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The Little Book of Common Sense Investing in English
The Little Book of Common Sense Investing in English
Author: Raja Babu
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© Raja Babu
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To Paul A. Samuelson, professor of economics
at Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Nobel Laureate, investment sage.
In 1948 when I was a student at Princeton
University, his classic textbook introduced me
to economics. In 1974, his writings reignited my
interest in market indexing as an investment strategy.
In 1976, his Newsweek column applauded my cre-
ation of the world’s first index mutual fund. In
1993, he wrote the foreword to my first book, and
in 1999 he provided a powerful endorsement for my
second. Now in his ninety-second year, he remains
my mentor, my inspiratio
at Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Nobel Laureate, investment sage.
In 1948 when I was a student at Princeton
University, his classic textbook introduced me
to economics. In 1974, his writings reignited my
interest in market indexing as an investment strategy.
In 1976, his Newsweek column applauded my cre-
ation of the world’s first index mutual fund. In
1993, he wrote the foreword to my first book, and
in 1999 he provided a powerful endorsement for my
second. Now in his ninety-second year, he remains
my mentor, my inspiratio
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Acknowledgments
IN WRITING THIS BOOK, I have received incredibly
wonderful support from the entire (three-person) staff of
Bogle Financial Markets Research Center, the Vanguard-
supported unit that began its formal activities at the
beginning of 2000.
Chapter Eighteen
What Should I Do Now?
-
Funny Money, Serious Money,
and Investment Strategy
DEEP DOWN, I REMAIN absolutely confident that the
vast majority of American families will be well served by
owning their equity holdings in an all-U.S.
Chapter Seventeen
“The Relentless Rules
of Humble Arithmetic”
-
Reprise
IF THE MESSAGE IN this book comes across as confident,
please understand that it is little more than common
sense. Even more, please understand that my confidence
in the index fund is buttressed by the conclusions of many
of the smartest, most experienced, most successful in-
vestors in the United States including Warren Buffett,
Charlie Munger, and Benjamin Graham, along with top
academics and endowment managers—Nobel Laureates
Paul Samuelson, William Sharpe, and Daniel Kahneman
and Princeton’s Burton Malkiel, Yale’s David Swensen,
Harvard’s Jack Meyer, and MIT’s Andrew Lo.
Chapter Sixteen
What Would Benjamin
Graham Have Thought
about Indexing?
-
A Confirmation from Mr. Buffett
THE FIRST EDITION OF The Intelligent Investor was pub-
lished in 1949. It was written by Benjamin Graham, the
most respected money manager of the era, and coauthor
(with David Dodd) of Security Analysis, a scholarly tome
originally published in 1934.
Chapter Fifteen
The Exchange
Traded Fund
-
A Trader to the Cause
EVEN BEFORE THE RISE of the so-called new paradigm of
fundamental indexing described in Chapter 14, traditional
indexing was being challenged by a sort of wolf-in-sheep’s
clothing, the exchange traded fund (ETF).
Chapter Fourteen
Index Funds
That Promise to Beat
the Market
-
The New Paradigm?
SINCE THE INCEPTION OF the first index mutual fund in
1975, indexing—investing in passively managed, broadly
diversified, low-cost, stock and bond index funds—has
proved to be both a remarkable artistic success and a re-
markable commercial success.
Chapter Thirteen
Bond Funds and
Money Market Funds
-
Where Those Relentless Rules
Are Even More Powerful
SO FAR, MY DISCUSSION of the index fund (and its hand-
maiden, low investment costs) has related to the stock
market and to equity mutual funds.
Chapter Twelve
Profit from the Majesty
of Simplicity
-
Hold Index Funds That Own
the Entire Stock Market.
IF LOW COSTS ARE GOOD (and I don’t think a single an-
alyst, academic, or industry expert would disagree that
low costs are good), why wouldn’t it be logical to focus on
the lowest-cost funds of all—index funds that own the en-
tire stock market?
Chapter Eleven ¸
Focus on the Lowest-
Cost Funds
-
The More the Managers Take,
the Less the Investors Make.
WHAT LESSONS HAVE YOU learned in Chapters 8
through 10? Selecting equity funds based on long-term
past performance hasn’t been the answer.
Chapter Ten
Seeking Advice to
Select Funds?
-
Look beforeYou Leap.
THE EVIDENCE PRESENTED in Chapters 8 and 9 teaches
two lessons: (1) Selecting winning equity funds over the
long term bears all the potential success of looking for
the needle in the haystack; and (2) Selecting winning
funds based on their performance over relatively short-
term periods in the past is all too likely to lead, if not to
disaster, at least to disappointment.
Chapter Nine
Yesterday’s Winners,
Tomorrow’s Losers
-
Fooled by Randomness*
IN SELECTING MUTUAL FUNDS, most fund investors seem
to rely, not on sustained performance over the long term, but
on exciting performance over the short term. (Exhibits 5.2
and 5.3 in Chapter 5 reinforce this point.)
Chapter Eight
Selecting Long-Term
Winners
-
Don’t Look for the Needle—
Buy the Haystack.
SELECTING WINNING FUNDS in advance is more diffi-
cult than it looks. Sure, there are always some winners
that survive over the years. And if we pore over records
of past performance, it is easy to find them.
Chapter Seven
When the Good Times
No Longer Roll
-
What Happens If
Future Returns Are Lower?
REMEMBER THE UNFAILING principle described in
Chapter 2: in the long run it is the reality of business—the
dividend yields and earnings growth of corporations—that
drives the returns generated by the stock market. How-
ever, I must warn you that during the past 25 years—the
period examined in the three preceding chapters—the
12.5 percent nominal annual return provided by the U.S.
stock market included a speculative return of nearly 3
percent per year, far above the business reality
Chapter Six
Taxes Are Costs, Too
-
Don’t Pay Uncle Sam Any More
Than You Should.
WE STILL AREN’T THROUGH with these relentless rules
of humble arithmetic—the logical, inevitable, and unyield-
ing long-term penalties assessed against stock market par-
ticipants by investment expenses and the powerful impact
of inflation—that have slashed the capital accumulated by
mutual fund investors.
Chapter Five
The Grand Illusion
-
Surprise! The Returns Reported
by Mutual Funds Aren’t Actually
Earned by Mutual Fund Investors.
IT IS GRATIFYING THAT industry insiders such as the In-
vestment Company Institute’s (ICI’s) chairman Jon Fossel,
Fidelity’s Peter Lynch, Mad Money’s James Cramer, and
AQR’s Clifford Asness agree with me about the inevitable
inadequacy of returns earned by the typical equity mutual
fund relative to the returns available simply by owning the
stock market through an index fund based on the S&P 500.
Chapter Four
How Most Investors Turn a Winner’s Game Into a Loser’s Game
-
“The Relentless Rules
of Humble Arithmetic”
BEFORE WE TURN TO the success of indexing as an invest-
ment strategy, let’s explore in a bit more depth just why it is
that investors as a group fail to earn the returns that our
corporations generate through their dividends and earnings
growth, ultimately reflected in the prices of their stocks.
Chapter Three
Cast Your Lot With Business
-
Rely on Occam’s Razor
to Win by Keeping It Simple.
SO HOW DO YOU cast your lot with business? Simply by
buying a portfolio that owns the shares of every business
in the United States and then holding it forever.
Chapter Two
Rational Exuberance
-
Business Reality Trumps
Market Expectations.
THAT WONDERFUL PARABLE ABOUT the Gotrocks family
in Chapter 1 brings home the central reality of investing:
“The most that owners in the aggregate can earn between
now and Judgment Day is what their business in the aggre-
gate earns,” in the words of Warren Buffett.
Chapter One
A Parable
-
The Gotrocks Family
EVEN BEFORE YOU THINK about “index funds”—
in their most basic form, mutual funds that simply buy
all the stocks in the U.S.
Introduction
-
Don’t Allow a Winner’s Game
to Become a Loser’s Game.
SUCCESSFUL INVESTING IS ALL about common sense.
As the Oracle has said, it is simple, but it is not easy.




