June 16, 2000 Report - Volume 20 No. 3
1. This page was page 1
2. Page 2 was about applying Bogle's way of controlling risk to a higher yield strategy.
3. Irrational Exuberance - the great new book by Robert Shiller
4. The list and updates on a few stocks: BCE, Dofasco, TRP, PNG and Brascan - current
Risk in an Era of Confidence
Whenever I find something written by John Bogle, the grizzled veteran of 50 years in the business
and founder of The Vangard Group, I pay attention. His speech to the New England Pension
Consultants' Client Conference in Boston on April 6th was sensational. I recommend you go to
Morningstar News URL, download Bogle's remarks, print all fifteen pages and study his words
carefully. If you are in a rush, print and read only page 13. After you analyze page 13, you'll
discover you must make the time to study the rest of John Bogles's remarks...and maybe even buy
his book: Common Sense on Mutual Funds
http://news.morningstar.com/news/MS/Article/0,1299,2743,00.html
Along with many other most interesting comments*, about half of John Bogle's speech embraced
the three principal approaches to risk and controlling risk:
1. ignore equity risk - stay the course with correctly set asset allocation and a long-term horizon
2. reduce risk by broadening diversification among sectors of the equity market
3. reduce risk by reducing equity exposure
1. "If the equity exposure of the portfolio is deemed appropriate to the client's time horizon and
need for income (dividend yields and interest coupons, not capital gains) there are far worse
strategies than simply staying the course".
2. "The second approach to risk control", Bogle says, "is broadening the conventional focus of an
equity portfolio in marketable U.S. equities to encompass other equities that have reliably
different correlation with the U.S. market, dominated by large-cap growth and value stocks."
After considering alternative investments including foreign stocks, gold*, new enterprises, real
estate and hedge funds for some three pages, Bogle says, "I urge you to consider the wisdom of
reducing short-term volatility risk by assuming the substantially higher financial risk in owning
alternative investments in the portfolio."
3. John Bogle concludes "that the single most effective way to control risk is by controlling equity
exposure." [W]e must", he says, "base our asset allocations not on the probabilities of choosing
the right allocation, but on the consequences of choosing the wrong allocation.". Bonds, Bogle
says, "diversified portfolios of U.S. Treasuries and corporates rated A or better with little credit
risk-are, finally, the investor's only real protection against the most dire consequences of the
inevitable uncertainty of equity ownership." "No one knows whether or not bonds will provide
higher total returns than stocks over the next decade or quarter century. But we do know that
bonds will produce far higher income. I don't mean to be a Luddite, but income remains
important..." With the yield on an all-market stock portfolio now only about 1%, it would be
decades, even with substantial dividend growth, before the cumulative dividend payments
generated would equal the interest provided by the bond.
Go to front page index
More quotations from Bogle's speech of April 6, 2000
* "I may be the first serious investor in decades to bring up the subject of gold as a useful
portfolio diversifier, but surely it fills the bill."
"stocks are facing outsized risks today, and the recent surge of market volatility may be the
harbinger, that after all these years, risk is again coming home to roost."
"So let me be clear: you can place me firmly in the camp of those who are deeply concerned that
the stock market is all too likely to be riding for a painful fall - indeed a fall that might well have
begun."