Brent Esplin

Investment Costs Matter (Part I): John Bogle, Vanguard, and the Cost Matters Hypothesis

An Investor with minimal curiosity will learn that the shortest and surest route to top-quartile performance is bottom-quartile expenses. – John C. Bogle, Vanguard founder and index fund pioneer The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) states that capital markets are highly efficient, and that any new information about a company’s stock is almost immediately reflected in…

Comparing Ourselves to Others Leads to Foolish Financial Choices

Men do not desire to be rich, only to be richer than other men. – John Stuart Mills (1806-1873) There is a great old Jewish folktale in Rabbi Harold Kushner’s book When Bad Things Happen to Good People.  The story is about two competing shopkeepers in a small town.  Their shops were right across the street…

Debt Elimination or Retirement Savings?: Gazelle Intensity vs. Humble Arithmetic

Gazelle Intensity Popular debt elimination evangelist Dave Ramsey teaches that, after setting aside $1,000 for emergencies, your only financial priority should be paying off all debt except your home mortgage.  Everything else, including saving for retirement, should be put on hold until your debts are paid.  Ramsey uses the term “gazelle intensity” to describe the…

Asset Allocation: Putting It All Together (Bill O’Reilly Case Studies)

We have been discussing the asset allocation decision, which in its simplest form consists of how much of your investments you should expose to the higher risks and potentially higher rewards of the stock market, and how much you should keep in safer investment such as bonds and cash.  First, we established that this decision…