The Bogleheads® - Bogleheads (2024)


Bogleheads 17 Conference (2018)

Bogleheads, a term intended to honor Vanguard founder and investor advocate John Bogle, are investing enthusiasts who participate in the Bogleheads Forum. The forum's members discuss financial news and theory, while also helping less experienced investors develop their portfolios. There are more than 120,000 registered members and the site receives an average of nearly 2,000 posts each day. Some members also participate in national or local chapter get-togethers.

The Bogleheads community encompasses the forum, the wiki, the blog and three investment books (The Bogleheads’ Guide to Investing, The Bogleheads’ Guide to Retirement Planning and The Bogleheads' Guide to the Three-Fund Portfolio). Affiliated sites include a presence on Facebook,Reddit and Twitter, and The John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy. The Center sponsors a series of podcasts, the annual Bogleheads Conferences, the Bogleheads YouTube channel, the Bogleheads Virtual Life Stage chapter meetings, and the weekly Bogleheads Twitter Spaces discussions.

Investing philosophy

The Bogleheads approach begins with an investor deciding on percentage allocations to various asset classes, such as U.S. stocks, international stocks, U.S. bonds, etc. The desired allocations are then implemented using low-cost vehicles which are true to the targeted asset classes. Tax costs are carefully considered, influencing decisions as to what investments to place in taxable versus tax-advantaged accounts.

Bogleheads emphasize regular saving, broad diversification, and sticking to one's investment plan regardless of market conditions. Information relevant to the group's core beliefs is available in both The Twelve Pillars of Wisdom and Vanguard's investment philosophy, and are explained in greater detail in Bogleheads investment philosophy.

Online history

The Bogleheads' history is one of growth and an increasing sense of group identity.

Vanguard Diehards

The Bogleheads group informally began in March 1998 when Morningstar established the Vanguard Diehards Forum to discuss Vanguard funds.[1] By October 2001 the Morningstar forum had grown into Morningstar's most popular forum.

Today is a very special day for Morningstar's Vanguard Diehard Forum. It is the first time any Morningstar Forum has received 100,000 postings. My first Diehard post was in March 1998. None of us ever dreamed that 43 months later we would be Morningstar's most popular forum.

— Taylor Larimore [notes 1]

Diehards.org

In July 2001 Alex Frakt and Larry Auton debuted diehards.org as a convenient index and search capability in support of the Morningstar Vanguard Diehards Forum.[notes 2]

Figure 1: The Diehards.org homepage as it looked in September, 2001.

Figure 1 shows how the diehards.org homepage originally looked in September, 2001.

The Bogleheads Forum

An independent and noncommercial Bogleheads Forum was established on February 19, 2007 by an individual with username Phoenix. The primary driver behind creation of the new forum was acute disruption at Vanguard Diehards resulting from Morningstar's lax moderation policies. Technical obsolescence of the Morningstar boards was a secondary reason. One week after founding, Alex Frakt and Larry Auton agreed to host the new forum. [notes 3] Alex and Larry accomplished the changeover quickly, and the diehards.org homepage adopted a split-screen format, listing posts from both forums.

Figure 2: The Diehards.org homepage as it looked in March, 2007.

Figure 2 shows the look of the diehards.org homepage in March, 2007, when it incorporated posts from both Morningstar and the Bogleheads forum.

On January 29, 2019, in response to the increased presence of members across the globe, the forum added three non-US forums and welcomed Bogleheads® España as our affiliate forum in Spain.[2]

Bogleheads.org

After the inception of the Bogleheads Forum, activity on Vanguard Diehards decreased markedly, primarily due to rapid growth of the competing board. Also contributing to the decline was Morningstar's unpopular site redesign in September 2007.[3]

On May 31, 2008 Alex and Larry switched default domain names from diehards.org to the more natural bogleheads.org. The newly minted bogleheads.org home page no longer indexed posts from the Vanguard Diehards Forum.[notes 4]

Bogleheads wiki

In April 2008, a small group of forum members began experimenting with an off-site wiki. After a few weeks of joint effort, the group presented the forum administrators with a proposal to create a Bogleheads.org. hosted wiki. The forum administrators agreed with the proposal, and Alex and Larry kindly consented to host the new venture. The wiki was officially introduced on May 13, 2008.

Bogleheads® on Facebook

The Bogleheads® Facebook page was announced on January 11, 2011.[4] The site is managed by a small group of forum volunteers. The page seeks to continually fulfill the following purposes:

  • To maintain a Bogleheads.org presence on social networking website Facebook.
  • Serve to guide visitors to the Bogleheads® Forum.
  • Spread the word about Bogleheads® community and forum on Facebook.
  • Have an appearance consistent with the Bogleheads brand and respect to our mentor John Bogle.
  • Maintain content and presence that is lasting; a page that does not require daily moderation or policing.

Since inception the site has seen steady growth, having passed 13,000 followers in 2019.

Bogleheads® blog

The Bogleheads blog was launched on March 4, 2014. On September 8, 2014, the blog was moved to Financial Page-a Bogleheads blog, maintained by Barry Barnitz. The blog was transferred to the bogleheads.org server in February 2020. The blogging team provides up-to-date information across a broad range of site activities. These include local chapters and calendar; boglehead contests,boglehead podcasts, boglehead portfolio and retirement tools; as well as interviews. Specialized topics of interest are also covered in our blog postings.

Podcasts

The Bogleheads on Investing Podcast, sponsored by The John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy, and hosted by Rick Ferri, is a monthly podcast series featuring well-known figures in the investment world. The initial podcast, an interview with John C. Bogle, was published on September 14, 2018.

Bogleheads YouTube

The Bogleheads YouTube channel, sponsored by the John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy, was launched on August 19, 2021. The channel provides Boglehead Conference videos, videos of the Boglehead Local Chapter "Life Stage" virtual meetings, and audios of the Bogleheads on Investing Podcast series.[5]

The John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy

The John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy, a non-profit organization set up "to expand John C. Bogle’s legacy by promoting the principles of successful investing and financial well-being through education and community" (see more about the Center's mission).

The Center was approved by the IRS as a 501(c)(3) public charity on February 6, 2012. The approval was retroactive to Nov. 22, 2010, the date of the organization's incorporation as a non-profit Texas Corporation.[notes 5]

Donations to the Bogle Center are tax-deductible. [6]

In one of its first actions, the Center trademarked the name "Bogleheads", and it is now a Registered Service Mark of The John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy. [7]

Notes

  1. Taylor Larimore provides the following account of the forum's founding and early days in 100,000 POSTS!!!!!!!!, written in October 2001.
  2. Alex details the site's inception in the 2007 post Diehards.org history. The idea for what would become diehards.org was planted in this thread started on 6/13/01:Has anyone noticed....
  3. The conversation An announcement to the forum's membership, which occurred a week later, provides background information, and it details the willingness of Alex Frakt and Larry Auton to host the upstart forum at diehards.org.
  4. Alex provides an explanation in this Bogleheads forum post: "Why?"
  5. Further information can be found in this Bogleheads forum post: "Re: Tax-Deductible Donations to the Forum?" Tax return filings for the Bogle Center can be downloaded from the Foundation Center at Form 990 Finder

See also

  • Bogleheads® Conference history
  • Bogleheads® convention meetings
  • Bogleheads® wiki history

References

  1. Morningstar Forums
  2. Bogleheads forum topic: "Welcome to the new forum layout". January 30, 2019.
  3. M* to Launch Upgraded Message Boards
  4. The New Bogleheads Facebook Page -forum discussion.
  5. Bogleheads now on YouTube, forum discussion
  6. IRS Exempt Organizations Select Check
  7. Legal Force:Bogleheads

External links

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The Bogleheads®

The Bogleheads
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Conference videos
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Investment philosophy
  • Bogleheads investment philosophy
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  • Variations on Bogleheads investing
Member contributions
  • John Bogle forum post index
  • Contests
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US investors start-up kits
  • Getting started
  • Investing start-up kit
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Non-US investors start-up kits
  • Getting started for non-US investors
  • Bogleheads investing start-up kit for non-US investors
Published works
  • Bogleheads books and authors
  • Bogleheads on Investing podcast
  • Financial Page
  • News and blogs
  • The Bogleheads view
Wiki
  • Bogleheads wiki history
  • Wiki annual reports
  • v
  • t
  • e

The Bogleheads®

The Bogleheads
  • The Bogleheads
  • Conference meetings
  • Conference history
  • Facebook
  • Financial literacy project
  • Local chapters
  • Taiwan Bogleheads 2013 conference
  • Taiwan Bogleheads 2015 conference
  • YouTube

Conference videos
  • Bogleheads 7
  • Bogleheads 9
  • Bogleheads 10
  • Bogleheads 11
  • Bogleheads 12
  • Bogleheads 13
  • Bogleheads 14
  • Bogleheads 15
  • Bogleheads 16
  • Bogleheads 17
Investment philosophy
  • Bogleheads investment philosophy
  • Investment philosophy video
  • Investment philosophy online course (2022 conference videos)
  • Variations on Bogleheads investing
Member contributions
  • John Bogle forum post index
  • Contests
  • Debates
  • Classic Bernstein
  • Grok's tips
  • Madsinger monthly reports
  • Social Security
  • Taylor Larimore's market timing quotes
  • What the experts say about investing
US investors start-up kits
  • Getting started
  • Investing start-up kit
  • Personal finance planning start-up kit
  • Retirement planning start-up kit
Non-US investors start-up kits
  • Getting started for non-US investors
  • Bogleheads investing start-up kit for non-US investors
Published works
  • Bogleheads books and authors
  • Bogleheads on Investing podcast
  • Financial Page
  • News and blogs
  • The Bogleheads view
Wiki
  • Bogleheads wiki history
  • Wiki annual reports
The Bogleheads® - Bogleheads (2024)

FAQs

What is the 50 30 20 rule for Bogleheads? ›

First, Warren's original rule was 30 to wants and 20 to savings, but if you can flip that, great! Apply the numbers to your after tax income. Then figure out how much you need for housing, utilities, transportation, food, insurance and clothing. If that is 50% or less, everything else is wants.

What is the Boglehead method? ›

Introduction. Bogleheads emphasize regular saving, broad diversification, and sticking to an investment plan regardless of market conditions. We follow a small number of simple investment principles that proved over time to produce risk-adjusted returns far greater than those achieved by the average investor.

What is the summary of the Bogleheads? ›

If you didn't know, and I didn't before this book, Bogleheads are long-term investors who follow the investment philosophy of Jack Bogle. It is a simple but effective message to diversify with low-cost index funds and let compounding grow your wealth. One of their mottos is “Stay the course!”

What is the Boglehead Three Fund portfolio? ›

The three funds commonly used in the John Bogle three-fund portfolio are a total U.S. stock market index fund, a total international stock market index fund, and a total U.S. bond market index fund.

What is the rule of 55 Bogleheads? ›

OP can only access 401k funds penalty-free under the 'Rule of 55' if they separate from the plan's sponsor (employer) as of Jan. 1 of the year turning 55, or later. So the funds if left in an old 401k plan where OP separated from service at age 45 wouldn't qualify for a 'Rule of 55' distribution.

What is the ideal portfolio allocation for a 30 year old? ›

The old rule about the best portfolio balance by age is that you should hold the percentage of stocks in your portfolio that is equal to 100 minus your age. So a 30-year-old investor should hold 70% of their portfolio in stocks. This should change as the investor gets older.

What is Bogleheads 3 bucket strategy? ›

Stripped to its simplest form, here's the premise of the Bucket Strategy™: You organize your investments into three main groupings, or "buckets" and take the majority of the risk in Bucket No. 3, largely with stocks and real estate.

What is the 70 30 portfolio strategy? ›

The 70/30 portfolio targets a 70% long term allocation to equities and 30% in all other asset classes – the actual portfolio allocation at any point in time will fluctuate to reflect prevailing investment opportunities.

How often should you rebalance Bogleheads? ›

There are several ways you can determine when it is time to rebalance: At a certain point in the calendar (for example, the beginning of the year, a specific day of the year, every other year, and so on). For example, you might systematically rebalance your portfolio once a year, on your birthday.

What is the Bogleheads theory? ›

Investing philosophy

The Bogleheads approach begins with an investor deciding on percentage allocations to various asset classes, such as U.S. stocks, international stocks, U.S. bonds, etc. The desired allocations are then implemented using low-cost vehicles which are true to the targeted asset classes.

What is home country bias in Bogleheads? ›

Home country bias means overweighting your home country or region in your asset allocation. One simple reason for this is familiarity.

What is the max 401k Bogleheads? ›

Employees can contribute up to $23,000 to their 401(k) plan for 2024 vs. $22,500 for 2023. Anyone age 50 or over is eligible for an additional catch-up contribution of $7,500 for both 2024 and 2023. The general limit on total employer and employee contributions for 2024 is $69,000 ($76,500 with catch-up).

What is the Bogle strategy? ›

His investing approach focused on simplicity, diversification, long-term thinking, and expecting short-term market fluctuations to be erased by consistent secular trends. His work empowered the individual investor and inspired his peers among financial giants.

What is the Bogle recommended portfolio? ›

Building a Solid Foundation: The Boring Money Account

The core of Bogles recommended portfolio is having a boring money account invested primarily in index funds. Bogle suggested putting at least 95% of investable assets into low-cost, diversified index funds.

What is the Boglehead approach to investing? ›

Rather than trying to pick specific securities or sectors of the market (US stocks, international stocks, and US bonds) that in theory might outperform the overall market in the future, Bogleheads buy funds that are widely diversified, or even approximate the whole market.

What should you do according to the 50 30 20 rule? ›

The 50-30-20 rule recommends putting 50% of your money toward needs, 30% toward wants, and 20% toward savings.

What is the 50/30/20 rule? ›

The rule is to split your after-tax income into three categories of spending: 50% on needs, 30% on wants, and 20% on savings. 1. This intuitive and straightforward rule can help you draw up a reasonable budget that you can stick to over time in order to meet your financial goals.

What is one negative thing about the 50 30 20 rule of budgeting? ›

Hopefully, you wouldn't do this, but the way the 50/30/20 budget is set up, it can cause high-income individuals to spend a lot of money on things that they don't need and not save enough for important financial goals.

What is the 50 30 20 rule money saving expert? ›

50% of your income is used for needs. 30% is spent on any wants. 20% goes towards your savings.

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