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Bogle On Mutual Funds: New Perspectives For The Intelligent Investor (Wiley Investment Classics) Hardcover – Illustrated, April 27, 2015
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The seminal work on mutual funds investing is now a Wiley Investment Classic
Certain books have redefined the way we view the world of finance and investing―books that should be on every investor’s shelf. Bogle On Mutual Funds―the definitive work on mutual fund investing by one of finance’s great luminaries―is just such a work, and has been added to the catalog of Wiley’s Investment Classic collection. Updated with a new introduction by expert John Bogle, this comprehensive book provides investors with the wisdom of the pioneer of mutual funds to help you identify and execute the ideal mutual fund investment choices for your portfolio.
The former Vanguard Chief Executive, Bogle has long been mutual funds' most outspoken critic; in this classic book, he provides guidance on what you should and shouldn't believe when it comes to mutual funds, along with the story of persistence and perseverance that led to this seminal work. You'll learn the differences between common stock, bond, money market, and balanced funds, and why a passively managed "index" fund is a smarter investment than a fund managed by someone making weighted bets on individual securities, sectors, and the economy. Bogle reveals the truth behind the advertising, the mediocre performance, and selfishness, and highlights the common mistakes many investors make.
- Consider the risks and rewards of investing in mutual funds
- Learn how to choose between the four basic types of funds
- Choose the lower-cost, more reliable investment structure
- See through misleading advertising, and watch out for pitfalls
- Print length368 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWiley
- Publication dateApril 27, 2015
- Dimensions6.3 x 1.4 x 9.1 inches
- ISBN-10111908833X
- ISBN-13978-1119088332
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Editorial Reviews
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From the Inside Flap
John Bogle—investment giant and founder of the Vanguard Group of mutual funds—offers a hands-on guide for creating a long-term investment program that can be tailored to any investor’s financial goals. Written in down-to-earth terms for investors at any level, Bogle on Mutual Funds: New Perspectives for the Intelligent Investor explores the rewards of investing, the inherent investment risks, and the pitfalls to avoid. Drawing on his years of investment wisdom and success, Bogle outlines the time-tested principles and practicalities of investing through mutual funds.
At the heart of Bogle’s analysis are three “New Perspectives” on key investment issues. When the first edition of Bogle on Mutual Funds was published in 1993, these topics had not been given much attention in financial literature. Today, however, these ideas are firmly in the mainstream of investing’s conventional wisdom. Those three new perspectives—index funds, mutual fund costs, and taxes and mutual funds—remain critically important topics for mutual fund investors to consider. Bogle shows the way to intelligently navigate these issues in order to maximize your chances for investment success.
Bogle’s approach to mutual fund investing offers an effective method for developing a broadly diversified investment program. Step by step, he shows how to develop a long-term and strategic investing approach that balances the myriad market risks and shows how to manage the bumps along the volatile road of the marketplace. With Bogle on your side, you can learn how to spot excessive fees, reduce taxes, steer clear of overblown advertising claims, and ultimately create a portfolio that will meet your own financial objectives.
Bogle on Mutual Funds gives investors the keys to adopting an effective asset allocation strategy, selecting appropriate mutual funds, and employing the savvy use of index funds. Fundamental to the Bogle approach is an understanding of the role of the many costs of investing, including advisory fees, operating expenses, and sales charges. Return, risk, and cost are the three legs of Bogle’s eternal triangle of investing.
John Bogle has built his acclaimed mutual fund company on the fundamental principles of candor, fairness, and low cost. Bogle on Mutual Funds: New Perspectives for the Intelligent Investor, his first book, has become a classic. The framework it presents for creating an investment portfolio is well grounded in Bogle’s fact-founded wisdom and guiding principles, proven over and over again during the near-quarter-century since its first publication in 1993.
From the Back Cover
John Bogle―investment giant and founder of the Vanguard Group of mutual funds―offers a hands-on guide for creating a long-term investment program that can be tailored to any investor’s financial goals. Written in down-to-earth terms for investors at any level, Bogle on Mutual Funds: New Perspectives for the Intelligent Investor explores the rewards of investing, the inherent investment risks, and the pitfalls to avoid. Drawing on his years of investment wisdom and success, Bogle outlines the time-tested principles and practicalities of investing through mutual funds.
At the heart of Bogle’s analysis are three “New Perspectives” on key investment issues. When the first edition of Bogle on Mutual Funds was published in 1993, these topics had not been given much attention in financial literature. Today, however, these ideas are firmly in the mainstream of investing’s conventional wisdom. Those three new perspectives―index funds, mutual fund costs, and taxes and mutual funds―remain critically important topics for mutual fund investors to consider. Bogle shows the way to intelligently navigate these issues in order to maximize your chances for investment success.
Bogle’s approach to mutual fund investing offers an effective method for developing a broadly diversified investment program. Step by step, he shows how to develop a long-term and strategic investing approach that balances the myriad market risks and shows how to manage the bumps along the volatile road of the marketplace. With Bogle on your side, you can learn how to spot excessive fees, reduce taxes, steer clear of overblown advertising claims, and ultimately create a portfolio that will meet your own financial objectives.
Bogle on Mutual Funds gives investors the keys to adopting an effective asset allocation strategy, selecting appropriate mutual funds, and employing the savvy use of index funds. Fundamental to the Bogle approach is an understanding of the role of the many costs of investing, including advisory fees, operating expenses, and sales charges. Return, risk, and cost are the three legs of Bogle’s eternal triangle of investing.
John Bogle has built his acclaimed mutual fund company on the fundamental principles of candor, fairness, and low cost. Bogle on Mutual Funds: New Perspectives for the Intelligent Investor, his first book, has become a classic. The framework it presents for creating an investment portfolio is well grounded in Bogle’s fact-founded wisdom and guiding principles, proven over and over again during the near-quarter-century since its first publication in 1993.
About the Author
JOHN C. BOGLE is founder and former chairman of the Vanguard Group of mutual funds and President of its Bogle Financial Markets Research Center. After creating Vanguard in 1974, he served as chairman and chief executive officer until 1996 and senior chairman until 2000. Bogle is the author of ten books, including Enough.: True Measures of Money, Business, and Life, The Little Book of Common Sense Investing, and Clash of the Cultures: Investment vs. Speculation, all published by Wiley.
Product details
- Publisher : Wiley; 1st edition (April 27, 2015)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 368 pages
- ISBN-10 : 111908833X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1119088332
- Item Weight : 1.27 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.3 x 1.4 x 9.1 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #632,217 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #147 in Mutual Funds Investing (Books)
- #373 in Money & Monetary Policy (Books)
- #1,691 in Introduction to Investing
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

John C. Bogle (Bryn Mawr, PA) is Founder of The Vanguard Group, Inc., and President of the Bogle Financial Markets Research Center. He created Vanguard in 1974 and served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer until 1996 and Senior Chairman until 2000. He had been associated with a predecessor company since 1951, immediately following his graduation from Princeton University, magna cum laude in Economics. The Vanguard Group is one of the two largest mutual fund organizations in the world. Headquartered in Malvern, Pennsylvania, Vanguard comprises more than 100 mutual funds with current assets totaling about $742 billion. Vanguard 500 Index Fund, the largest fund in the group, was founded by Mr. Bogle in 1975. In 2004, TIME magazine named Mr. Bogle as one of the world's 100 most powerful and influential people, and Institutional Investor presented him with its Lifetime Achievement Award. In 1999, FORTUNE designated him as one of the investment industry's four "Giants of the 20th Century." In the same year, he received the Woodrow Wilson Award from Princeton University for distinguished achievement in the nation's service."
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However, this book needs updating with developments since the 1990s. It has been overtaken, in relevance, by recent publications by William Bernstein, Andrew Hallam, Thomas Stanley and William Danko, which, in my opinion are more informative, relevant and readable.
Bogle draws upon financial history and it is relevant, but less so than many of the books written by the above authors. This might be a little unfair on Bogle who published his tome first but it is noteworthy to the current day reader, to be aware of subsequent developments in the investing world, particularly in the past five years. For the more experienced investor it is still a must read, as so many current day authors reference it and, indeed, Bogle, has promised to update it further.




"Bogle on Mutual Funds" ist ziemlich nüchtern geschrieben, enthält aber einige Hintergrundinformationen, die man kennen sollte, wenn man das Risiko eingehen möchte, in Investmentfonds zu investieren. Wussten Sie z.B., dass, wenn bei einem Börsencrash in Folge auch die Aktienfonds-Kurse fallen und viele Anleger deshalb ihre Anteile verkaufen, diejenigen Anleger, die ihre Anteile weiterhin halten, zu ihrem Unglück mit den fallenden Kursen zusätzlich steuerlich den schwarzen Peter erhalten? Der Investmentfonds muss zur Auszahlung der flüchtenden Anleger Aktien verkaufen, realisiert evtl. steuerlich zu berücksichtigende Kursgewinne auf länger gehaltene Aktien, die vorher stark im Wert gestiegen waren, und muss die Steuern ebenfalls aus dem Fondsvermögen bezahlen, worauf dieses weiter schrumpft. Am besten dran sind die schnell flüchtenden Anleger, die noch aus den Bargeldbeständen des Fonds bedient werden können, denn auf diese entfallen überhaupt keine Steuerzahlungen. Das Halten der Investmentfonds-Anteile durch dick und dünn bestraft also gerade die Anleger, die nicht der allgemeinen Panik verfallen. Dies ist vielleicht der Grund, warum der Markt in seiner Gesamtheit "nur" vierzig Prozent gefallen ist, aber Ihr Investmentfonds sechzig Prozent im Minus ist. Allein derartige technische Hintergrundinformationen, die Ihnen sonst niemand erzählt, sind meiner bescheidenen Meinung nach den Preis des ganzen Buches wert.
Wenn Ihr Investmentfonds das in ihn investierte Geld in einem Jahr verdoppelt und im nächsten Jahr den erzielten Gewinn wieder komplett verliert, kann er - ohne zu lügen - behaupten, dass die durchschnittliche jährliche Performance bei +25 % lag (in einem Jahr +100 Prozent, im nächsten -50 Prozent ergibt nach dem arithmetischen Mittel berechnet +25 Prozent). Ist das nicht beachtlich für einen Investmentfonds, der keinen Gewinn erzielt hat, der den Wert ihres Kapitals aber schon beim Kauf der Anteile durch den Ausgabeaufschlag antastet, dann noch einmal jährlich kräftig Gebühren aus dem Fondsvermögen abzapft und Ihnen in der Steuerbescheinigung höchstwahrscheinlich auch noch virtuelle Trading-Gewinne zuweist, die Sie versteuern dürfen, obwohl sie nach all den Gebühren ärmer sind als zuvor?! Da musste John Bogle aus den USA ein Buch schreiben, um mir das zu erklären. Danke!
In Details ist das Buch trotzdem etwas veraltet und berücksichtigt noch nicht die Tatsache, dass Aktienfonds heute zusätzlich vielfach auch Spekulationsgeschäfte mit Optionen machen dürfen, was das allgemeine Risiko von Verlusten noch erhöht. Erst seit einigen Jahren in Deutschland erlaubt und ebenfalls noch nicht in diesem Buch berücksichtigt, ist die Tatsache, dass deutsche Investmentfonds auf Kredit ("margin") spekulieren dürfen. Nur so war es in den guten Zeiten von 2005 bis 2007 für viele Durchschnitts-Aktienfonds möglich, an der Börse jährlich 15 bis 30 Prozent Gewinn zu erwirtschaften. Der eingesetzte Hebel hat nur einen Nachteil: in schlechten Zeiten mit fallenden Börsenkursen schwindet das Kapital des Investmentfonds auch um so schneller.
Informieren Sie sich über Investmentfonds, bevor Sie Ihr Geld in diese riskante und meiner Meinung nach wegen des Mangels an Kontrolle gefährliche Geldanlagemöglichkeit investieren! Dieses Buch hilft dabei, sich das fehlendes Wissen anzueignen.