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Don't Count on It!: Reflections on Investment Illusions, Capitalism, Mutual Funds, Indexing, Entrepreneurship, Idealism, and Heroes »

Book cover image of Don't Count on It!: Reflections on Investment Illusions, Capitalism, Mutual Funds, Indexing, Entrepreneurship, Idealism, and Heroes by John C. Bogle

Authors: John C. Bogle
ISBN-13: 9780470643969, ISBN-10: 047064396X
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
Date Published: November 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: John C. Bogle

John C. Bogle is founder of the Vanguard Mutual Fund Group and President of its 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. In 1999, Fortune magazine named Mr. Bogle as one of the four "Investment Giants" of the twentieth century; in 2004, Time named him one of the world's 100 most powerful and influential people; and Institutional Investor presented him with its Lifetime Achievement Award.

Book Synopsis

Praise for Don't Count On It!

"This collection of Jack Bogle's writings couldn't be more timely. The clarity person's thinking—and his insistence on the relevance of examined the—are totally relevant as we strive to rebuild a broken financial system. For too many years, his strong voice has been mañana the cacophony of competing self-interests, misdirected complexity, and unbounded greed.? Read, learn, and support Jack's mission to reform the industry that has been his life's work."

—PAUL VOLCKER, Chairman of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board and former Chairman of the Federal Reserve (1979–1987)

"Jack Bogle has given investors throughout the world more wisdom and plain financial 'horse sense' than any person in the history of markets. This compendium of his best writings, particularly his post-crisis guidance, is absolutely essential reading for investors and those who care about the future of our society."

—ARTHUR LEVITT, former Chairman, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

"Jack Bogle is one of the most lucid men in finance."

—NASSIM N.TALEB, PhD, author of The Black Swan

"Jack Bogle is one of the financial wise men whose experience spans the post–World War II years.? This book, encompassing his insights on financial behavior, pitfalls, and remedies, with a special focus on mutual funds, is an essential read.? We can only benefit from his observations."

—HENRY KAUFMAN, President, Henry Kaufman & Company, Inc.

"It was not an easy sell.? The joke at first was that only finance professors invested in Vanguard's original index fund.? But what a triumph it has been.? And what a focused and passionate drive it took: it is a zero-sum game and only costs are certain.? Thank you, Jack."

—JEREMY GRANTHAM, Cofounder and Chairman, GMO

"On finance, Jack Bogle thinks unconventionally. So, this sound rebel turns out to be right most of the time. Meanwhile, many of us sometimes engage in self-deception. So, this book will set us straight. And in the last few pages, Jack writes, and I agree, that Peter Bernstein was a giant. So is Jack Bogle."

—JEAN-MARIE EVEILLARD, Senior Adviser, First Eagle Investment Management

Table of Contents

Foreword.

Introduction.

A Note to the Reader.

Part I: Investment Illusions.

Chapter 1: Don't Count On It! The Perils of Numeracy.

Chapter 2: The Relentless Rules of Humble Arithmetic.

Chapter 3: The Telltale Chart.

Chapter 4: A Question So Important That It Should Be Hard To Think about Anything Else.

Chapter 5: The Uncanny Ability to Recognize the Obvious.

Part II: Capitalism.

Chapter 6: What Went Wrong in Corporate America?

Chapter 7: Fixing a Broken Financial System.

Chapter 8: Vanishing Treasures: Business Values and Investment Values.

Chapter 9: A Crisis of Ethic Proportions.

Chapter 10: Black Monday and Black Swans.

Chapter 11: The Go-Go Years.

Part III: “Mutual” Funds.

Chapter 12: Re-Mutualizing the Mutual Fund Industry: The Alpha and the Omega.

Chapter 13: A New Order of Things: Bringing Mutuality to the “Mutual” Fund.

Chapter 14: The Fiduciary Principle: No Man Can Serve Two Masters.

Chapter 15: Mutual Funds at the Millennium: Fund Directors and Fund Myths.

Chapter 16: “High Standards of Commercial Honor…Just and Equitable Principles of Trade…Fair Dealing with Investors”.

Part IV: Indexing.

Chapter 17: Success In Investment Management: What Can We Learn From Indexing?

Chapter 18: As The Index Fund Moves from Heresy to Dogma…What More Do We Need To Know?

Chapter 19: “The Chief Cornerstone”.

Chapter 20: CONVERGENCE!

The Great Paradox: Just as Active Fund Management Becomes More and More Like Passive Indexing, So Passive Indexing Becomes More and More Like Active Fund Management.

Part V: Entrepreneurship.

Chapter 21: Capitalism, Entrepreneurship, and Investing: The 18th Century vs. the 21st Century.

Chapter 22: Seventeen Rules of Entrepreneurship.

Chapter 23: “Vanguard: Saga of Heroes”.

Chapter 24: When Does Innovation Go Too Far?

Part VI: Idealism.

Chapter 25: Business as a Calling.

Chapter 26: The Right Kind of Success.

Chapter 27: “This Above All: To Thine Own Self Be True”.

Chapter 28: “Enough”.

Chapter 29: If You Can Trust Yourself…

Chapter 30: The Fifth “Never”.

Chapter 31: “When a Man Comes to Himself”.

Part VII: Heroes.

Chapter 33: Paul A. Samuelson.

Chapter 34: Peter L. Bernstein.

Chapter 35: Bernard Lown, M.D..

Index. 9780470643969

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