Never underrate the importance of asset allocation.
“Never underrate the importance of asset allocation.”
The World Motivation
Never underrate the importance of asset allocation.
“Never underrate the importance of asset allocation.”
Explore more quotes by John C. Bogle on topics like Allocation, wisdom, and life lessons.
“Never underrate the importance of asset allocation.”
“Successful investing is all about common sense.”
“When you're young, you've got plenty of time to recover from your mistakes.”
“Our financial system is driven by a giant marketing machine in which the interests of sellers directly conflict with the interests of buyers.”
“The driving force of any profession includes not only the special knowledge, skills and standards that it demands, but the duty to serve responsibly, selflessly and wisely, and to establish an inherently ethical relationship between professionals and society.”
“Wise investors won't try to outsmart the market.”
“Throughout the universe of public and private funds, managers are measured quarterly against one index or another, defined by statistics, and corralled into this category or that category so that fund of funds, pensions, and other institutions can make comforting - if not necessarily prudent - asset allocation decisions.”
“Negotiations over a shrinking pie are especially difficult because they require an allocation of losses. People tend to be much more easygoing when they bargain over an expanding pie.”
“To be sure, debates will linger about whether Medicare is too large or too small. Debates remain about the allocation of Medicare dollars. But December 8, 2003, demonstrated that there is no debate about this most fundamental fact: Medicare must survive.”
“We need to save the education system. We need to remove education from the framework of the political parties that rule in the State of Israel. We need to increase the allocation of long-term national resources to education and never touch them - no matter what.”
“Textbooks describe economics as the study of the allocation of scarce resources. That definition may be the 'what,' but it certainly is not the 'why.'”