John Bogle, founder of the Vanguard Group, published his first book in late 1994.
John Bogle, the founder of the Vanguard Investment Group, champions the passive, or index, approach to investment.
John Bogle, founder of Vanguard, uses different data to make the same point.
We also deliver the wisdom of Vanguard's John Bogle, who picks the best and worst mutual funds ( p. 164).
The vindication of John Bogle WITH THE BENEFIT OF HINDSIGHT, we shouldn't have published that snide article about Vanguard Group.
John Bogle, Vanguard founder and long time advocate for better ethics in the financial industry, knows something of this heat.
FORBES: Financial Advisors Who Protest Too Much Are Probably Overcharging Clients
The index fund as we know it today was started by John Bogle in 1975 through his Vanguard Group.
FORBES: Enhanced Index Funds: Can They Deliver Low-Risk Returns?
These are familiar steps to people who have kept up with the writings of John Bogle and other low fee pioneers.
John Bogle has been preaching low-cost indexing for more than 35 years.
Don't tangle with John Bogle unless you are prepared for a fight.
John Bogle and Chris Davis, of Davis Funds, touched on security analysis.
This poor performance and the billions spent on fees could have been easily averted if state trustees listened to John Bogle years ago.
If you want to hear an opponent of the hedge-fund concept, spend some time with John Bogle, the founder of the Vanguard Group.
The forum title was named after John Bogle, founder of Vanguard mutual funds and the father of low-cost index fund investing.
The guy who convinced me of this is Vitaliy Katsenelson, but Warren Buffett, John Bogle and others have said the same thing.
The intense marketing of expensive index-like products has smeared the good name of traditional low-cost index funds that John Bogle and Vanguard created in 1975.
Soon after the column was published I got a scolding letter from John Bogle, founder of Vanguard Group and patron saint of cheap index funds.
John Bogle, the inventor of index funds, is more pessimistic.
Two old hats who know a few tricks about stocks--Warren Buffett and John Bogle--say the U.S. equity markets are headed for a long period of underperformance.
Mutual fund pioneer John Bogle, the founder of The Vanguard Group, offers this rule of thumb for investors: Own the same percentage of bonds as your age.
It appeared in the May 1, 1975 FORBES, not long after John Bogle had created Vanguard by splitting a fund administrative arm off from a money management company.
The trustees should have just taken the return of the markets, as John Bogle said, rather than foolishly thinking they were the anointed ones who would beat the markets.
But note that Vanguard's incentive pay system, created in 1984 by founder John Bogle , is more or less the inverse of what you would see at a for-profit firm.
Of course we would expect this from John Bogle, the grandfather of index fund investing, but not some of the other legends who made their fortunes from active management and stock picking.
As a result of this experience, by the mid-1990s, I became an avid believer in what John Bogle, Charley Ellis, Burton Malkeil and many others had been saying for a long time.
Mr. JOHN CLIFTON "JACK" BOGLE (Founder, The Vanguard Group): Good to be with you, Scott.
Vanguard Group founder John C. (Jack) Bogle uses the simple rule of thumb that investors own a proportion of bonds corresponding to their ages.
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