Vanguard founder Jack Bogle, who died Jan 16, 2019, was famous for making investing accessible to the everyday person through index funds – funds that match a market barometer like the S&P 500. His message was simple: why waste money on expensive fees and commissions for complex funds when market barometers often outperform them? That message remained remarkably consistent throughout his career.
Jack Bogle needed hefty amounts of brainpower and market know-how to put together the first index fund. But for investors wanting to cash in on his idea, it's become pretty easy.
In 1975, the founder of Vanguard Group was able to turn a long-held belief into reality, namely that it was far more profitable to follow the market than fight it. Most mutual fund managers who picked stocks couldn't keep up with basic benchmarks like the S&P 500 Index, much less beat them, he found.
So he turned his thoughts into action, putting together the first fund that simply followed the S&P 500, minus a small management cost that was much cheaper than the active funds of the day. CNBC.com video above published on Jan 17, 2019.
One website (of many) using Bogle's principles: bogleheads.org
See also:
- The Bogle eBlog - Domain: johncbogle.com
- Vanguard Group - Domain: vanguard.com
Jack Bogle changed your life even if you don't know who he was https://t.co/enDcX7sn03— Bloomberg (@business) January 28, 2019
No one did more for the small investor than Jack Bogle https://t.co/4JQX1Cxe8w— The Economist (@TheEconomist) January 27, 2019
Vanguard founder Jack Bogle shares the advice he’d leave his kids in an interview with Tony Robbins. https://t.co/aCCvNqM3ej— Tony Robbins (@TonyRobbins) January 27, 2019