rather, it was the totality of the circumstances that drove the board’s decision.

 

Nature, extent, and quality of services

The board considered the quality of the fund’s investment management over both short- and long-term periods and took into account the organizational depth and stability of each advisor. The board noted the following:

 

Wellington Management Company. Wellington Management, which was founded in 1928, is among the nation’s oldest and most respected institutional investment managers. The firm has advised the fund since its inception in 1958. The advisor’s contrarian process involves buying stocks of high-quality companies that are out of favor with investors. Stocks are selected using a bottom-up approach, supported by Wellington Management’s deep industry research capabilities.

 

AllianceBernstein. For more than 40 years, the investment professionals at AllianceBernstein have been known for their commitment to value investing and their objectivity in investment research. AllianceBernstein has managed assets of the fund since 1999. The advisor continues to employ a sound process, creating a portfolio with specific risk and return expectations compared with the Russell 1000 Value Index, the fund’s benchmark. Stocks are selected through a bottom-up approach, in which AllianceBernstein uses a proprietary dividend discount model as the primary valuation tool.

 

The board concluded that each advisor’s experience, stability, depth, and performance, among other factors, warranted continuation of the advisory agreements.

 

Investment performance

The board considered the short- and long-term performance of the fund, including any periods of outperformance or underperformance of a relevant benchmark and peer group. The board concluded that each advisor has carried out the fund’s investment strategy in disciplined fashion and that performance results have allowed the fund to remain competitive versus its benchmark and its average peer fund. Information about the fund’s most recent performance can be found in the Performance Summary portion of this report.

 

25

 

 

Cost

The board concluded that the fund’s expense ratio was far below the average expense ratio charged by funds in its peer group. The fund’s advisory fee rate was also well below the peer-group average. Information about the fund’s expense ratio appears in the About Your Fund’s Expenses section of this report as well as in the Financial Statements section, which also includes information about the advisory fee rate.

 

The board did not consider profitability of Wellington Management or AllianceBernstein in determining whether to approve the advisory fees, because the firms are independent of Vanguard and the advisory fees are the result of arm’s-length negotiations.

 

The benefit of economies of scale

The board concluded that the fund’s shareholders benefit from economies of scale because of breakpoints in the advisory fee schedules. The breakpoints reduce the effective rate of the fees as the fund’s assets managed by the firms increase.

 

The board will consider whether to renew the advisory agreements again after a one-year period.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

26

 

 

Glossary

 

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. A fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition below). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

 

Earnings Growth Rate. The average annual rate of growth in earnings over the past five years for the stocks now in a fund.

 

Expense Ratio. The percentage of a fund’s average net assets used to pay its annual administrative and advisory expenses. These expenses directly reduce returns to investors.

 

Foreign Holdings. The percentage of a fund represented by stocks or depositary receipts of companies based outside the United States.

 

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

 

Median Market Cap. An indicator of the size of companies in which a fund invests; the midpoint of market capitalization (market price x shares outstanding) of a fund’s stocks, weighted by the proportion of the fund’s assets invested in each stock. Stocks representing half of the fund’s assets have market capitalizations above the median, and the rest are below it.

 

Price/Book Ratio. The share price of a stock divided by its net worth, or book value, per share. For a fund, the weighted average price/book ratio of the stocks it holds.

 

Price/Earnings Ratio. The ratio of a stock’s current price to its per-share earnings over the past year. For a fund, the weighted average P/E of the stocks it holds. P/E is an indicator of market expectations about corporate prospects; the higher the P/E, the greater the expectations for a company’s future growth.

 

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0.

 

Return on Equity. The annual average rate of return generated by a company during the past five years for each dollar of shareholder’s equity (net income divided by shareholder’s equity). For a fund, the weighted average return on equity for the companies whose stocks it holds.

 

Short-Term Reserves. The percentage of a fund invested in highly liquid, short-term securities that can be readily converted to cash.

 

Turnover Rate. An indication of the fund’s trading activity. Funds with high turnover rates incur higher transaction costs and may be more likely to distribute capital gains (which may be taxable to investors). The turnover rate excludes in-kind transactions, which have minimal impact on costs.

 

Yield. A snapshot of a fund’s income from interest and dividends. The yield, expressed as a percentage of the fund’s net asset value, is based on income earned over the past 30 days and is annualized, or projected forward for the coming year. The index yield is based on the current annualized rate of income provided by securities in the index.

 

27

 

 

The People Who Govern Your Fund

 

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

 

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals.

 

Our independent board members bring distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service to their task of working with Vanguard officers to establish the policies and oversee the activities of the funds. Among board members’ responsibilities are selecting investment advisors for the funds; monitoring fund operations, performance, and costs; reviewing contracts; nominating and selecting new trustees/directors; and electing Vanguard officers.

 

Each trustee serves a fund until its termination; or until the trustee’s retirement, resignation, or death; or otherwise as specified in the fund’s organizational documents. Any trustee may be removed at a shareholders’ meeting by a vote representing two-thirds of the net asset value of all shares of the fund together with shares of other Vanguard funds organized within the same trust. The table on these two pages shows information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. The mailing address of the trustees and officers is P.O. Box 876, Valley Forge, PA 19482.

 

 

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer, and Trustee

 

 

John J. Brennan1

 

Born 1954

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive

Trustee since May 1987;

Officer, and Director/Trustee of The Vanguard Group, Inc., and of each of the investment

Chairman of the Board and

companies served by The Vanguard Group.

Chief Executive Officer

 

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

Independent Trustees

 

 

 

Charles D. Ellis

 

Born 1937

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Applecore Partners (pro bono ventures

Trustee since January 2001

in education); Senior Advisor to Greenwich Associates (international business strategy

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

consulting); Successor Trustee of Yale University; Overseer of the Stern School of Business

 

at New York University; Trustee of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.

 

 

Rajiv L. Gupta

 

Born 1945

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Trustee since December 20012

of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Board Member of the American Chemistry Council;

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Director of Tyco International, Ltd. (diversified manufacturing and services) since 2005;

 

Trustee of Drexel University and of the Chemical Heritage Foundation.

 

 

Amy Gutmann

 

Born 1949

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President of the University of

Trustee since June 2006

Pennsylvania since 2004; Professor in the School of Arts and Sciences, Annenberg School

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

for Communication, and Graduate School of Education of the University of Pennsylvania

 

since 2004; Provost (2001–2004) and Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics and the

 

University Center for Human Values (1990–2004), Princeton University; Director of Carnegie

 

Corporation of New York since 2005 and of Schuylkill River Development Corporation and

 

Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce since 2004.

 

 

 

JoAnn Heffernan Heisen

 

Born 1950

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate Vice President and Chief

Trustee since July 1998

Global Diversity Officer since 2006, Vice President and Chief Information Officer

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

(1997–2005), and Member of the Executive Committee of Johnson & Johnson

 

(pharmaceuticals/consumer products); Director of the University Medical Center

 

at Princeton and Women’s Research and Education Institute.

 

 

André F. Perold

 

Born 1952

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Gund Professor of Finance

Trustee since December 2004

and Banking, Harvard Business School; Senior Associate Dean, Director of Faculty

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Recruiting, and Chair of Finance Faculty, Harvard Business School; Director and Chairman

 

of UNX, Inc. (equities trading firm) since 2003; Chair of the Investment Committee of

 

HighVista Strategies LLC (private investment firm) since 2005; Director of registered

 

investment companies advised by Merrill Lynch Investment Managers and affiliates

 

(1985–2004), Genbel Securities Limited (South African financial services firm)

 

(1999–2003), Gensec Bank (1999–2003), Sanlam, Ltd. (South African insurance

 

company) (2001–2003), and Stockback, Inc. (credit card firm) (2000–2002).

 

 

Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.

 

Born 1941

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, Chief Executive

Trustee since January 1993

Officer, and Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Director

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/aircraft systems and services).

 

 

J. Lawrence Wilson

 

Born 1936

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Retired Chairman and Chief Executive

Trustee since April 1985

Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Director of Cummins Inc. (diesel engines) and

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

AmerisourceBergen Corp. (pharmaceutical distribution); Trustee of Vanderbilt University

 

and of Culver Educational Foundation.

 

 

Executive Officers1

 

 

 

Heidi Stam

 

Born 1956

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing Director of The Vanguard

Secretary since July 2005

Group, Inc., since 2006; General Counsel of The Vanguard Group since 2005; Secretary of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

The Vanguard Group, and of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard

 

Group, since 2005; Principal of The Vanguard Group (1997–2006).

 

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Born 1957

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.;

Treasurer since July 1998

Treasurer of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard Group.

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

Vanguard Senior Management Team

 

 

 

 

 

R. Gregory Barton

Kathleen C. Gubanich

Michael S. Miller

Mortimer J. Buckley

Paul A. Heller

Ralph K. Packard

James H. Gately

F. William McNabb, III

George U. Sauter

 

 

 

Founder

 

 

 

 

 

John C. Bogle

 

 

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996

 

 

 

1 Officers of the funds are “interested persons” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940.

2 December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.

More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information, available from The Vanguard Group.

 

 

 

 


 

P.O. Box 2600

 

Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

 

Connect with Vanguard® > www.vanguard.com

 

 

Fund Information > 800-662-7447

Vanguard, Admiral, Connect with Vanguard, Windsor, and

 

the ship logo are trademarks of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739

 

 

All other marks are the exclusive property of their

Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036

respective owners.

 

 

Text Telephone for People

All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc.

with Hearing Impairment > 800-952-3335

or Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.

 

 

 

 

 

You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting

 

guidelines by visiting our website, www.vanguard.com,

This material may be used in conjunction

and searching for “proxy voting guidelines,” or by calling

with the offering of shares of any Vanguard

Vanguard at 800-662-2739. They are also available from

fund only if preceded or accompanied by

the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov. In addition, you may

the fund’s current prospectus.

obtain a free report on how your fund voted the proxies for

 

securities it owned during the 12 months ended June 30.

 

To get the report, visit either www.vanguard.com

 

or www.sec.gov.

 

 

 

You can review and copy information about your fund

 

at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C.

 

To find out more about this public service, call the SEC

 

at 202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also

 

available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive

 

copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a

 

request in either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to

 

publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the

 

Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange

 

Commission, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© 2007 The Vanguard Group, Inc.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.

 

 

 

Q222 062007

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

Vanguard® Windsor II Fund

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

> Semiannual Report

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

April 30, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

>

Vanguard Windsor II Fund returned 10.9% for the first half of its fiscal year, outpacing both its benchmark and peer average.

 

>

Electricity producers and consumer staples companies were among the fund’s top performers.

 

>

An underweighting in the financials sector relative to the fund’s benchmark proved beneficial.

 

 

 

 

Contents

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

1

Chairman’s Letter

2

Advisors’ Report

6

Fund Profile

10

Performance Summary

11

Financial Statements

12

About Your Fund’s Expenses

25

Trustees Approve Advisory Arrangements

27

Glossary

29

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Please note: The opinions expressed in this report are just that—informed opinions. They should not be considered promises or advice. Also, please keep in mind that the information and opinions cover the period through the date on the cover of this report. Of course, the risks of investing in your fund are spelled out in the prospectus.

 

 

 

Your Fund’s Total Returns

 

 

 

Six Months Ended April 30, 2007

 

 

 

Ticker

Total

 

Symbol

Returns

Vanguard Windsor II Fund

 

 

Investor Shares

VWNFX

10.9%

Admiral™ Shares1

VWNAX

10.9

Russell 1000 Value Index

 

9.8

Average Large-Cap Value Fund2

 

9.2

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index

 

9.1

 

 

Your Fund’s Performance at a Glance

October 31, 2006–April 30, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Distributions Per Share

 

Starting

Ending

Income

Capital

 

Share Price

Share Price

Dividends

Gains

Vanguard Windsor II Fund

 

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$35.14

$36.98

$0.410

$1.458

Admiral Shares

62.41

65.66

0.769

2.588

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 A lower-cost class of shares available to many longtime shareholders and to those with significant investments in the fund.

2 Derived from data provided by Lipper Inc.

 

 

1

 

 


 

Chairman’s Letter

 

Dear Shareholder,

 

Value stocks continued their prolonged market leadership, helping Vanguard Windsor II Fund to a double-digit gain for the six months ended April 30, 2007. The fund returned 10.9%, a fine performance on both an absolute and a relative basis. Windsor II surpassed both its benchmark, the Russell 1000 Value Index, and the average gain among large-capitalization value funds.

 

The fund’s advisors notched a large portion of their gains in a handful of industries, including consumer staples companies and electricity providers. The fund also benefited from largely avoiding financials companies that were laid low by soaring default rates on mortgages issued to homebuyers with weak credit.

 

Stocks soared to a new high in the final month of the period

The U.S. stock market was particularly volatile during the six-month period. The Dow Jones Industrial Average crept up gradually through the first three months, fell steeply in late February, then recovered in March and climbed steadily through April. The Dow closed above 13,000 for the first time on April 25 and gained 5.9% overall for the month, its best single-month performance since December 2003.

 

During the period, the market was buoyed by economic reports that showed slower, but broad-based, growth in the domestic economy, and by strong profit reports from a host of blue-chip companies. Once

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2

 

 

again, international stocks outperformed U.S. equities. In a marked turnaround from recent years, large-cap stocks outpaced small-cap issues.

 

Bonds produced modest gains

The Federal Reserve Board maintained its target for the federal funds rate at 5.25% throughout the six-month period. The inversion of the yield curve continued, with yields of long-term bonds remaining lower than short-term yields. As inflation fears abated, the premium generally paid for long-term bonds—and for the longer commitment of capital—diminished.

 

Money market instruments continued to be a bright spot in the fixed income firmament, returning 2.5% for the half-year, as measured by the Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index. The yield of 3-month U.S. Treasuries was 4.8% at the end of the period. For the six months, the broad taxable bond market returned 2.6%, while municipal bonds posted a return of 1.6%.

 

Stock selection in power producers, consumer staples stoked gains

The market for value stocks was so robust during the six months that no industry sector lost ground and many produced double-digit gains. Vanguard Windsor II Fund did better still by holding the deeply discounted stocks its advisors prefer.

 

The largest single contribution to returns came from the utilities sector, particularly electricity providers Exelon and Entergy. Both benefited from increased demand for power and from flat supplies in their

 

 

Market Barometer

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Returns

 

 

Periods Ended April 30, 2007

 

Six Months

One Year

Five Years1

Stocks

 

 

 

Russell 1000 Index (Large-caps)

9.1%

15.2%

9.1%

Russell 2000 Index (Small-caps)

6.9

7.8

11.1

Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index (Entire market)

9.1

14.5

9.7

MSCI All Country World Index ex USA (International)

16.1

19.7

18.3

 

 

 

 

Bonds

 

 

 

Lehman Aggregate Bond Index (Broad taxable market)

2.6%

7.4%

5.1%

Lehman Municipal Bond Index

1.6

5.8

5.2

Citigroup 3-Month Treasury Bill Index

2.5

5.0

2.6

 

 

 

 

CPI

 

 

 

Consumer Price Index

2.4%

2.6%

2.8%

 

1 Annualized.

 

 

 

 

 

 

3

 

 

regions, boosting profit margins. Exelon posted a 73% rise in quarterly profits

for the first three months of 2007 and, like Entergy, received preliminary regulatory approval to add to its portfolio of nuclear power plants.

 

Approximately one-third of the fund’s six-month gain came from only two sectors: utilities and consumer staples. The latter group’s performance was driven by Imperial Tobacco Group, up 25%, and Altria Group, which rose 14%. Both companies benefited from consolidation in the industry, and Altria gained after spinning off Kraft.

 

The fund’s largest sector, financials, made up 26% of holdings on average during the half-year, a much smaller exposure than the sector’s 36% weighting in the Russell 1000 Value Index. The fund’s long-standing underweighting of the sector has hurt the fund’s relative performance in the past few years, during which real estate investment trusts and investment banks have been top performers. During this most recent fiscal period, however, troubles in the mortgage loan business rippled through a variety of financial institutions and turned the fund’s underweighting into a positive.

 

Weak spots were conspicuous by their absence, in general. Compared with the stocks in its benchmark, however, Windsor II missed out on some of the large gains at ExxonMobil and Chevron, for example.

 

 

Annualized Expense Ratios1

 

 

 

Your fund compared with its peer group

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average

 

Investor

Admiral

Large-Cap

 

Shares

Shares

Value Fund

Windsor II Fund

0.33%

0.23%

1.35%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Fund expense ratios reflect the six months ended April 30, 2007. Peer-group expense ratio is derived from data provided by Lipper Inc. and captures information through year-end 2006.

 

 

4

 

 

In January, Lazard Asset Management LLC joined Windsor II’s team of advisors, replacing two firms, Equinox Capital Management, LLC, and Tukman Capital Management, Inc. The five managers responsible for Windsor II (see the table on page 6) have been assembled to represent different, yet complementary, investment strategies that we believe will provide competitive long-term performance at a very modest cost.

 

In addition, in November the fund’s board of trustees removed a $25,000 limit on annual share purchases that had been in place since April 20, 2006. A period of strong performance that resulted in significant new cash flows prompted the investment ceiling. We removed the cap on November 9, 2006, but retained the fund’s $10,000 initial investment minimum. The moves are part of our ongoing effort to protect existing shareholders and ensure that Windsor II’s advisors can effectively manage the portfolio, Vanguard’s largest actively managed fund.

 

A balanced strategy positions you for the long term

At Vanguard, we always encourage shareholders to evaluate their investments from a long-term perspective. In our view, a stock fund like Windsor II should be part of a carefully considered, balanced portfolio with an asset allocation that reflects your personal appetite for risk, your time horizon, and your investment goals.

 

Over time, a well-diversified portfolio that holds both value and growth stock funds, as well as bond and money market funds, can help position you to reap the rewards of the markets’ best-performing assets while muting the impact of the worst-performing ones. With its low expenses and long-term focus on value investing, Vanguard Windsor II Fund can play an important role in such an investment plan.

 

Thank you for investing with Vanguard.

 

Sincerely,

 


 

John J. Brennan

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

May 9, 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5

 

 

Advisors’ Report

 

During the fiscal half-year ended April 30, 2007, Vanguard Windsor II Investor and Admiral Shares both returned 10.9%. This performance reflects the combined efforts of your fund’s five independent advisors. The use of multiple advisors provides exposure to distinct, yet complementary, investment approaches, enhancing the fund’s diversification. The advisors, the percentage and amount of fund assets each manages, and a brief description of their investment strategies are presented in the table below. Each advisor has also prepared a discussion of the investment environment that existed during the fiscal half-year and of how the portfolio’s positioning reflects this assessment.

 

Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss, Inc.

 

Portfolio Manager:

James P. Barrow, Founding Partner

 

Corporate earnings began to moderate from their high levels over the past six months, even while companies continued

 

 

Vanguard Windsor II Fund Investment Advisors

 

 

 

 

 

Fund Assets Managed

 

 

Investment Advisor

%

$ Million

 

Investment Strategy

Barrow, Hanley,

59

30,751

 

Conducts fundamental research on individual stocks

Mewhinney & Strauss, Inc.

 

 

 

exhibiting traditional value characteristics: price/

 

 

 

 

earnings and price/book ratios below the broad

 

 

 

 

market average and dividend yields above the

 

 

 

 

broad market average.

Lazard Asset Management LLC

15

7,848

 

Employs a relative-value approach that seeks a

 

 

 

 

combination of attractive valuation and high financial

 

 

 

 

productivity. The process is research-driven, relying

 

 

 

 

upon bottom-up stock analysis performed by the

 

 

 

 

firm’s global sector analysts.

Vanguard Quantitative Equity Group

14

7,575

 

Employs a quantitative fundamental management

 

 

 

 

approach, using models that assess valuation,

 

 

 

 

marketplace sentiment, and balance-sheet

 

 

 

 

characteristics of companies versus their peers.

Hotchkis and Wiley

5

2,860

 

Uses a disciplined investment approach, focusing on

Capital Management, LLC

 

 

 

such investment parameters as a company’s tangible

 

 

 

 

assets, sustainable cash flow, and potential for

 

 

 

 

improving business performance.

Armstrong Shaw Associates Inc.

4

1,973

 

Uses a bottom-up approach, employing fundamental

 

 

 

 

and qualitative criteria to identify individual companies

 

 

 

 

for potential investment.

Cash Investments1

3

1,603

 

 

 

 

 

1 These short-term reserves are invested by Vanguard in equity index products to simulate investments in stocks. Each advisor may also maintain a modest cash position.

 

 

6

 

 

 

to experience record profitability. Many believe the Federal Reserve Board has learned how to correctly manipulate the economy. In our report to shareholders in October, we urged caution, as most markets were near an all-time high.Yet, equities in general, and your fund in particular, have experienced good returns and the stock market has climbed to new levels. Stocks’ performance is sustainable, so long as inflation is under control and interest rates stay down.

 

In the fund’s fiscal half-year, oil prices failed to reach new highs even after headlines about political risk and supply disruptions. Our underweighting in the energy sector, particularly a lack of oil service holdings, detracted from performance. Financials stocks were a drag, with holdings such as Allstate, Bank of America, and Capital One Financial underperforming for the period.

 

Significant holdings in electric utilities such as Entergy and Exelon helped our performance. Our stock selection in consumer staples, particularly tobacco companies Imperial Tobacco Group and Altria Group, also contributed significantly to performance.

 

New names in the portfolio during the past six months include Quest Diagnostics, AT&T, Kraft Foods, Spectra Energy (a spin-off from Duke Energy), and Wyndham Worldwide. We closed our positions in ConAgra Foods and Mattel.

 

Lazard Asset Management LLC

 

Portfolio Managers:

Andrew Lacey, Deputy Chairman

Christopher Blake, Managing Director

 

The multiyear bull market that began in 2003 continued in 2007. Volatility increased in February and March; however, better-than-expected earnings reports and acquisitions drove stocks to new highs in April. Financials were among the portfolio’s worst-performing groups, as uncertainty surrounding the scope of the recent rise in subprime loan defaults weighed on the sector.

 

The portfolio’s performance was aided by solid stock selection in the consumer discretionary sector, particularly media holdings, including Idearc and R.H. Donnelley. Stock selection in consumer staples also boosted performance, as shares of Smithfield Foods rose. Within information technology, shares of First Data rose sharply after the company agreed to be acquired by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts. The acquisition was one of many demonstrating that private-equity firms are not only focusing on mid-cap targets but also on larger-cap companies, due to the attractive valuations and consistent free cash flow available in that part of the market.

 

Stock selection in health care detracted from the portfolio’s returns, as shares of Sepracor declined. Returns were also hurt by a lack of exposure to utilities stocks, where we believe that valuations are unattractive.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

7

 

 

Historically, periods of slowing corporate-earnings growth have favored larger-cap, more diversified, and more consistently profitable companies, as investors seek out stability amid a more adverse environment. We expect the portfolio to perform well in these market conditions.

 

Vanguard Quantitative Equity Group

 

Portfolio Manager:

James D. Troyer, Principal

 

The heart of our process is a stock-selection model that uses three measures of a stock’s attractiveness relative to its capitalization and industry peers. The first measures a stock’s valuation; the second evaluates earnings quality; and the third considers market sentiment. We construct our portfolio by combining our rating of a stock with risk measures to minimize our exposure to industry-specific and other factors. Simply stated, our portion of the portfolio’s performance integrates three components: first, the return of the benchmark; second, our model’s stock-picking ability; and third, some amount of “luck.” Over the long run, we expect that luck will average out to zero.

 

During the fund’s fiscal half-year, our luck component was positive, slightly enhancing our model’s stock selection. The model itself had a good half-year, with all of the model’s components working in sync.

 

Our best performance over the six months was in the consumer durables industry, where our model picked Whirlpool and Mohawk Industries, each of which rose dramatically. Our model was also successful in the energy and banking industries. Conversely, the model picked Pfizer, which dropped in value during the period. These disparate results are typical of a quantitative process that holds many positions.

 

Hotchkis and Wiley Capital Management, LLC

 

Portfolio Managers:

George H. Davis, Jr., Chief Executive Officer

Sheldon J. Lieberman, Principal.

 

U.S. equity returns for the six months were led by the materials and utilities sectors as they reacted to surprisingly strong commodity inflation over the period. Consumer stocks were dragged down as investors extrapolated the impact on consumer spending of a collapse in subprime mortgage lending. Despite the distraction, equity indexes surged forward after a bit of a roller coaster ride.

 

During the past six months, our portion of the portfolio benefited from positive stock selection in the financials and information technology sectors. In financials, the portfolio had high exposure to insurance companies, such as Unum Group and MetLife, which did well on a relative basis. Within information technology, IT services companies Electronic Data Systems and First Data, and software manufacturer CA, performed well. In addition, strong stock selection within the health care sector aided performance.

 

 

 

 

8

 

 

In the consumer discretionary sector, negative returns from homebuilders Centex, Pulte Homes, and Lennar hurt performance. Although current conditions are weak for homebuilders, and the subprime contraction may deepen the trough, we continue to be bullish about the long-term value of our homebuilder positions, as they offer attractive rewards for a patient investor, in our view.

 

Armstrong Shaw Associates Inc.

 

Portfolio Manager:

Jeffrey M. Shaw, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer

 

During the past six months, our portion of Windsor II garnered the greatest gain from our utility holdings, which were up 31%, followed by consumer staples and energy, up 20% and 15%, respectively. Weak relative returns in consumer discretionary and industrials detracted from performance.

 

We maintained a meaningful overweighting in consumer discretionary, with sizable positions in Comcast and Time Warner. Both companies had strong free-cash-flow generation and robust growth driven by the strength of their triple-play offerings of phone, Internet, and television services. We were also overweighted in health care, which is partly a play on demographics and the aging U.S. population.

 

Although corporate profit growth is already decelerating and earnings expectations are declining, several favorable trends could benefit our portfolio. Corporations are continuing to buy back stock, which should boost earnings per share; continued dollar weakness could improve the profit outlook of our global companies; and private equity firms are still flush with cash, fueling merger-and-acquisition and leveraged-buyout activity. In fact, on April 2, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts announced a leveraged buyout of First Data, one of our holdings, causing the stock to rise more than 25%. Finally, investors tend to move up in quality and capitalization size of their holdings as economic concerns grow, benefiting our high-quality large-cap stocks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9

 

 

Fund Profile

As of April 30, 2007

 

 

Portfolio Characteristics

 

 

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index1

Index2

Number of Stocks

284

599

4,921

Median Market Cap

$43.4B

$50.3B

$32.1B

Price/Earnings Ratio

15.5x

14.7x

18.0x

Price/Book Ratio

2.5x

2.2x

2.9x

Yield

 

2.4%

1.7%

Investor Shares

2.1%

 

 

Admiral Shares

2.2%

 

 

Return on Equity

19.1%

17.6%

18.0%

Earnings Growth Rate

16.7%

19.4%

20.8%

Foreign Holdings

7.4%

0.0%

1.0%

Turnover Rate

45%3

Expense Ratio

 

Investor Shares

0.33%3

 

 

Admiral Shares

0.23%3

 

 

Short-Term Reserves

1%

 

 

Sector Diversification (% of portfolio)

 

 

 

Comparative

Broad

 

Fund

Index1

Index2

Consumer Discretionary

8%

9%

12%

Consumer Staples

10

8

8

Energy

9

14

10

Financials

26

35

22

Health Care

13

7

11

Industrials

10

7

11

Information Technology

6

3

15

Materials

4

4

4

Telecommunication Services

5

6

3

Utilities

8

7

4

Short-Term Reserves

1%

 

 

Volatility Measures4

 

 

Fund Versus

Fund Versus

 

Comparative Index1

Broad Index2

R-Squared

0.91

0.76

Beta

0.91

0.71

 

 

 

 

 

Ten Largest Holdings5 (% of total net assets)

 

 

 

 

Bank of America Corp.

diversified financial services

2.7%

Citigroup, Inc.

diversified financial services

2.5

Pfizer Inc.

pharmaceuticals

2.4

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

diversified financial services

2.4

ConocoPhillips Co.

integrated oil and gas

2.3

Altria Group, Inc.

tobacco

2.3

AT&T Inc.

integrated telecommunication services

2.3

Exelon Corp.

electric utilities

2.3

Imperial Tobacco Group ADR

tobacco

2.3

Verizon Communications Inc.

integrated telecommunication services

2.2

Top Ten

 

23.7%

 

 

Investment Focus

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1Russell 1000 Value Index.

2 Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index.

3 Annualized.

4 For an explanation of R-squared, beta, and other terms used here, see the Glossary on page 29.

5 “Ten Largest Holdings” excludes any temporary cash investments and equity index products.

 

 

10

 

 

Performance Summary

 

All of the returns in this report represent past performance, which is not a guarantee of future results that may be achieved by the fund. (Current performance may be lower or higher than the performance data cited. For performance data current to the most recent month-end, visit our website at www.vanguard.com/performance.) Note, too, that both investment returns and principal value can fluctuate widely, so an investor’s shares, when sold, could be worth more or less than their original cost. The returns shown do not reflect taxes that a shareholder would pay on fund distributions or on the sale of fund shares.

 

 

Fiscal-Year Total Returns (%): October 31, 1996–April 30, 2007

 


 

Average Annual Total Returns: Periods Ended March 31, 2007

This table presents average annual total returns through the latest calendar quarter—rather than through the end of the fiscal period. Securities and Exchange Commission rules require that we provide this information.

 

 

 

Inception Date

One Year

Five Years

Ten Years

Investor Shares

6/24/1985

16.07%

9.61%

10.25%

Admiral Shares

5/14/2001

16.19

9.73

7.672

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Six months ended April 30, 2007.

2 Return since inception.

Note: See Financial Highlights tables on pages 19 and 20 for dividend and capital gains information.

 

 

11

 

 

Financial Statements (unaudited)

 

Statement of Net Assets

As of April 30, 2007

 

The fund provides a complete list of its holdings four times in each fiscal year, at the quarter-ends. For the second and fourth fiscal quarters, the lists appear in the fund’s semiannual and annual reports to shareholders. For the first and third fiscal quarters, the fund files the lists with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Form N-Q. Shareholders can look up the fund’s Forms N-Q on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Forms N-Q may also be reviewed and copied at the SEC’s Public Reference Room (see the back cover of this report for further information).

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Common Stocks (97.0%)1

 

 

Consumer Discretionary (7.8%)

 

 

 

Carnival Corp.

14,536,500

710,689

2

Sherwin-Williams Co.

9,235,200

588,929

* 2

Wyndham Worldwide Corp.

12,031,174

416,279

2

Service Corp. International

26,080,100

316,873

 

Time Warner, Inc.

13,199,699

272,310

*

R.H. Donnelley Corp.

2,117,525

165,358

 

Gannett Co., Inc.

2,564,500

146,330

 

Liz Claiborne, Inc.

3,265,583

146,037

 

Idearc Inc.

3,982,007

138,375

 

News Corp., Class A

4,868,500

109,006

 

Centex Corp.

2,372,300

106,208

*

Comcast Corp. Special Class A

3,728,840

98,441

 

Home Depot, Inc.

2,195,500

83,144

 

The Stanley Works

1,393,500

81,213

 

Fortune Brands, Inc.

974,600

78,065

 

Lowe’s Cos., Inc.

2,255,700

68,934

 

Pulte Homes, Inc.

2,412,500

64,896

 

Lennar Corp. Class A

1,348,000

57,573

 

McDonald’s Corp.

1,173,406

56,652

*

Interpublic Group of Cos., Inc.

3,332,400

42,255

*

Office Depot, Inc.

1,221,580

41,070

 

Whirlpool Corp.

330,200

35,011

 

General Motors Corp.

1,084,067

33,855

 

CBS Corp.

946,283

30,063

*

Mohawk Industries, Inc.

330,400

29,789

 

Magna International, Inc. Class A

361,100

28,581

*

Expedia, Inc.

1,124,700

26,565

 

Yum! Brands, Inc.

421,500

26,074

 

Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.

566,983

23,569

*

Dollar Tree Stores, Inc.

541,200

21,280

 

Mattel, Inc.

383,500

10,853

 

Jones Apparel Group, Inc.

270,400

9,029

 

Newell Rubbermaid, Inc.

289,048

8,865

 

Eastman Kodak Co.

270,800

6,746

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

Tribune Co.

182,100

5,973

 

Leggett & Platt, Inc.

241,700

5,685

 

Hasbro, Inc.

156,800

4,956

 

E.W. Scripps Co. Class A

36,200

1,567

 

The Gap, Inc.

52,400

941

 

Regal Entertainment Group Class A

5,300

115

*

Liberty Global, Inc. Class A

700

25

 

 

 

4,098,179

Consumer Staples (9.3%)

 

 

 

Altria Group, Inc.

17,854,399

1,230,525

 

Imperial Tobacco Group ADR

13,840,000

1,209,754

 

Kraft Foods Inc.

21,448,226

717,872

 

Diageo PLC ADR

7,768,500

655,661

 

CVS/Caremark Corp.

6,473,500

234,600

 

Coca-Cola Enterprises, Inc.

7,300,360

160,170

 

Kimberly-Clark Corp.

2,000,177

142,353

*

Constellation Brands, Inc. Class A

3,866,600

86,651

*

Smithfield Foods, Inc.

2,604,400

79,617

 

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

1,437,900

68,904

 

The Coca-Cola Co.

1,263,699

65,952

 

General Mills, Inc.

627,600

37,593

 

ConAgra Foods, Inc.

1,422,700

34,970

 

Safeway, Inc.

907,500

32,942

 

Molson Coors Brewing Co. Class B

306,400

28,887

 

Unilever PLC ADR

899,760

28,171

 

The Kroger Co.

906,099

26,739

 

Carolina Group

247,200

18,918

 

H.J. Heinz Co.

293,300

13,817

 

Dean Foods Co.

368,200

13,414

 

Reynolds American Inc.

156,800

10,076

 

The Pepsi Bottling Group, Inc.

224,300

7,359

 

 

 

4,904,945

Energy (8.4%)

 

 

 

ConocoPhillips Co.

17,794,757

1,234,066

 

Occidental Petroleum Corp.

20,467,700

1,037,712

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

ExxonMobil Corp.

6,099,194

484,154

 

Chevron Corp.

5,208,029

405,133

 

Spectra Energy Corp.

13,534,200

353,243

 

Hess Corp.

2,213,656

125,625

2

Massey Energy Co.

4,659,000

125,467

 

Arch Coal, Inc.

3,022,300

109,014

 

BJ Services Co.

3,551,400

101,783

 

Devon Energy Corp.

1,024,852

74,681

 

Royal Dutch Shell PLC ADR Class B

813,500

57,523

 

Valero Energy Corp.

741,800

52,097

 

Marathon Oil Corp.

438,600

44,540

 

Chesapeake Energy Corp.

1,160,800

39,177

 

Tesoro Petroleum Corp.

293,700

35,596

 

Sunoco, Inc.

444,400

33,566

 

GlobalSantaFe Corp.

473,800

30,290

 

Cimarex Energy Co.

692,700

27,292

 

Petro-Canada (New York Shares)

550,000

24,382

 

Apache Corp.

236,170

17,122

 

Patterson–UTI Energy, Inc.

602,900

14,705

 

Anadarko Petroleum Corp.

274,600

12,813

 

 

 

4,439,981

Financials (24.9%)

 

 

 

Capital Markets (1.8%)

 

 

 

The Bank of New York Co., Inc.

3,604,568

145,913

 

Bear Stearns Co., Inc.

921,952

143,548

 

Mellon Financial Corp.

3,247,028

139,395

 

Morgan Stanley

1,597,685

134,222

 

Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.

1,395,100

125,880

 

A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc.

1,594,633

115,531

 

Ameriprise Financial, Inc.

1,837,625

109,284

 

Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.

368,900

27,771

 

 

 

 

 

Commercial Banks (3.0%)

 

 

 

Wells Fargo & Co.

26,913,223

965,916

 

Wachovia Corp.

1,828,540

101,557

 

National City Corp.

2,536,800

92,720

 

U.S. Bancorp

2,057,322

70,669

 

Comerica, Inc.

974,994

60,362

 

PNC Financial Services Group

662,500

49,091

 

KeyCorp

1,308,328

46,681

 

Synovus Financial Corp.

945,300

29,834

 

Huntington Bancshares Inc.

1,254,709

27,829

 

Colonial BancGroup, Inc.

1,070,500

25,756

 

M & T Bank Corp.

223,300

24,862

 

SunTrust Banks, Inc.

263,200

22,219

 

BB&T Corp.

379,740

15,805

 

UnionBanCal Corp.

223,800

13,759

 

Fifth Third Bancorp

330,799

13,427

 

Regions Financial Corp.

130,000

4,562

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

Consumer Finance (3.0%)

 

 

 

SLM Corp.

19,878,300

1,070,049

 

Capital One Financial Corp.

6,670,720

495,368

*

AmeriCredit Corp.

24,000

606

 

 

 

 

 

Diversified Financial Services (7.5%)

 

 

 

Bank of America Corp.

27,746,541

1,412,299

 

Citigroup, Inc.

24,139,041

1,294,335

 

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

24,239,723

1,262,890

 

 

 

 

 

Insurance (7.4%)

 

 

 

The Allstate Corp.

15,277,601

952,100

 

Manulife Financial Corp.

22,406,830

809,111

2

XL Capital Ltd. Class A

9,779,400

762,598

 

American International Group, Inc.

4,820,200

336,980

 

Marsh & McLennan Cos., Inc.

5,244,945

166,579

 

PartnerRe Ltd.

2,118,760

152,593

 

The Travelers Cos., Inc.

2,593,000

140,281

 

MetLife, Inc.

1,725,000

113,333

 

Genworth Financial Inc.

2,394,000

87,357

 

Unum Group

2,550,300

63,451

 

ACE Ltd.

722,700

42,972

 

The Hartford Financial Services Group Inc.

395,149

39,989

 

Prudential Financial, Inc.

415,800

39,501

 

Safeco Corp.

457,588

30,539

 

Ambac Financial Group, Inc.

309,600

28,421

 

RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd.

510,800

27,660

*

Conseco, Inc.

1,326,500

23,466

 

Nationwide Financial Services, Inc.

353,300

20,184

 

The Chubb Corp.

283,304

15,250

 

Axis Capital Holdings Ltd.

382,800

14,202

 

Loews Corp.

297,500

14,078

 

Assurant, Inc.

237,400

13,658

*

Arch Capital Group Ltd.

26,529

1,932

 

 

 

 

 

Real Estate Investment Trusts (0.6%)

 

 

 

CBL & Associates Properties, Inc. REIT

1,677,300

76,233

 

Simon Property Group, Inc. REIT

226,400

26,099

 

Boston Properties, Inc. REIT

177,523

20,870

 

Archstone-Smith Trust REIT

361,400

18,833

 

Vornado Realty Trust REIT

132,100

15,671

 

Health Care Properties Investors REIT

410,300

14,521

 

Avalonbay Communities, Inc. REIT

117,900

14,414

 

Regency Centers Corp. REIT

159,600

13,151

 

SL Green Realty Corp. REIT

93,304

13,147

 

 

 

 

 

 

13

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

Apartment Investment & Management Co. Class A REIT

225,900

12,492

 

UDR, Inc. REIT

376,100

11,298

 

Host Hotels & Resorts Inc. REIT

428,999

11,000

 

ProLogis REIT

143,300

9,286

 

iStar Financial Inc. REIT

168,600

8,079

 

Equity Residential REIT

153,500

7,127

 

The Macerich Co. REIT

72,800

6,925

 

CapitalSource Inc. REIT

229,000

5,901

 

Kimco Realty Corp. REIT

81,800

3,932

 

Federal Realty Investment Trust REIT

11,400

1,028

 

Public Storage, Inc. REIT

9,700

905

 

 

 

 

 

Real Estate Management & Development (0.1%)

 

 

^

The St. Joe Co.

946,300

53,589

 

Forest City Enterprise Class A

139,170

9,298

 

 

 

 

 

Thrifts & Mortgage Finance (1.5%)

 

 

 

Washington Mutual, Inc.

13,313,095

558,884

 

Freddie Mac

1,907,700

123,581

 

Fannie Mae

1,141,700

67,269

 

Countrywide Financial Corp.

450,028

16,687

 

Radian Group, Inc.

83,210

4,835

 

 

 

13,063,430

Health Care (12.2%)

 

 

 

Pfizer Inc.

48,325,400

1,278,690

 

Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

38,393,900

1,108,048

 

Wyeth

18,946,800

1,051,547

*

WellPoint Inc.

10,883,900

859,502

 

Baxter International, Inc.

12,506,800

708,260

 

Quest Diagnostics, Inc.

6,540,500

319,765

*

Boston Scientific Corp.

8,952,200

138,222

 

Merck & Co., Inc.

2,413,000

124,125

*

Biogen Idec Inc.

2,224,056

104,998

 

Abbott Laboratories

1,558,500

88,242

*

Barr Pharmaceuticals Inc.

1,812,800

87,667

 

Eli Lilly & Co.

1,435,400

84,875

 

Johnson & Johnson

1,319,200

84,719

*

Sepracor Inc.

1,541,163

82,730

*

Hospira, Inc.

1,878,948

76,191

 

Schering-Plough Corp.

2,175,600

69,032

 

UnitedHealth Group Inc.

1,234,500

65,503

*

King Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

1,404,700

28,726

*

Tenet Healthcare Corp.

3,827,900

28,403

 

CIGNA Corp.

90,500

14,081

 

AmerisourceBergen Corp.

259,400

12,967

*

Charles River Laboratories, Inc.

75,400

3,571

 

 

 

6,419,864

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

Industrials (9.8%)

 

 

 

General Electric Co.

24,476,300

902,196

 

Honeywell International Inc.

16,334,288

884,992

 

Illinois Tool Works, Inc.

15,525,700

796,624

2

Cooper Industries, Inc. Class A

13,561,300

674,810

 

ITT Industries, Inc.

8,101,000

516,925

 

Tyco International Ltd.

8,411,500

274,467

 

United Technologies Corp.

2,274,000

152,654

 

Textron, Inc.

1,335,400

135,770

 

Pitney Bowes, Inc.

2,666,300

127,982

 

Northrop Grumman Corp.

1,537,421

113,170

 

Ingersoll-Rand Co.

2,489,855

111,172

 

Masco Corp.

2,884,600

78,490

*^

USG Corp.

1,435,800

66,262

 

Flowserve Corp.

980,400

59,814

 

Parker Hannifin Corp.

409,200

37,704

 

Union Pacific Corp.

294,499

33,647

 

Deere & Co.

289,500

31,671

 

Embraer-Empresa Brasileira de Aeronautica SA ADR

605,200

28,390

 

Avery Dennison Corp.

407,600

25,353

 

PACCAR, Inc.

247,030

20,746

 

CSX Corp.

270,800

11,690

 

R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co.

285,350

11,471

 

Emerson Electric Co.

243,800

11,456

*

Avis Budget Group, Inc.

344,210

9,683

 

Raytheon Co.

163,400

8,748

 

Eaton Corp.

69,000

6,155

 

Dover Corp.

25,200

1,213

*

Allied Waste Industries, Inc.

52,962

708

*

Raytheon Co. Warrants Exp. 6/16/11

24,065

432

 

 

 

5,134,395

Information Technology (6.0%)

 

 

 

Hewlett-Packard Co.

13,071,672

550,840

 

Microsoft Corp.

13,948,600

417,621

*

Nokia Corp. ADR

13,702,700

345,993

 

First Data Corp.

9,507,500

308,043

 

International Business Machines Corp.

2,751,700

281,251

 

Electronic Data Systems Corp.

5,188,000

151,697

 

CA, Inc.

5,267,728

143,598

*

Oracle Corp.

7,345,200

138,090

*

Sun Microsystems, Inc.

20,890,900

109,051

*

EMC Corp.

5,991,752

90,955

*

Dell Inc.

3,344,300

84,310

 

Intel Corp.

3,884,800

83,523

*

Flextronics International Ltd.

7,045,040

78,552

*

Cisco Systems, Inc.

2,892,100

77,335

*

Symantec Corp.

3,929,300

69,156

 

 

 

 

 

14

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

QUALCOMM Inc.

1,559,200

68,293

 

Motorola, Inc.

3,205,600

55,553

*

BMC Software, Inc.

785,700

25,433

*

Xerox Corp.

969,800

17,941

*

Cadence Design Systems, Inc.

684,200

15,189

*

Novellus Systems, Inc.

435,899

14,110

*

Lexmark International, Inc.

163,000

8,884

*

LSI Corp.

946,200

8,043

*

Vishay Intertechnology, Inc.

353,500

5,886

 

Intersil Corp.

34,900

1,040

*

International Rectifier Corp.

4,500

159

 

 

 

3,150,546

Materials (4.2%)

 

 

2

Lyondell Chemical Co.

22,889,300

712,315

2

Hanson PLC ADR

8,026,950

681,328

 

Dow Chemical Co.

3,712,800

165,628

 

E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.

2,709,100

133,206

 

Alcoa Inc.

3,494,900

124,034

 

Louisiana-Pacific Corp.

4,872,551

96,038

 

Ball Corp.

1,293,700

65,578

*

Cemex SAB de CV ADR

1,517,700

49,325

 

United States Steel Corp.

363,700

36,930

 

Weyerhaeuser Co.

435,400

34,492

 

Eastman Chemical Co.

444,900

30,120

 

Ashland, Inc.

410,500

24,609

 

International Paper Co.

623,500

23,518

 

Nucor Corp.

163,890

10,400

 

Vulcan Materials Co.

47,000

5,812

 

International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc.

97,000

4,721

 

Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Inc. Class B

22,000

1,478

 

 

 

2,199,532

Telecommunication Services (5.3%)

 

 

 

AT&T Inc.

31,708,675

1,227,760

 

Verizon Communications Inc.

29,957,654

1,143,783

 

Sprint Nextel Corp.

12,034,900

241,059

 

Alltel Corp.

2,404,076

150,712

 

Telephone & Data Systems, Inc.

464,118

26,432

 

 

 

2,789,746

Utilities (7.9%)

 

 

 

Exelon Corp.

16,087,625

1,213,168

 

Entergy Corp.

8,863,400

1,002,805

 

Dominion Resources, Inc.

6,705,800

611,569

 

Duke Energy Corp.

28,002,400

574,609

2

CenterPoint Energy Inc.

18,711,100

352,330

 

FPL Group, Inc.

907,000

58,384

 

FirstEnergy Corp.

656,600

44,938

 

American Electric Power Co., Inc.

876,925

44,039

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market

 

 

 

Value

 

 

Shares

($000)

 

Edison International

753,500

39,446

*

Mirant Corp.

840,100

37,695

 

Sempra Energy

575,100

36,507

 

Consolidated Edison Inc.

706,200

36,200

 

PG&E Corp.

682,700

34,545

 

Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

336,200

29,962

 

Southern Co.

559,209

21,133

 

Xcel Energy, Inc.

633,260

15,255

 

MDU Resources Group, Inc.

476,600

14,441

 

Ameren Corp.

47,200

2,481

 

NSTAR

62,600

2,247

*

NRG Energy, Inc.

14,200

1,121

 

 

 

4,172,875

Exchange-Traded Funds (1.2%)

 

 

3

Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF

3,098,900

455,941

3

Vanguard Value ETF

2,511,200

179,124

 

 

 

635,065

Total Common Stocks

 

 

(Cost $36,481,608)

 

51,008,558

Temporary Cash Investments (3.5%)1

 

 

Money Market Fund (3.4%)

 

 

4

Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 5.259%

1,732,706,036

1,732,706

4

Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, 5.259%—Note G

55,004,400

55,004

 

 

 

1,787,710

 

 

Face

 

 

 

Amount

 

 

 

($000)

 

U.S. Agency Obligations (0.1%)

 

 

5

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.

 

 

6

5.195%–5.197%, 7/9/07

60,000

59,414

5

Federal National Mortgage Assoc.

 

 

6

5.192%, 7/25/07

2,000

1,976

 

 

 

61,390

Total Temporary Cash Investments

 

 

(Cost $1,849,096)

 

1,849,100

Total Investments (100.5%)

 

 

(Cost $38,330,704)

 

52,857,658

Other Assets and Liabilities—

 

 

Net (–0.5%)

 

(247,691)

Net Assets (100%)

 

52,609,967

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

15

 

 

 

Market

 

Value

 

($000)

Statement of Assets and Liabilities

 

Assets

 

Investment in Securities, at Value

52,857,658

Receivables for Investment Securities Sold

48,935

Receivables for Capital Shares Issued

41,815

Other Assets—Note C

75,278

Total Assets

53,023,686

Liabilities

 

Payables for Investment

 

Securities Purchased

216,380

Security Lending Collateral Payable to Brokers—Note G

55,004

Payables for Capital Shares Redeemed

43,516

Other Liabilities

98,819

Total Liabilities

413,719

Net Assets

52,609,967

 

 

 

 

At April 30, 2007, net assets consisted of:7

 

 

Amount

 

($000)

Paid-in Capital

35,165,658

Undistributed Net Investment Income

290,986

Accumulated Net Realized Gains

2,583,923

Unrealized Appreciation

 

Investment Securities

14,526,954

Futures Contracts

42,446

Net Assets

52,609,967

 

 

Investor Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 904,272,217 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

33,439,607

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Investor Shares

$36.98

 

 

Admiral Shares—Net Assets

 

Applicable to 291,944,346 outstanding

 

$.001 par value shares of beneficial

 

interest (unlimited authorization)

19,170,360

Net Asset Value Per Share—

 

Admiral Shares

$65.66

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

See Note A in Notes to Financial Statements.

*

Non-income-producing security.

^

Part of security position is on loan to broker-dealers. See Note G in Notes to Financial Statements.

1 The fund invests a portion of its cash reserves in equity markets through the use of index futures contracts. After giving effect to futures investments, the fund’s effective common stock and temporary cash investment positions represent 98.8% and 1.7%, respectively, of net assets. See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements.

2 Considered an affiliated company of the fund as the fund owns more than 5% of the outstanding voting securities of such company. See Note I in Notes to Financial Statements.

3 Considered an affiliated company of the fund as the issuer is another member of The Vanguard Group.

4 Affiliated money market fund available only to Vanguard funds and certain trusts and accounts managed by Vanguard. Rate shown is the 7-day yield.

5 The issuer operates under a congressional charter; its securities are neither issued nor guaranteed by the U.S. government. If needed, access to additional funding from the U.S. Treasury (beyond the issuer’s line of credit) would require congressional action.

6 Securities with a value of $61,390,000 have been segregated as initial margin for open futures contracts.

7 See Note E in Notes to Financial Statements for the tax-basis components of net assets.

ADR—American Depositary Receipt.

REIT—Real Estate Investment Trust.

 

 

16

 

 

Statement of Operations

 

 

Six Months Ended

 

April 30, 2007

 

($000)

Investment Income

 

Income

 

Dividends1

585,329

Interest1

43,077

Security Lending

2,210

Total Income

630,616

Expenses

 

Investment Advisory Fees—Note B

 

Basic Fee

30,289

Performance Adjustment

2,622

The Vanguard Group—Note C

 

Management and Administrative

 

Investor Shares

27,658

Admiral Shares

6,046

Marketing and Distribution

 

Investor Shares

3,427

Admiral Shares

1,527

Custodian Fees

251

Shareholders’ Reports

 

Investor Shares

264

Admiral Shares

64

Trustees’ Fees and Expenses

31

Total Expenses

72,179

Expenses Paid Indirectly—Note D

(987)

Net Expenses

71,192

Net Investment Income

559,424

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

 

Investment Securities Sold1

2,582,325

Futures Contracts

22,807

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

2,605,132

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

 

Investment Securities

1,944,605

Futures Contracts

23,882

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

1,968,487

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

5,133,043

 

 

 

 

 

1 Dividend income, interest income, and realized net gain (loss) from affiliated companies of the fund were $54,440,000, $40,966,000, and ($34,272,000), respectively.

 

 

17

 

 

Statement of Changes in Net Assets

 

 

Six Months Ended

Year Ended

 

April 30,

October 31,

 

2007

2006

 

($000)

($000)

Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets

 

 

Operations

 

 

Net Investment Income

559,424

1,011,048

Realized Net Gain (Loss)

2,605,132

2,126,784

Change in Unrealized Appreciation (Depreciation)

1,968,487

3,639,947

Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations

5,133,043

6,777,779

Distributions

 

 

Net Investment Income

 

 

Investor Shares

(355,166)

(636,172)

Admiral Shares

(201,092)

(313,576)

Realized Capital Gain1

 

 

Investor Shares

(1,263,000)

(782,678)

Admiral Shares

(676,755)

(343,927)

Total Distributions

(2,496,013)

(2,076,353)

Capital Share Transactions—Note H

 

 

Investor Shares

955,528

(564,170)

Admiral Shares

2,293,148

2,396,256

Net Increase (Decrease) from Capital Share Transactions

3,248,676

1,832,086

Total Increase (Decrease)

5,885,706

6,533,512

Net Assets

 

 

Beginning of Period

46,724,261

40,190,749

End of Period2

52,609,967

46,724,261

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Includes fiscal 2007 and 2006 short-term gain distributions totaling $134,373,000 and $0, respectively. Short-term gain distributions are treated as ordinary income dividends for tax purposes.

2 Net Assets—End of Period includes undistributed net investment income of $290,986,000 and $287,820,000.

 

 

18

 

 

Financial Highlights

 

 

Windsor II Fund Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Six Months

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ended

 

For a Share Outstanding

April 30,

Year Ended October 31,

Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$35.14

$31.61

$28.49

$24.61

$20.87

$24.50

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.399

.760

.65

.56

.51

.51

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

3.309

4.368

3.10

3.87

3.75

(3.47)

Total from Investment Operations

3.708

5.128

3.75

4.43

4.26

(2.96)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.410)

(.720)

(.63)

(.55)

(.52)

(.52)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(1.458)

(.878)

(.15)

Total Distributions

(1.868)

(1.598)

(.63)

(.55)

(.52)

(.67)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$36.98

$35.14

$31.61

$28.49

$24.61

$20.87

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

10.89%

16.85%

13.22%

18.15%

20.68%

–12.51%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$33,440

$30,790

$28,199

$26,232

$20,843

$17,735

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets1

0.33%*

0.34%

0.35%

0.37%

0.43%

0.42%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

2.26%*

2.28%

2.14%

2.07%

2.31%

2.12%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

45%*

34%

28%

22%

29%

41%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of 0.01%, 0.01%, 0.01%, 0.02%, 0.03%, and 0.02%.

*

Annualized.

 

 

 

19

 

 

 

Windsor II Fund Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Six Months

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ended

 

 

 

For a Share Outstanding

April 30,

Year Ended October 31,

Throughout Each Period

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period

$62.41

$56.13

$50.59

$43.69

$37.05

$43.50

Investment Operations

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Investment Income

.743

1.402

1.224

1.043

.95

.944

Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss)

 

 

 

 

 

 

on Investments

5.864

7.782

5.493

6.885

6.65

(6.167)

Total from Investment Operations

6.607

9.184

6.717

7.928

7.60

(5.223)

Distributions

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends from Net Investment Income

(.769)

(1.346)

(1.177)

(1.028)

(.96)

(.962)

Distributions from Realized Capital Gains

(2.588)

(1.558)

(.265)

Total Distributions

(3.357)

(2.904)

(1.177)

(1.028)

(.96)

(1.227)

Net Asset Value, End of Period

$65.66

$62.41

$56.13

$50.59

$43.69

$37.05

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return

10.93%

17.01%

13.34%

18.30%

20.79%

–12.44%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ratios/Supplemental Data

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net Assets, End of Period (Millions)

$19,170

$15,934

$11,992

$4,849

$3,412

$2,484

Ratio of Total Expenses to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets1

0.23%*

0.23%

0.22%

0.26%

0.32%

0.35%

Ratio of Net Investment Income to

 

 

 

 

 

 

Average Net Assets

2.36%*

2.39%

2.25%

2.17%

2.41%

2.18%

Portfolio Turnover Rate

45%*

34%

28%

22%

29%

41%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 Includes performance-based investment advisory fee increases (decreases) of 0.01%, 0.01%, 0.01%, 0.02%, 0.03%, and 0.02%.

*

Annualized.

See accompanying Notes, which are an integral part of the Financial Statements.

 

 

20

 

 

Notes to Financial Statements

 

Vanguard Windsor II Fund is registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 as an open-end investment company, or mutual fund. The fund files reports with the SEC under the company name Vanguard Windsor Funds. The fund offers two classes of shares, Investor Shares and Admiral Shares. Investor Shares are available to any investor who meets the fund’s minimum purchase requirements. Admiral Shares are designed for investors who meet certain administrative, service, tenure, and account-size criteria.

 

A. The following significant accounting policies conform to generally accepted accounting principles for U.S. mutual funds. The fund consistently follows such policies in preparing its financial statements.

 

1. Security Valuation: Securities are valued as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (generally 4 p.m., Eastern time) on the valuation date. Equity securities are valued at the latest quoted sales prices or official closing prices taken from the primary market in which each security trades; such securities not traded on the valuation date are valued at the mean of the latest quoted bid and asked prices. Securities for which market quotations are not readily available, or whose values have been materially affected by events occurring before the fund’s pricing time but after the close of the securities’ primary markets, are valued by methods deemed by the board of trustees to represent fair value. Investments in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund are valued at that fund’s net asset value. Temporary cash investments acquired over 60 days to maturity are valued using the latest bid prices or using valuations based on a matrix system (which considers such factors as security prices, yields, maturities, and ratings), both as furnished by independent pricing services. Other temporary cash investments are valued at amortized cost, which approximates market value.

 

2. Futures Contracts: The fund uses index futures contracts to a limited extent, with the objective of maintaining full exposure to the stock market while maintaining liquidity. The fund may purchase or sell futures contracts to achieve a desired level of investment, whether to accommodate portfolio turnover or cash flows from capital share transactions. The primary risks associated with the use of futures contracts are imperfect correlation between changes in market values of stocks held by the fund and the prices of futures contracts, and the possibility of an illiquid market.

 

Futures contracts are valued at their quoted daily settlement prices. The aggregate principal amounts of the contracts are not recorded in the Statement of Net Assets. Fluctuations in the value of the contracts are recorded in the Statement of Net Assets as an asset (liability) and in the Statement of Operations as unrealized appreciation (depreciation) until the contracts are closed, when they are recorded as realized futures gains (losses).

 

3. Federal Income Taxes: The fund intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company and distribute all of its taxable income. Accordingly, no provision for federal income taxes is required in the financial statements.

 

4. Distributions: Distributions to shareholders are recorded on the ex-dividend date.

 

5. Security Lending: The fund may lend its securities to qualified institutional borrowers to earn additional income. Security loans are required to be secured at all times by collateral at least equal to the market value of securities loaned. The fund invests cash collateral received in Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund, and records a liability for the return of the collateral, during the period the securities are on loan. Security lending income represents the income earned on investing cash collateral, less expenses associated with the loan.

 

21

 

 

6. Other: Dividend income is recorded on the ex-dividend date. Interest income includes income distributions received from Vanguard Market Liquidity Fund and is accrued daily. Security transactions are accounted for on the date securities are bought or sold. Costs used to determine realized gains (losses) on the sale of investment securities are those of the specific securities sold.

 

Each class of shares has equal rights as to assets and earnings, except that each class separately bears certain class-specific expenses related to maintenance of shareholder accounts (included in Management and Administrative expenses) and shareholder reporting. Marketing and distribution expenses are allocated to each class of shares based on a method approved by the board of trustees. Income, other non-class-specific expenses, and gains and losses on investments are allocated to each class of shares based on its relative net assets.

 

B. Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss, Inc.; Hotchkis and Wiley Capital Management, LLC; Armstrong Shaw Associates Inc.; and beginning January 9, 2007, Lazard Asset Management LLC each provide investment advisory services to a portion of the fund for a fee calculated at an annual percentage rate of average net assets managed by the advisor. The basic fee of Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss, Inc. is subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance for the preceding three years relative to the S&P 500/Barra Value Index for periods prior to May 1, 2006, and the new benchmark, the MSCI US Prime Market 750 Index, beginning May 1, 2006. The benchmark change will be fully phased in by April 2009. The basic fee of Hotchkis and Wiley Capital Management, LLC, is subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance since January 31, 2004, relative to the MSCI US Investable Market 2500 Index. The basic fee of Armstrong Shaw Associates Inc. is subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance since January 31, 2006, relative to the Russell 1000 Value Index. In accordance with the advisory contract entered into with Lazard Asset Management LLC in January 2007, beginning in November 2007, the investment advisory fee will be subject to quarterly adjustments based on performance since January 31, 2007, relative to the S&P 500 Index.

 

The Vanguard Group provides investment advisory services to a portion of the fund on an at-cost basis; the fund paid Vanguard advisory fees of $1,038,000 for the six months ended April 30, 2007.

 

For the six months ended April 30, 2007, the aggregate investment advisory fee represented an effective annual basic rate of 0.12% of the fund’s average net assets before an increase of $2,622,000 (0.01%) based on performance.

 

C. The Vanguard Group furnishes at cost corporate management, administrative, marketing, and distribution services. The costs of such services are allocated to the fund under methods approved by the board of trustees. The fund has committed to provide up to 0.40% of its net assets in capital contributions to Vanguard. At April 30, 2007, the fund had contributed capital of $4,642,000 to Vanguard (included in Other Assets), representing 0.01% of the fund’s net assets and 4.64% of Vanguard’s capitalization. The fund’s trustees and officers are also directors and officers of Vanguard.

 

D. The fund has asked its investment advisors to direct certain security trades, subject to obtaining the best price and execution, to brokers who have agreed to rebate to the fund part of the commissions generated. Such rebates are used solely to reduce the fund’s management and administrative expenses. The fund’s custodian bank has also agreed to reduce its fees when the fund maintains cash on deposit in the non-interest-bearing custody account. For the six months ended April 30, 2007, these arrangements reduced the fund’s management and administrative expenses by $977,000 and custodian fees by $10,000.

 

22

 

 

E. Distributions are determined on a tax basis and may differ from net investment income and realized capital gains for financial reporting purposes. Differences may be permanent or temporary. Permanent differences are reclassified among capital accounts in the financial statements to reflect their tax character. Temporary differences arise when certain items of income, expense, gain, or loss are recognized in different periods for financial statement and tax purposes; these differences will reverse at some time in the future. Differences in classification may also result from the treatment of short-term gains as ordinary income for tax purposes. The fund’s tax-basis capital gains and losses are determined only at the end of each fiscal year.

 

At April 30, 2007, the cost of investment securities for tax purposes was $38,330,704,000. Net unrealized appreciation of investment securities for tax purposes was $14,526,954,000, consisting of unrealized gains of $14,778,028,000 on securities that had risen in value since their purchase and $251,074,000 in unrealized losses on securities that had fallen in value since their purchase.

 

At April 30, 2007, the aggregate settlement value of open futures contracts expiring in June 2007 and the related unrealized appreciation (depreciation) were:

 

 

 

 

 

($000)

 

 

Aggregate

Unrealized

 

Number of

Settlement

Appreciation

Futures Contracts

Long Contracts

Value

(Depreciation)

S&P 500 Index

2,362

878,900

41,829

E-mini S&P 500 Index

1,096

81,564

617

 

 

Unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on open futures contracts is required to be treated as realized gain (loss) for tax purposes.

 

F. During the six months ended April 30, 2007, the fund purchased $14,524,592,000 of investment securities and sold $13,493,768,000 of investment securities, other than temporary cash investments.

 

G. The market value of securities on loan to broker-dealers at April 30, 2007, was $52,439,000, for which the fund received cash collateral of $55,004,000.

 

H. Capital share transactions for each class of shares were:

 

 

 

Six Months Ended

Year Ended

 

April 30, 2007

October 31, 2006

 

Amount

Shares

Amount

Shares

 

($000)

(000)

($000)

(000)

Investor Shares

 

 

 

 

Issued

2,257,857

63,994

4,035,614

123,796

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

1,580,553

45,484

1,378,672

43,697

Redeemed

(2,882,882)

(81,333)

(5,978,456)

(183,528)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Investor Shares

955,528

28,145

(564,170)

(16,035)

Admiral Shares

 

 

 

 

Issued

2,363,723

37,548

3,485,256

60,101

Issued in Lieu of Cash Distributions

821,181

13,311

605,081

10,803

Redeemed

(891,756)

(14,232)

(1,694,081)

(29,219)

Net Increase (Decrease)—Admiral Shares

2,293,148

36,627

2,396,256

41,685

 

 

 

23

 

 

I. Certain of the fund’s investments are in companies that are considered to be affiliated companies of the fund because the fund owns more than 5% of the outstanding voting securities of the company. Transactions during the period in securities of these companies were as follows:

 

 

 

 

Current Period Transactions

 

 

Oct. 31, 2006

 

Proceeds from

 

Apr. 30, 2007

 

Market

Purchases

Securities

Dividend

Market

 

Value

at Cost

Sold

Income

Value

Security Name

($000)

($000)

($000)

($000)

($000)

CenterPoint Energy, Inc.

367,821

83,680

6,912

352,330

Cooper Industries, Inc. Class A

563,607

86,986

45,525

4,970

674,810

Hanson PLC ADR

558,114

12,057

681,328

Lyondell Chemical Co.

572,238

19,018

10,031

712,315

Massey Energy Co.

n/a1

106,337

186

125,467

Service Corp. International

237,851

35,154

36,623

1,664

316,873

Sherwin-Williams Co.

544,105

3,075

5,206

588,929

Wyndham Worldwide Corp.

n/a1

332,760

416,279

XL Capital Ltd. Class A

637,970

51,551

6,961

762,598

 

3,481,706

 

 

47,987

4,630,929

 

 

J. In June 2006, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Interpretation No. 48 (“FIN 48”), “Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes.” FIN 48 establishes the minimum threshold for recognizing, and a system for measuring, the benefits of tax-return positions in financial statements. FIN 48 will be effective for the fund’s fiscal year beginning November 1, 2007. Management is in the process of analyzing the fund’s tax positions for purposes of implementing FIN 48; based on the analysis completed to date, management does not believe the adoption of FIN 48 will result in any material impact to the fund’s financial statements.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 At October 31, 2006, the issuer was not an affiliated company of the fund.

 

 

24

 

 

About Your Fund’s Expenses

 

As a shareholder of the fund, you incur ongoing costs, which include costs for portfolio management, administrative services, and shareholder reports (like this one), among others. Operating expenses, which are deducted from a fund’s gross income, directly reduce the investment return of the fund.

 

A fund’s expenses are expressed as a percentage of its average net assets. This figure is known as the expense ratio. The following examples are intended to help you understand the ongoing costs (in dollars) of investing in your fund and to compare these costs with those of other mutual funds. The examples are based on an investment of $1,000 made at the beginning of the period shown and held for the entire period.

 

The table below illustrates your fund’s costs in two ways:

 

• Based on actual fund return. This section helps you to estimate the actual expenses that you paid over the period. The “Ending Account Value” shown is derived from the fund’s actual return, and the third column shows the dollar amount that would have been paid by an investor who started with $1,000 in the fund. You may use the information here, together with the amount you invested, to estimate the expenses that you paid over the period.

 

To do so, simply divide your account value by $1,000 (for example, an $8,600 account value divided by $1,000 = 8.6), then multiply the result by the number given for your fund under the heading “Expenses Paid During Period.”

 

• Based on hypothetical 5% yearly return. This section is intended to help you compare your fund’s costs with those of other mutual funds. It assumes that the fund had a yearly return of 5% before expenses, but that the expense ratio is unchanged. In this case—because the return used is not the fund’s actual return—the results do not apply to your investment. The example is useful in making comparisons because the Securities and Exchange Commission requires all mutual funds to calculate expenses based on a 5% return. You can assess your fund’s costs by comparing this hypothetical example with the hypothetical examples that appear in shareholder reports of other funds.

 

 

Six Months Ended April 30, 2007

 

 

 

 

Beginning

Ending

Expenses

 

Account Value

Account Value

Paid During

Windsor II Fund

10/31/2006

4/30/2007

Period1

Based on Actual Fund Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,108.93

$1.73

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,109.33

1.20

Based on Hypothetical 5% Yearly Return

 

 

 

Investor Shares

$1,000.00

$1,023.16

$1.66

Admiral Shares

1,000.00

1,023.65

1.15

 

 

1 The calculations are based on expenses incurred in the most recent six-month period. The fund’s annualized six-month expense ratios for that period are 0.33% for Investor Shares and 0.23% for Admiral Shares. The dollar amounts shown as “Expenses Paid” are equal to the annualized expense ratio multiplied by the average account value over the period, multiplied by the number of days in the most recent six-month period, then divided by the number of days in the most recent 12-month period.

 

 

25

 

 

Note that the expenses shown in the table on page 25 are meant to highlight and help you compare ongoing costs only and do not reflect transaction costs incurred by the fund for buying and selling securities. Further, the expenses do not include any account service fee described in the prospectus. If such a fee were applied to your account, your costs would be higher. Your fund does not charge transaction fees, such as purchase or redemption fees, nor does it carry a “sales load.”

 

The calculations assume no shares were bought or sold during the period. Your actual costs may have been higher or lower, depending on the amount of your investment and the timing of any purchases or redemptions.

 

You can find more information about the fund’s expenses, including annual expense ratios, in the Financial Statements section of this report. For additional information on operating expenses and other shareholder costs, please refer to your fund’s current prospectus.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

26

 

 

Trustees Approve Advisory Arrangements

 

The board of trustees of Vanguard Windsor II Fund has renewed the fund’s investment advisory arrangements with Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss, Inc.; Hotchkis and Wiley Capital Management, LLC; Armstrong Shaw Associates Inc.; and The Vanguard Group, Inc. The board also added Lazard Asset Management LLC to the fund’s investment advisory team effective January 2007.

 

The board concluded that retaining Barrow Hanley, Hotchkis and Wiley, Armstrong Shaw, and Vanguard as advisors, and adding Lazard to the investment advisory team, were in the best interests of the fund and its shareholders.

 

The board based its decisions upon an evaluation of each advisor’s investment staff, portfolio management process, and performance. The trustees considered the factors discussed below, among others. However, no single factor determined whether the board approved the

arrangements. Rather, it was the totality of the circumstances that drove the board’s decision.

 

Nature, extent, and quality of services

The board considered the quality of the fund’s investment management over both short- and long-term periods and took into account the organizational depth and stability of each advisor. The board noted the following:

 

Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinney & Strauss. Founded in 1979, Barrow Hanley is known for its commitment to value investing. A subsidiary of Old Mutual Asset Managers, Barrow Hanley remains independently managed and its professionals retain significant equity ownership. The firm has advised Vanguard Windsor II Fund since the fund’s inception in 1985.

 

Using a combination of in-depth fundamental research and valuation forecasts, Barrow Hanley seeks stocks offering strong fundamentals and price appreciation potential, with below-average price/earnings ratios and price/book-value ratios, and above-average current yields.

 

Hotchkis and Wiley Capital Management. Founded in 1980, Hotchkis and Wiley is a value-oriented firm that manages various large-, mid-, and small-cap portfolios. The firm has advised Vanguard Windsor II Fund since 2003.

 

Hotchkis and Wiley invests mainly in mid- to large-cap stocks with value-oriented characteristics. The advisor follows a disciplined investment approach, focusing on such investment parameters as a company’s tangible assets, sustainable cash flow, and potential for improving business performance.

 

Armstrong Shaw Associates. Founded in 1984, Armstrong Shaw is employee-owned and invests in large-cap value products. The firm has advised Vanguard Windsor II Fund since 2006.

 

Armstrong Shaw constructs a portfolio of large-cap stocks using a combination of fundamental and qualitative criteria to identify individual companies for potential investment. The firm’s disciplined, absolute value-based approach determines the intrinsic value of a company through analysis of its cash flow or an appraisal of its assets. Candidates for purchase are stocks selling at a substantial discount to this intrinsic value that also have a sound business and a capable management team.

 

The Vanguard Group. Vanguard has been managing investments for more than two decades. George U. Sauter, Vanguard managing director and chief investment officer, has been in the investment management business since 1985. The group adheres to a sound, disciplined investment management process; the team has considerable experience, stability, and depth.

 

 

 

27

 

 

Lazard Asset Management. Lazard is an investment management firm and a wholly owned subsidiary of Lazard Frères & Co., LLC. Lazard manages approximately $100 billion in assets.

 

Stability, depth, and a strong investment culture are key attributes of the U.S. equity team, which is headed by Andrew Lacey. The team consists of 11 portfolio managers supported by Lazard’s 28-person global-sector analyst team. The 6-member value team has, on average, 16 years of investment experience.

 

The board concluded that each advisor’s experience, stability, depth, and performance, among other factors, warranted the continuation and addition, as applicable, of the fund’s advisory arrangements.

 

Investment performance

The board considered the short- and long-term performance of the fund, including any periods of outperformance or underperformance of relevant benchmarks and peer groups. The board concluded that each of the existing advisors has carried out the fund’s investment strategy in disciplined fashion, and that performance results have allowed the fund to remain competitive versus its benchmark and its average peer fund. Further, the board concluded that Lazard’s other investment portfolios have been competitive versus the fund’s benchmark and the fund’s peer group over various short- and long-term periods. Information about the fund’s most recent performance can be found in the Performance Summary portion of this report.

 

Cost

The board considered the cost of services to be provided, including consideration of competitive fee rates and the fact that, after implementation of the new agreement with Lazard, the fund’s advisory fee rate and expense ratio should remain below the advisory fee rates and expense ratios of the fund’s peers. Information about the fund’s expense ratio appears in the About Your Fund’s Expenses section of this report as well as in the Financial Statements section, which also includes information about the advisory fee rate.

 

The board did not consider profitability of Barrow Hanley; Hotchkis and Wiley; Armstrong Shaw; or Lazard in determining whether to approve the advisory fees, because the firms are independent of Vanguard and the advisory fees are the result of arm’s-length negotiations. The board does not conduct a profitability analysis of Vanguard because of Vanguard’s unique “at-cost” structure. Unlike most other mutual fund management companies, Vanguard is owned by the funds it oversees, and produces “profits” only in the form of reduced expenses for fund shareholders.

 

The benefit of economies of scale

The board concluded that the fund’s shareholders benefit from economies of scale because of breakpoints in the advisory fee schedules for Barrow Hanley, Hotchkis and Wiley, Armstrong Shaw, and Lazard. The breakpoints reduce the effective rate of the fees as the fund’s assets managed by the firms increase. The board also concluded that the fund’s low-cost arrangement with Vanguard ensures that the fund will realize economies of scale as it grows, with the cost to shareholders declining as the fund’s assets managed by Vanguard increase.

 

The board will consider whether to renew the advisory arrangements again after a one-year period.

 

 

 

28

 

 

Glossary

 

Beta. A measure of the magnitude of a fund’s past share-price fluctuations in relation to the ups and downs of a given market index. The index is assigned a beta of 1.00. Compared with a given index, a fund with a beta of 1.20 typically would have seen its share price rise or fall by 12% when the index rose or fell by 10%. A fund’s beta should be reviewed in conjunction with its R-squared (see definition below). The lower the R-squared, the less correlation there is between the fund and the index, and the less reliable beta is as an indicator of volatility.

 

Earnings Growth Rate. The average annual rate of growth in earnings over the past five years for the stocks now in a fund.

 

Expense Ratio. The percentage of a fund’s average net assets used to pay its annual administrative and advisory expenses. These expenses directly reduce returns to investors.

 

Foreign Holdings. The percentage of a fund represented by stocks or depositary receipts of companies based outside the United States.

Inception Date. The date on which the assets of a fund (or one of its share classes) are first invested in accordance with the fund’s investment objective. For funds with a subscription period, the inception date is the day after that period ends. Investment performance is measured from the inception date.

 

Median Market Cap. An indicator of the size of companies in which a fund invests; the midpoint of market capitalization (market price x shares outstanding) of a fund’s stocks, weighted by the proportion of the fund’s assets invested in each stock. Stocks representing half of the fund’s assets have market capitalizations above the median, and the rest are below it.

 

Price/Book Ratio. The share price of a stock divided by its net worth, or book value, per share. For a fund, the weighted average price/book ratio of the stocks it holds.

 

Price/Earnings Ratio. The ratio of a stock’s current price to its per-share earnings over the past year. For a fund, the weighted average P/E of the stocks it holds. P/E is an indicator of market expectations about corporate prospects; the higher the P/E, the greater the expectations for a company’s future growth.

 

R-Squared. A measure of how much of a fund’s past returns can be explained by the returns from the market in general, as measured by a given index. If a fund’s total returns were precisely synchronized with an index’s returns, its R-squared would be 1.00. If the fund’s returns bore no relationship to the index’s returns, its R-squared would be 0.

 

Return on Equity. The annual average rate of return generated by a company during the past five years for each dollar of shareholder’s equity (net income divided by shareholder’s equity). For a fund, the weighted average return on equity for the companies whose stocks it holds.

 

Short-Term Reserves. The percentage of a fund invested in highly liquid, short-term securities that can be readily converted to cash.

Turnover Rate. An indication of the fund’s trading activity. Funds with high turnover rates incur higher transaction costs and may be more likely to distribute capital gains (which may be taxable to investors). The turnover rate excludes in-kind transactions, which have minimal impact on costs.

 

Yield. A snapshot of a fund’s income from interest and dividends. The yield, expressed as a percentage of the fund’s net asset value, is based on income earned over the past 30 days and is annualized, or projected forward for the coming year. The index yield is based on the current annualized rate of income provided by securities in the index.

 

 

29

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The People Who Govern Your Fund

 

The trustees of your mutual fund are there to see that the fund is operated and managed in your best interests since, as a shareholder, you are a part owner of the fund. Your fund’s trustees also serve on the board of directors of The Vanguard Group, Inc., which is owned by the Vanguard funds and provides services to them on an at-cost basis.

 

A majority of Vanguard’s board members are independent, meaning that they have no affiliation with Vanguard or the funds they oversee, apart from the sizable personal investments they have made as private individuals.

 

Our independent board members bring distinguished backgrounds in business, academia, and public service to their task of working with Vanguard officers to establish the policies and oversee the activities of the funds. Among board members’ responsibilities are selecting investment advisors for the funds; monitoring fund operations, performance, and costs; reviewing contracts; nominating and selecting new trustees/directors; and electing Vanguard officers.

 

Each trustee serves a fund until its termination; or until the trustee’s retirement, resignation, or death; or otherwise as specified in the fund’s organizational documents. Any trustee may be removed at a shareholders’ meeting by a vote representing two-thirds of the net asset value of all shares of the fund together with shares of other Vanguard funds organized within the same trust. The table on these two pages shows information for each trustee and executive officer of the fund. The mailing address of the trustees and officers is P.O. Box 876, Valley Forge, PA 19482.

 

 

Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer, and Trustee

 

 

John J. Brennan1

 

Born 1954

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive

Trustee since May 1987;

Officer, and Director/Trustee of The Vanguard Group, Inc., and of each of the investment

Chairman of the Board and

companies served by The Vanguard Group.

Chief Executive Officer

 

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

 

Independent Trustees

 

 

 

Charles D. Ellis

 

Born 1937

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Applecore Partners (pro bono ventures

Trustee since January 2001

in education); Senior Advisor to Greenwich Associates (international business strategy

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

consulting); Successor Trustee of Yale University; Overseer of the Stern School of Business

 

at New York University; Trustee of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research.

 

 

Rajiv L. Gupta

 

Born 1945

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Trustee since December 20012

of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Board Member of the American Chemistry Council;

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Director of Tyco International, Ltd. (diversified manufacturing and services) since 2005;

 

Trustee of Drexel University and of the Chemical Heritage Foundation.

 

 

Amy Gutmann

 

Born 1949

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: President of the University of

Trustee since June 2006

Pennsylvania since 2004; Professor in the School of Arts and Sciences, Annenberg School

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

for Communication, and Graduate School of Education of the University of Pennsylvania

 

since 2004; Provost (2001–2004) and Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Politics and the

 

University Center for Human Values (1990–2004), Princeton University; Director of Carnegie

 

Corporation of New York since 2005 and of Schuylkill River Development Corporation and

 

Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce since 2004.

 

 

 

JoAnn Heffernan Heisen

 

Born 1950

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Corporate Vice President and Chief

Trustee since July 1998

Global Diversity Officer since 2006, Vice President and Chief Information Officer

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

(1997–2005), and Member of the Executive Committee of Johnson & Johnson

 

(pharmaceuticals/consumer products); Director of the University Medical Center

 

at Princeton and Women’s Research and Education Institute.

 

 

André F. Perold

 

Born 1952

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: George Gund Professor of Finance

Trustee since December 2004

and Banking, Harvard Business School; Senior Associate Dean, Director of Faculty

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

Recruiting, and Chair of Finance Faculty, Harvard Business School; Director and Chairman

 

of UNX, Inc. (equities trading firm) since 2003; Chair of the Investment Committee of

 

HighVista Strategies LLC (private investment firm) since 2005; Director of registered

 

investment companies advised by Merrill Lynch Investment Managers and affiliates

 

(1985–2004), Genbel Securities Limited (South African financial services firm)

 

(1999–2003), Gensec Bank (1999–2003), Sanlam, Ltd. (South African insurance

 

company) (2001–2003), and Stockback, Inc. (credit card firm) (2000–2002).

 

 

Alfred M. Rankin, Jr.

 

Born 1941

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Chairman, President, Chief Executive

Trustee since January 1993

Officer, and Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (forklift trucks/housewares/lignite); Director

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

of Goodrich Corporation (industrial products/aircraft systems and services).

 

 

J. Lawrence Wilson

 

Born 1936

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Retired Chairman and Chief Executive

Trustee since April 1985

Officer of Rohm and Haas Co. (chemicals); Director of Cummins Inc. (diesel engines) and

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

AmerisourceBergen Corp. (pharmaceutical distribution); Trustee of Vanderbilt University

 

and of Culver Educational Foundation.

 

 

Executive Officers1

 

 

 

Heidi Stam

 

Born 1956

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Managing Director of The Vanguard

Secretary since July 2005

Group, Inc., since 2006; General Counsel of The Vanguard Group since 2005; Secretary of

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

The Vanguard Group, and of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard

 

Group, since 2005; Principal of The Vanguard Group (1997–2006).

 

 

Thomas J. Higgins

 

Born 1957

Principal Occupation(s) During the Past Five Years: Principal of The Vanguard Group, Inc.;

Treasurer since July 1998

Treasurer of each of the investment companies served by The Vanguard Group.

147 Vanguard Funds Overseen

 

 

Vanguard Senior Management Team

 

 

 

 

 

R. Gregory Barton

Kathleen C. Gubanich

Michael S. Miller

Mortimer J. Buckley

Paul A. Heller

Ralph K. Packard

James H. Gately

F. William McNabb, III

George U. Sauter

 

 

 

Founder

 

 

 

 

 

John C. Bogle

 

 

Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, 1974–1996

 

 

 

1 Officers of the funds are “interested persons” as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940.

2 December 2002 for Vanguard Equity Income Fund, Vanguard Growth Equity Fund, the Vanguard Municipal Bond Funds, and the Vanguard State Tax-Exempt Funds.

More information about the trustees is in the Statement of Additional Information, available from The Vanguard Group.

 

 

 

 


 

P.O. Box 2600

 

Valley Forge, PA 19482-2600

 

 

Connect with Vanguard® > www.vanguard.com

 

 

Fund Information > 800-662-7447

Vanguard, Admiral, Connect with Vanguard, Windsor, and

 

the ship logo are trademarks of The Vanguard Group, Inc.

Direct Investor Account Services > 800-662-2739

 

 

All other marks are the exclusive property of their

Institutional Investor Services > 800-523-1036

respective owners.

 

 

Text Telephone for People

All comparative mutual fund data are from Lipper Inc.

with Hearing Impairment > 800-952-3335

or Morningstar, Inc., unless otherwise noted.

 

 

 

 

 

You can obtain a free copy of Vanguard’s proxy voting

 

guidelines by visiting our website, www.vanguard.com,

This material may be used in conjunction

and searching for “proxy voting guidelines,” or by calling

with the offering of shares of any Vanguard

Vanguard at 800-662-2739. They are also available from

fund only if preceded or accompanied by

the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov. In addition, you may

the fund’s current prospectus.

obtain a free report on how your fund voted the proxies for

 

securities it owned during the 12 months ended June 30.

 

To get the report, visit either www.vanguard.com

 

or www.sec.gov.

 

 

 

You can review and copy information about your fund

 

at the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, D.C.

 

To find out more about this public service, call the SEC

 

at 202-551-8090. Information about your fund is also

 

available on the SEC’s website, and you can receive

 

copies of this information, for a fee, by sending a

 

request in either of two ways: via e-mail addressed to

 

publicinfo@sec.gov or via regular mail addressed to the

 

Public Reference Section, Securities and Exchange

 

Commission, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

© 2007 The Vanguard Group, Inc.

 

All rights reserved.

 

Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor.

 

 

 

Q732 062007

 

 

 

 


Item 2: Not Applicable

Item 3: Not Applicable

Item 4: Not Applicable

Item 5: Not applicable.

Item 6: Not applicable.

Item 7: Not applicable.

Item 8: Not applicable.

Item 9: Not applicable.

Item 10: Not applicable.

Item 11: Controls and Procedures

        (a) Disclosure Controls and Procedures. The Principal Executive and Financial Officers concluded that the Registrant's Disclosure Controls and Procedures are effective based on their evaluation of the Disclosure Controls and Procedures as of a date within 90 days of the filing date of this report.

        (b) Internal Control Over Financial Reporting. There were no significant changes in Registrant‘s Internal Control Over Financial Reporting or in other factors that could significantly affect this control subsequent to the date of the evaluation, including any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.

Item 12: Exhibits.

        Certifications.

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

VANGUARD WINDSOR FUNDS

BY: (signature)
(HEIDI STAM)
JOHN J. BRENNAN*
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

Date:   June 14, 2007

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Investment Company Act of 1940, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

VANGUARD WINDSOR FUNDS

BY: (signature)
(HEIDI STAM)
JOHN J. BRENNAN*
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

Date:   June 14, 2007

VANGUARD WINDSOR FUNDS

BY: (signature)
(HEIDI STAM)
THOMAS J. HIGGINS*
TREASURER

Date:   June 14, 2007

*By Power of Attorney. See File Number 002-65955-99, filed on July 27, 2006. Incorporated by Reference.

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M@AO+H,\UNN5#X"$!E!4X!!..!CM[561JGA70]9G$]_IT1^)['P[8M;+H.H37A=2TWF*_"2'64F,D$K0VEPIVNL0VG:"1AE!W`9SCD#%=)'X!\+Q2I M(NE*61@P#32,,CU!;!'L:Z"...&)(HD6.-%"JBC`4#H`.PJ5#6[-\1F2E2C" ME>ZZNU_P_JQQI^%>@&)4\^^#!B2_FKD@XX/RXP,>G<]>,6T^'NC?V<+&XEO+ MJ*/<8/-FYMRWWBFT#J0#@Y&1TY.>IHJ^5=CSWC<2]YLY"#X8>'88ID<74[2+ MA7DFP8SSRNT`9Y[@]*@_X53H7_/WJ'_?Q/\`XBNVHHY(]A_7\3_.S&\.^&+3 MPS%/%9W-U+',P8I.X(4CN``,$\9^@]*R[_X:>'[ZZ:=%N+3=R8[=P$SDG.&! MQUZ#`XZ5UM%/E5K&:Q5>,W-2=WN_>\BNKZVD,IE402(@C.I5MSN]@HHHIF(4444`?_9 ` end EX-31 14 cert302a.htm CERT302

CERTIFICATIONS

I, John J. Brennan, certify that:

1.     I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Vanguard Windsor Funds;

2.     Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.     Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4.     The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

(a)     Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

(b)     Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

(c)     Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based on such evaluation; and

(d)     Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and

5.     The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

(a)     All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

(b)     Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

Date: June 14, 2007

/s/ John J. Brennan
Chief Executive Officer


CERTIFICATIONS

I, Thomas J. Higgins, certify that:

1.     I have reviewed this report on Form N-CSR of Vanguard Windsor Funds;

2.     Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.     Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations, changes in net assets, and cash flows (if the financial statements are required to include a statement of cash flows) of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4.     The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 30a-3(c) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rule 30a-3(d) under the Investment Company Act of 1940) for the registrant and have:

(a)     Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

(b)     Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

(c)     Evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of a date within 90 days prior to the filing date of this report based on such evaluation; and

(d)     Disclosed in this report any change in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the second fiscal quarter of the period covered by this report that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting; and

5.     The registrant’s other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

(a)     All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize, and report financial information; and

(b)     Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal control over financial reporting.

Date: June 14, 2007

/s/ Thomas J. Higgins
Treasurer
EX-32 15 cert906a.htm CERT906

Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350,As
Adopted Pursuant to

Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Name of Issuer: Vanguard Windsor Funds

        In connection with the Report on Form N-CSR of the above-named issuer that is accompanied by this certification, the undersigned hereby certifies, to his knowledge, that:

1. The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

2. The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer.

Date: June 14, 2007 /s/ John J. Brennan
John J. Brennan
Chief Executive Officer


Certification Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350,As
Adopted Pursuant to

Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

Name of Issuer: Vanguard Windsor Funds

        In connection with the Report on Form N-CSR of the above-named issuer that is accompanied by this certification, the undersigned hereby certifies, to his knowledge, that:

  1. The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and

  2. The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer.

Date: June 14, 2007 /s/ Thomas J. Higgins
Thomas J. Higgins
Treasurer
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