When looking at a funds summary on any of the sites, is "YTD" the percentage amount of the annual dividend?
YTD stands for "year to date." So if they're showing you how much the fund has returned in the past 1 year, 5 years, 10 years, etc., the YTD column is how much the fund has returned since January 1 of the current year.
OneCoolCat - Further to what seattlecyclone writes, note that the performance percentages you see in those returns columns (YTD, 1 year, 5 years, 10 years, etc.) usually indicate both the growth
and the dividends reinvested. The fine print on the sponsor's website (Vanguard, Fidelity, Invesco etc.) will clarify if you want to be sure. To know what the dividends would have been all by themselves you need to look at the "Yield" which is usually expressed as a percent. Note mutual funds & ETFs are structured by their sponsors to address different objectives. You can buy mutual funds & ETFs that have been designed with a focus on yields -- they will typically have "income" or "dividend" in their names. Mutual fund/ETF yields can be dividends and/or "distributions". Distributions are a transfer of profit from the fund to the unit holder that is done to keep the fund/ETF from having to pay tax on those profits. (The idea is that it is more tax efficient to let the unit holders be responsible for taxes than to have the fund pay them. Complicated eh?)
Other mutual funds & ETFs are designed to focus on growth and will often have "growth" in their name. Growth ones can still pay dividends & Income ones can still have growth.