The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing — Ten Years Later (Anniversary Edition)
John Bogle published research and advice on stocks and bonds in 1999. A decade later, he updated with 2009 data and reflections — a decade-spanning analysis and forecast that impresses.
The book's core conclusion remains consistent: cost matters most. Choose low-cost index funds and beat most active funds. History proves this via data analysis.
The author also emphasizes American dominance: global investing's necessity is debated. U.S. stock allocation stayed near 50% a decade before and after; different allocations of U.S. versus global stocks across periods showed return differences within ±1%. Though standard deviations vary, optimal allocation ratios differ each period, making definitive conclusions difficult. So global investing is optional using low-cost index funds.
Reviewing fund turnover rates, they remain high — fund managers encourage frequent trading, contradicting cost reduction. Yet past superstar funds reviewed over decades saw less than 30% remain stellar, showing the "holy grail" eludes most.
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