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MCON ETF: what Mackenzie Conservative Allocation ETF is, what it holds, and how it works

By Sammy · Updated May 22, 2026 ·
Illustration for MCON ETF: what Mackenzie Conservative Allocation ETF is, what it holds, and how it works

Short answer: MCON is Mackenzie’s 40/60 stock-bond one-ticker conservative wrapper. Listed in September 2020, 0.19% MER, 10.3% three-year annualized return through May 2026. The cheapest conservative all-in-one on the recent Morningstar screen.

MCON is the conservative end of Mackenzie’s allocation lineup, complementing MGRW (80/20) and MBAL (60/40). Tilted toward bonds, designed for capital preservation rather than growth.

Not financial advice. Fund details change. Check current disclosures.

What MCON actually is

TSX-listed, CAD-denominated. Mackenzie Investments manages it. Fund-of-funds: holds underlying Mackenzie index components for the equity and bond sleeves.

MCON fund facts
AttributeValue
TickerMCON (TSX)
InceptionSeptember 29, 2020
Asset mixabout 40/60 stocks/bonds
MER0.19%
Net assetsabout $37.9M (May 2026)
3-year annualized return10.3% (through May 19, 2026)

What MCON holds

MCON asset allocation
Fixed income 55.6%
U.S. equity 18.7%
Canadian equity 11.6%
International equity 10.9%
Cash 3.1%
Source: Morningstar Direct, data as of May 19, 2026, via The Globe and Mail.

The fee

Fee drag calculator
How much MCON's MER costs vs XCNS over time
Extra cost from MCON
$0
That's what you pay MCON (0.19%) over 20 years above what XCNS (0.2%) would charge on the same portfolio.
MCON total fees
$0
XCNS total fees
$0
Peer comparison: XCNS, iShares Core Conservative Balanced ETF Portfolio. Assumes constant gross return, annual contributions made at year-end, and MER charged on average annual balance. Real returns vary.
For illustration only. Simplified compounding. Ignores trading costs, tracking error, distribution reinvestment timing, taxes, and the obvious fact that real returns are not constant. MERs and peer fees as of May 2026 and may change. Do not use this number as the basis for a real decision.

Cheaper than XCNS by 1 bp. The lowest-fee conservative wrapper on the Morningstar Five Star list.

Tax treatment

How MCON compares to alternatives

  • MCON vs XCNS. Same 40/60 mix, MCON is 1 bp cheaper. XCNS has bigger AUM and more trading volume.
  • MCON vs GCNS. Same 40/60 mix. GCNS adds ESG screen for 4 bps more. Pick based on ESG preference.
  • MCON vs a GIC ladder. A GIC ladder is principal-protected but offers no equity upside. MCON gives you an equity sleeve but no principal guarantee. Different tools.

Frequently asked questions

What is MCON.TO?

Mackenzie Conservative Allocation ETF. A one-ticker 40/60 stock-bond wrapper for capital-preservation-tilted investing.

What is MCON’s MER?

0.19%. The cheapest conservative allocation ETF in the recent Morningstar Five Star and Gold cohort.

Why is MCON small?

Mackenzie’s allocation lineup has grown more slowly than iShares and Vanguard equivalents. The conservative end is also less popular than balanced and growth across the industry, so MCON is the smallest of the three Mackenzie allocation ETFs.

Did MCON drop hard in 2022?

Yes. The 2022 rate shock hit bonds and equities simultaneously, which was unusual. Conservative wrappers like MCON, which have most of their weight in bonds, took a real hit. The recovery since has been steady.

Where should I hold MCON?

In a TFSA or RRSP, ideally. The bond-heavy mix is best sheltered.

Should I pick MCON over MBAL or MGRW?

It depends on your risk tolerance and time horizon. If you can hold for 20+ years and stomach 30%+ drawdowns, MGRW (80/20) compounds harder. If you need the money in 5 to 10 years or can’t stomach volatility, MCON (40/60) is the right rung.

The honest verdict

The honest verdict
Good fit for
DIY investors near or in retirement who want a low-fee one-ticker conservative wrapper inside a registered account.
Skip if
You're early in accumulation (the bond-heavy mix is too defensive), you need principal protection (use GICs), or you prefer the ESG screen (GCNS).
Cheaper alternative XCNS · iShares Core Conservative Balanced ETF Portfolio · MER 0.20%

Bottom line

MCON is the cheapest conservative allocation wrapper among the Morningstar Five Star 2020 and 2021 launches. The mix is built for preservation, not growth. Match the wrapper to your horizon and risk tolerance, hold it inside a registered account, and don’t expect equity-like returns from a fund with 55%+ in bonds.

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