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John
Bogle on Investing, the First 50 Years:
Industry-Defining Wisdom From the
Founder and Former Chairman of The Vanguard Group
Foreword
by Paul A. Volcker, former Federal Reserve Chairman
McGraw
Hill $29.95
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March
7 , 2001:
Our
mutual friend
How Princeton set
John Bogle '51 on his financial course
While many
alumni owe much to a Princeton education, few can trace their careers
more directly to it than John C. Bogle '51.
Bogle, who
founded the mutual-fund company Vanguard Group in 1974, has almost
single-handedly transformed the way millions of Americans invest
their money. He has relentlessly preached the virtues of keeping
the costs of investing down, when most mutual-fund purveyors would
prefer that their customers ignore fees, commissions, and other
expenses entirely. To assure that Vanguard's interests were aligned
with those of its customers, he made the customers owners of the
company.
In 1976 he
started the first index fund that ordinary investors could buy.
Since then the Vanguard 500 Index Fund has become the largest mutual
fund in the world, with $100 billion in assets, and Vanguard has
started more than 30 additional funds that track other market indexes.
It all began
with Jack Bogle's senior thesis, which earned him a 1+ (as A+ was
called in the '50s). In the following address, given to young alumni
at the Princeton Club of New York on February 16, Bogle, the first
businessman ever to win the Woodrow Wilson Award exemplifying "Princeton
in the nation's service," tells how his college experience
launched him on a remarkable career. He also shares his thoughts
on today's investment climate.
Let me get right to the
point: Were there no Princeton, there would be no Vanguard. For
it was only a wonderful series of happy accidents - beginning with
my admission to this best old place of all as a member of the great
Class of 1951 - that led to the creation of Vanguard. Today we manage
some $560 billion of investor assets, the second largest mutual
fund complex in the world. That fact, in as of itself, is not important.
What is important is that we've developed a unique corporate structure,
a more efficient and economical way to serve investors and a new
way of managing investments that have together begun to reshape
the way the financial community thinks about investing.
There's not much question
that the first of the almost infinite number of breaks I've been
given during my long life (a word about that later on!) came when,
with a scholarship and a job at Blair Academy, I received a splendid
college preparatory education. That priceless advantage, in turn,
presented me with another break. With the help of another full scholarship
and a job waiting on tables in Commons, I entered Princeton University.
Despite my academic success
at Blair, I found the early going at Princeton tough. The low point
came in the autumn of 1948, when I struggled with the first edition
of Paul Samuelson's Economics: An Introductory Analysis. It was
not a happy introduction to my major field of study, and I earned
a well-deserved 4+ (D+ today) as my mid-term grade. With my other
grades scarcely more worthy, my scholarship - and hence my Princeton
career, for I had not a sou of financial support - was in dire jeopardy.
But I ended the term with a hardly distinguished 3 (today a C) average.
A year later, academic
distinction still eluded me, but fate smiled down on me once again.
Determined to write my senior thesis on a subject which no previous
thesis had ever tackled, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and John Maynard
Keynes were hardly on my list. But what topic should I choose? In
December 1949, perusing Fortune magazine in the reading room of
the then-brand-new Firestone library, I paused on page 116 and read
an article about a business which I had never even imagined. And
when "Big Money in Boston" described the mutual fund industry
as "tiny but contentious," this determined young kid decided
that mutual funds should be the topic of his thesis. I entitled
it, "The Economic Role of the Investment Company," and,
as the saying goes, the rest is history.
I can't tell you that
my thesis laid out the design for what Vanguard would become. But
many of the values I identified then would, 50 years later, prove
to lie at the very core of our success. "The principal function
of mutual funds is the management of their investment portfolios.
Everything else is incidental . . . Future industry growth can be
maximized by a reduction of sales loads and management fees . .
. Mutual funds can make no claim to superiority over the market
averages." And, with a final rhetorical flourish, funds should
operate "in the most efficient, honest, and economical way
possible."
An early design for a
sound enterprise? Or callow, even sophomoric, idealism? I'll leave
it to you to decide. But whatever was truly in my mind all those
years ago, the thesis clearly put forth the proposition that mutual
fund shareholders ought to be given a fair shake. In any event,
the countless hours I spent researching and analyzing the industry
in my carrel at Firestone was rewarded with a 1+, and led to a magna
cum laude diploma - a delightful, if totally unexpected, finale
for my academic career at Princeton. And it came with a fine sequel:
A half-century later, Dr. Samuelson, by then a Nobel Laureate in
Economics, would write the foreword to my first book!
Fate smiled on me yet
again when a great Princetonian named Walter L. Morgan, Class of
1920 and the founder of Wellington Fund, read my thesis. In his
own words: "Largely as a result of his thesis, we have added
Mr. Bogle to our Wellington organization." While I agonized
over the risks of going into that "tiny but contentious"
business, my thesis had persuaded me that the industry's future
would be bright. So I cast my lot with this great man, my good friend
until his death at age 100 in 1998, and never looked back. He had
given me the opportunity of a lifetime. Bless his soul!
By 1965, Mr. Morgan had
made it clear that I would be his successor. At that time, the Company
was lagging its peers, and he told me to do whatever it took to
solve our problems. Young and headstrong (I was then but 36 years
of age), I put together a merger with a high flying group of four
"whiz kids" who had achieved an extraordinary record of
investment performance over the preceding six years. (Such an approach
- believing that past fund performance has the power to predict
future performance - is, of course, antithetical to everything I
believe today.) Together, we five whiz kids whizzed high for a few
years. And then we whizzed low. The speculative fever in the stock
market during the "Go-Go Era" of the mid-1960s died, and
was followed by a 50% market decline in the early 1970s. The once
happy band of partners had a falling out, and in January 1974 I
was fired from what I had considered my company.
In the Business and
Out
But without both the
1951 hiring, which providentially brought me into this industry,
and the 1974 firing, which abruptly took me out of it, there would
be no Vanguard today. Removed from my position as head of Wellington
Management Company, I decided to pursue an unprecedented course
of action. The Company directors who fired me comprised a minority
of the board of Wellington Fund itself, so I went to the Fund Board
with a novel proposal: Have the Fund, and its then-ten associated
funds (today there are 100), declare their independence from their
manager. It wasn't exactly the Colonies telling King George III
to get lost, as it were, in 1776. But fund independence - the right
of a fund to operate in the interest of its own shareholders, free
of conflict and domination by the fund's outside manager - was at
the heart of my proposal. Mirabile dictu! After a contentious debate
lasting seven months, we won the battle to administer the funds
on a truly mutual basis, under which they would be operated, at
cost, by a wholly owned subsidiary.
With only weeks to go
before our incorporation, we still had no name for the new firm.
Fate, of course, smiled again. In September, 1974 a dealer in antique
prints came by my office with some small engravings from the Napoleonic
War era, illustrating the military battles of the Duke of Wellington,
for whom Mr. Morgan had named his first mutual fund 45 years earlier.
When I bought them, he offered me some companion prints of the British
naval battles of the same era. Ever enticed by the sea and its timeless
mystery, I bought them, too. Delighted, the dealer gave me the book
from which they had been removed. Even as I had browsed through
Fortune in 1949, I browsed through the text. With my usual luck,
I turned to the saga of the historic Battle of the Nile - recently
designated by The New York Times as the greatest naval battle of
the past millennium - where Lord Nelson sank the French fleet, ending
Napoleon's dreams of world conquest. I paused, and noticed Nelson's
triumphant dispatch from his flagship, "Vanguard, off the mouth
of the Nile." Together, the Wellington tie-in, the naval tradition
embodied in HMS Vanguard, and the leading-edge implication of vanguard,
were more than I could resist. And on September 24, 1974, The Vanguard
Group was born. Consider this: No Princeton, no thesis; no thesis,
no Morgan; no Morgan, no Wellington; no Wellington, no merger; no
merger, no firing; no firing, no Vanguard. Without Princeton the
patriarch, Vanguard the child would never have been born.
The Character of Vanguard
Even a casual reading
of my ancient thesis would, I think, reflect its pervasive idealism.
To this day, I use quotations from it to define the genesis of my
views, from the forces that move financial markets to the forces
that fail to move fund managers to become responsible corporate
citizens. But the highest manifestation of this idealism comes in
my long standing view that the central principle of the business
of managing mutual funds should be, not the marketing of financial
products to customers, but the stewardship of investment services
for clients.
Holding the interests
of our clients as our finest value brings me to Vanguard's central
mission: To provide to investors not only the highest quality services,
but also the lowest possible costs. Our drive to become the low-cost
provider of financial services in the world has been realized largely
by breaking new ground in the industry: Having the mutual funds
themselves responsible for their own governance and administration.
Not only would we operate the funds at cost, but we would operate
them at the lowest possible cost, disciplined and sparing in every
expenditure, always asking ourselves: "Is this expenditure
necessary?" Put another way: "If this were my own money,
would I spend it?" (Happily for our investors, I hate to spend
my own money!)
All of this is important
only if costs matter. They do. Costs matter. I repeat this phrase
so often in my speeches that a Cleveland journalist compared me
with Cato, the Roman orator whose speeches in the Forum always ended
with a call for the defeat of Carthage: "Carthago delanda est."
Why do costs matter? Consider the analogy of the casino, in which
the investor-gamblers swap stocks with one another, a casino in
which, inevitably, all investors as a group share the stock market's
returns, no more, no less. But only until the rakes of the croupiers
descend. Then, what was a fruitless search by investors to beat
the market before costs - a zero-sum game - becomes a negative-sum
game after the costs of investing are deducted - a loser's game.
Playing the mutual fund
game carries heavy costs and entails lots of croupiers, each wielding
a wide rake. Sales commissions when most funds are purchased. Fund
management fees and operating costs. Marketing costs - all those
expensive television advertisements you see. The opportunity cost
of having funds hold cash in rising markets. Transaction costs paid
to stock brokers and investment bankers when fund managers buy and
sell the stocks in fund portfolios. The excessive tax costs to which
funds unnecessarily subject their shareholders as the result of
their incessant, often mindless, turnover. Simply put, these costs,
compounded year after year, combine to give mutual fund investors
but about one-half of the market's return in the past decade and
- I'm glad you're sitting down! - only one-third in the past quarter
century. The investor, who put up 100% of the capital and assumed
100% of the risk, garnered just 33% of the market's return. Yes,
costs matter.
The First Index Fund
It was the conviction
that costs are crucial that quickly led Vanguard to the first of
the major mutual fund innovations with which I've been identified,
our pioneering formation of the first market index mutual fund.
In mid-1975, only a few short months after we began operations,
I began to lay the groundwork for the fund. I can't honestly say
that I was thinking about it a quarter century earlier, when I was
writing my Princeton senior thesis (remember, "mutual funds
can make no claim to superiority over the market averages").
The magic, such as it
may be, of the index fund is simply that it gets the croupiers largely
out of the game: No sales charges; no management fees; tiny operating
costs; virtually no transaction costs; high tax efficiency. Anyone
could have had - and I imagine many others did have - this banally
simple, completely obvious insight. But, as fate would have it,
a firm had just been formed that - like the suspect in a good murder
mystery - had not only the opportunity, but the motive, to seize
the day and take this first step that is now beginning to re-shape
the way we think about investing. After recognizing our opportunity,
only force of will - persistence, patience, and determination, along
with a healthy dollop of missionary zeal - was required. Implementation,
after all, has always been far tougher than ideation! But indexing
worked in practice, and it slowly caught on. The heresy of 1975
has become the dogma of 2000. Today, our stock and bond index funds,
along with a variety of other Vanguard funds offering both index-like
strategies and index-like costs now account for upwards of 70% of
our huge asset base, and have driven our growth during the past
decade.
The New Market Environment
During the Nineties,
the U.S. stock market provided by far the highest returns in history,
averaging 17% annually. The soaring market, along with the surge
in stock holdings of American families that accompanied it, was
a powerful force in driving Vanguard's growth. But that environment
vanished last year. The stock market - that once smoothly-paved
road to easy riches - became a bumpy road to capital erosion. The
burst in the NASDAQ bubble resulted in a 50% drop in value, while
NYSE issues were down less than 5%. In all, from its high on March
24 to its recent low, the U.S. stock market has tumbled almost 25%,
erasing $3 trillion of market value, and one of the three most severe
tumbles in the last 60 years (although this one may not yet be over).
Nonetheless, I look at the recent drop as a blessing in disguise,
indeed, three blessings:
First and most important,
the bear market has helped to bring back into focus financial reality
about investment returns and risks. No, the 17% average annual return
during the Nineties never was a new norm. Yes, a New Era in which
common stocks no longer carried a heavy risk of capital loss was
a delusion.
Second, for investors
accumulating stocks over long-term time horizons, lower prices are
good, just as are lower prices for computers or food. You can buy
more for less. If you will not retire for many years, it's better
to accumulate stocks with the Dow below 10,000 rather than above
20,000.
Third, the bear market
is beginning to make stocks attractive once again. Why? Simply because
lower stock prices, combined with high corporate earning, mean that
stocks, selling at 30 times earning a year ago, are now selling
at 24 times. Thus, valuations - if hardly cheap - are considerately
more attractive.
In short, the ice-cold
shower that has hit the stock market, however unpleasant, however
unexpected, however devastating to the personal wealth of very aggressive
investors, has sent a valuable and essential message to us all,
a lesson that has brought the hard realities of investing into a
financial world so recently overwhelmed by an unsustainable aura
of tinsel and glitter: The Mathematics of the Markets Is Eternal.
I believe we are now
in a New Environment - not to be confused with the so-called "New
Economy" - an environment in which future investment returns
will be lower, risk awareness higher, and investor expectations
more muted. So let me now speculate about what future market returns
might be. To state what must be obvious, when investor expectations
reach their pinnacle, stocks are priced to those expectations. As
a result, stocks become valued at levels that have nowhere to go
but down. Simply put, investors do better when they buy stocks at
low price/earnings levels and worse when they buy stocks at high
price/earnings levels. (Not every time, but most of the time.) With
the sharp decline since last spring, the price/earnings ratio has
tumbled from the 30 P/E when 2000 began to 24 times today. Stocks
are clearly cheaper, though the P/E ratio is still 50% above its
long-term norm of 16 times.
What lies ahead for the
stock market? I believe the best way to peer into the uncertain
future is to consider the two separate and distinct numbers - one
for investment return; one for speculative return - that constitute
the total market return. Investment return is simply the total of
the current dividend yield on stocks (today it's only about 1%)
and the earnings growth expected for, say, the next decade. Long-run
annual earnings growth has been 6%, but I'll assume, optimistically,
an 8% growth rate. So, that growth rate would bring the total investment
return to 9%.
Speculative return -
a far more volatile figure - measures the impact of any change in
the price/earnings ratio. It can add to - or subtract from - investment
return. If it remains the same, the investment return will exactly
equal the market return. If, over the coming decade, today's ratio
were to rise by, say, 33% to 32 times, we would add an annual 3%
of speculative return to the 9% investment return. Market return:
12%. But if the ratio falls 33% to 16 times, subtract 4% annually.
(Yes, 3% more, but 4% less. Reverse compounding is significantly
more negative.) Market return: 5%. While forecasting speculative
return is, well, speculation, pure and simple, I believe that the
price/earnings ratio a decade hence is considerably more likely
to be lower rather than higher than today's. If so, total stock
market returns might run in the range of 5% to 7% in the coming
decade.
In such a New Environment,
Vanguard's growth will doubtless slow. But I believe our share of
market will grow even more rapidly. And I believe that the strength
of our essentially conservative investment principles, the power
of our low costs (even more important in an era of modest returns),
and the special attractiveness of our bond and money market funds
in an environment in which those asset classes will provide more
competitive returns with stock returns will make us the envy of
our competitors. Whatever the case, we'll all be living in interesting
times.
Economics and Idealism
In retrospect, I believe
that idealism - the dream of a better world; fairness to one's fellow
human beings; focus on simplicity; emphasis on stewardship - has
driven my life from Blair Academy to Princeton, and then through
my long career. Happily, I've learned that the link between idealism
and economics is a powerful one. Indeed, both Vanguard's structure
and the index fund concept are classic examples of the fact that
enlightened idealism is sound economics.
This link between idealism
and economics is hardly limited to Vanguard. Indeed, the idealism
of that great Princetonian Woodrow Wilson was reflected in his economic
philosophy. In his first inaugural address as President of the United
States in 1912, Wilson presented a sweeping plan for financial reform
which culminated in the Federal Reserve system; which slashed tariffs
and opened America to global competition; and which toughened the
anti-trust laws in order to have free enterprise prevail. His passion
for his goals was hardly hidden. Listen to his words: "To restore
that ancient time when America lay in every hamlet, when America
was seen in every fair valley, when America displayed her great
forces on the wide prairies, ran her fine fires of enterprise up
over the mountainside and down into the bowels of the earth, and
eager men everywhere captains of industry, not employees . . . America
stands for opportunity. America stands for a free field and no favor.
America stands for a government responsive to the interests of all."
Could it be better said today?
I'm happy to report that
the half-century chronicle that links Princeton and Vanguard continues.
Last September, McGraw-Hill Corporation published John Bogle on
Investing: The First 50 Years, the initial volume of its "Great
Ideas in Finance" series It includes 25 speeches I've given
over the years, as well as my ancient Princeton senior thesis, published
at last, a half-century after it was written - yet one more piece
of good fortune in the seemingly endless string of breaks that I've
recounted this evening. The icing on the cake: a Foreword by legendary
Princetonian and former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, Class
of 1949.
Returning Full Circle
Thanks to an enterprising
Vanguard crew member, I received not so long ago a mint-condition
copy of the December 1949 issue of Fortune that contained the mutual
fund article that inspired my thesis. I re-read it: Clearly, "tiny
but contentious" had now become "big and contentious."
And yet another coincidence: The feature essay was entitled "The
Moral History of U.S. Business." I re-read that long-forgotten
article too.
The essay, I quickly
realized, described the kind of moral responsibility in business
that echoes Vanguard's guiding principles. And it cites the eerily
apt words of William Parsons, "a merchant of probity,"
who in 1844 described the good merchant as "an enterprising
man willing to run some risks, yet not willing to risk in hazardous
enterprises the property of others entrusted to his keeping, careful
to indulge no extravagance and to be simple in his manner and unostentatious
in his habits, not merely a merchant, but a man, with a mind to
improve, a heart to cultivate, a character to form."
As for the mind, I still
strive every day - I really do! - to improve my own. As for the
heart, no one - no one! - could possibly revel in the opportunity
to cultivate it more than I. A month from now, after all, I'll celebrate
the fifth anniversary of the amazing grace represented by my incredibly
successful heart transplant - a piece of luck that, among other
things, makes it possible for me to be with you tonight. And as
for character, I've tried not only to live my life, but build my
business with integrity above all - in every aspect of how we manage
the billions of dollars entrusted to our stewardship. I pray that
my company will forever hold that standard high, and continue to
put the will and the world of a business enterprise in the service
of others - in the Nation's service.
And I hope each of you
young Princetonians here this evening will also do your best to
consider your career, not just as a livelihood, but as a calling
as well, a calling to serve others. Perhaps you will be as inspired
as I am by Woodrow Wilson's words in his inaugural speech as President
of the University in 1902, demanding that the Princeton graduate
"derive his knowledge from the thoughts of the generations
that have gone before him." He noted that, "the ages of
strong and definite moral impulse have been the ages of achievement.
University men ought to . . . serve a free nation whose progress,
whose power, whose prosperity, whose happiness, whose integrity
depend on individual initiative and sound sense. "It is,"
he said, "the free capital of the mind the world most stands
in need of, spiritual as well as material, which help all men to
a better life . . . No task rightly done is truly private. It is
part of the world's work."
The infinite number of
blessings that have been fortuitously showered on me by my Princeton
education have encouraged me to strive to reach the lofty goals
cited by Woodrow Wilson, even as I realize they are beyond my grasp.
In this new century, so laden with challenge and opportunity alike,
I hope you too will be similarly blessed. If you are, I hope too
that you will do your best to make the most of your blessings and,
50 years hence, emerge late in your careers and lives with your
own ideals as undiminished by time and tide, by triumph and tragedy,
by joy and sorrow, as my own.
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