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Businesses The Almighty Buck United States

Jack Bogle, the Man Who Revolutionized Investing, Dies At 89 (marketwatch.com) 123

Thelasko shares a report from MarketWatch: You can thank Thomas Edison for the light bulb casting light in your home, Henry Ford for your affordable, mass-produced car, and Apple's Steve Jobs for the astonishing computer in your pocket. And Jack Bogle, who died Wednesday [at the age of 89]. The low-cost mutual funds he helped pioneer at Vanguard aren't as sexy or dramatic as other inventions. And you can't really touch or see them. But their effect on everyday lives has been enormous. Bogle's low-cost index funds, and the imitators they have inspired, may have saved ordinary Main Street Americans a staggering $250 billion, or more, in mutual fund fees over the last forty years. According to the Investment Company Institute (ICI), there are now about 450 index mutual funds with around $3.4 trillion in assets. There are also 1,800 exchange-traded funds, also with around $3.4 trillion in assets.
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Jack Bogle, the Man Who Revolutionized Investing, Dies At 89

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    He didn't invent shit. Pocket computers existed years before the iphone.

    • Jobs's engineers designed, improved and invented things, but Steve was just a designer, made things look pretty.

    • Jack Bogle didn't invent mutual funds either. Apparently he did come up with some good ideas, though. That more-or-less matches Jobs, I guess.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      He didn't invent shit. Pocket computers existed years before the iphone.

      And Edison didn't invent the light bulb, and Ford didn't invent the automobile.

      They all three were instrumental in making each of their respective products popular and help them enter into the mainstream.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @08:39PM (#57979982) Journal
    All my investments are in index funds. Much of it in Vanguard.

    But, still wondering, at what point the Index funds could be gamed?

    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @09:11PM (#57980118) Journal

      Boring, low-cost mutual funds like the Vanguard funds are how about 10 million Americans have become millionaires. Mustn't they've held Vanguard or similar funds inside their 401K or other retirement plan. That's most millionaires.

      Other interesting facts about millionaires:

      33% of millionaires never made $100,000 in any year.
      Most made less than $150K.

      Millionaires are no more likely than the average American to have received any inheritance. (21% f people, and 21% of millionaires, inherit any money).

      Less than 1% of millionaires made most of their money in one year, from a particular event. 99% consistently invested over the long term.

      Most commonly held jobs of millionaires:
      Engineer
      Accountant
      Teacher

      88% of millionaires have a bachelor's degree, 52% have a graduate degree. About half are first time graduates - their parents didn't have a degree.
      Of those will have a degree, most went to state schools rather than private schools, and 68% worked their way through school rather than taking out loans.

      • Where I'm from, a millionaire is someone who owns a two bedroom condo.

        Two bedroom condos is Silicon Valley [zillow.com]

      • Yeah, but being a millionaire means very little now, you own your own home and little more. Yeah there are plenty of people who don't but you are by no means rich.

        Also although actively managed funds are a rip off they charge you for their "expert" knowledge but generally under perform the market, and charge you a percentage of what you invested. To be fair they should charge a percentage of what they earn't over the market average (how you would expect monkeys to perform), and if they are below give you

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Most millionaires were created by inflation. The process by which the banksters steal money from the elderly, basically depreciating their assets, whilst the bankster manipulate funds to promote inflation and generate income based upon that inflation.

      • by ranton ( 36917 )

        Mostly this just illustrates the shifting definition of being a millionaire. The still most common definition is someone with a million dollars in assets, but as you have pointed out that is no longer a significant amount of money. It represents about $30-40k per year in retirement income (increasing with inflation). But the term is more frequently being used to describe someone who consistently makes $1 million per year in income. This requires either a very high paying job or over $25 million in assets. I

        • To my mind, borrowing a million dollars doesn't make you a millionaire, it just makes you in debt. So the definition uses for the figures above is *net worth*. That is, what you own minus what you owe. The figures I provided are people with a net worth of *at least* a million dollars. The average is about $2.5-$3 million, I don't recall exactly.

          For most millionaires that simply comes down to what's in their 401K or IRA. They've paid off their mortgage and bought their car three years ago with cash, typical

        • > It represents about $30-40k per year in retirement income (increasing with inflation).

          Long term average market return is about 10% minus average inflation is 3.2%. Annual return without depleting your nest egg = $68,000.

          It turns out that returns tend to be higher in years that inflation is higher and lower during periods of low inflation, so the real return (net of inflation) is more stable than you might think.

          Put part of your money in safer, less volatile investments like bonds (not bond funds) and m

          • The average life span of a 60 year old was never 72. The increase in life expectancy over the last 100 years or so has largely been the product of declining infant mortality and the elimination of many childhood diseases through vaccination (Measles, Polio, etc.). Heck, you can read texts from ancient Greece that talk about 80 years as a normal life span.

          • by dasunt ( 249686 )

            When average life span was 72, somebody 60 years old had a pretty short investment horizon, so they'd have more than half their money in bonds. These days, even a 70 year old plans for 15 years out, so more stocks makes sense. If you invested for 20-30 years while working, you've got a million so significant drop one year would just mean you spend $30,000 of the principal that year and your kids only get $970,000 when you die. Oh well.

            At a 4% withdrawal rate, even 100% stocks looks pretty safe. If we use

    • One of the problems with the Dark Market is that so much money goes into hedge funds which try to exploit data transmission delays, and game the system, since index funds tend to order in large blocks, so they basically steal the arbitrage between the block orders, making the index purchases and sales just a bit more expensive for the index fund investors.

      So you have a point. That said, if you don't trade out of fear, you'll usually be fine, since the bulk of your holdings aren't trading almost all of the t

    • But, still wondering, at what point the Index funds could be gamed?

      When every retirement account is invested in index funds that mimics the broader market, the next stock market crash will be a shared experience by everyone.

    • But, still wondering, at what point the Index funds could be gamed?

      When index funds were first implemented, they were too small to game. But as they became bigger, some investors figured out how to game them.

      Here's how they did it: Buy (or go long on) the 501st stock in the S&P list, while simultaneously selling (or shorting) the 500th. Do this only when they are close enough in value to switch places because of your activity. So the stock you shorted is removed from the S&P 500, compelling the index funds to dump it, driving the price even lower, while the sto

  • If you are one of those fund managers who makes massive fees, you won't be thanking him. Curiously these index funds exploit the efficiency of the market created by traders and actively traded funds and reduce it by creating vast category of new investors that don't contribute to the valuation effort.

    My hypothesis is that a secondary effect of them is to improve the performance of those who are prepared to research. The tertiary effect is that people drift back to actively managed funds. The net effect is t

    • by ShadowRangerRIT ( 1301549 ) on Thursday January 17, 2019 @09:37PM (#57980200)

      Except the actively managed fund "experts" aren't actually any better at predicting the market. After fees, actively managed funds underperform low fee index funds with similar investment goals two-thirds of the time. And no, that doesn't mean one-third of actively managed funds are better than index funds; the overperforming funds change each year, and over 10 year periods, and the index funds win over 90% of the time.

      So your premise is that index funds are free riders benefiting from the research of more informed investors, yet if that were the case, they should, by definition, underperform the actively managed funds since the index funds should in theory be buying lower and selling higher (since the index funds are always riding coattails, as it were, buying after others buy, and selling after they sell). And all that money in index funds should, by your theory, be making informed investment choices even more lucrative. Yet that's not how it goes in practice. In practice, even as the fees on actively managed funds have gone down, they've continued to underperform the index funds. The only way your theory jives with reality is if the majority of the so-called "informed" investors, including professional fund managers, have no real idea what they're doing (Note: Not going to dispute that possibility).

      • by caviare ( 830421 )

        That actively managed funds underperform the index fund after fees is not inconsistent with the hypothesis that they may overperform them before fees. My hypothesis is that the active fund managers and not their investors get the benefit of their research. As you say the fees on actively managed funds have decreased, however I do not think they can ever be as low as those on indexed funds. Not in the long term anyway, otherwise the manager is working for nothing.

        I doubt you are claiming that if everyone inv

  • wow the person that wrote that summary probably thinks Musk is an inventor too.

  • Ho hum (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jd ( 1658 ) <imipak@yahoGINSBERGo.com minus poet> on Friday January 18, 2019 @08:09AM (#57981102) Homepage Journal

    Edison stole his invention, exploiting America's refusal to recognize intellectual property rights in other countries. So did many U.S. "inventors".

    Ford was not the first to make cars, or even to make affordable cars. Ford was merely the best at getting his name touted.

    Steve Jobs?? Bwahahaha! The least competent narcissist on the planet? He invented nothing. Nor did Apple come up with portable or handheld computers. Apple were late in the game and overpriced.

    Don't revise history, just to pump up the obituary of someone. It makes a mockery of whatever they actually achieved.

    Applaud REAL achievements.

"Engineering without management is art." -- Jeff Johnson

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