For something like The Bogleheads Guide to Investing or the Bogleheads Guide to the Three-Fund Portfolio, absolutely those principles are pretty timeless. I haven't read the books myself but understand that it's fairly general advice, things that aren't really subject to change with the revisions to tax law that have happened since publication. If you're talking about more specific books on say estate planning, that may be different,
Specifically, when it comes to index investing, Jack Bogle made the observation that, in the aggregate, index investors will always come out ahead of active investors, because index investors are invested in exactly the same equities as active investors, but they're not paying the active investors' expenses. That brilliant yet simple observation will ALWAYS hold true, because math.
Specifically, when it comes to index investing, Jack Bogle made the observation that, in the aggregate, index investors will always come out ahead of active investors, because index investors are invested in exactly the same equities as active investors, but they're not paying the active investors' expenses. That brilliant yet simple observation will ALWAYS hold true, because math.
Statistics: Posted by 02nz — Sun Oct 27, 2024 2:57 am