Go to main Forum page »
Last weekend, my wife and I returned to our former southeastern PA home town. The occasion was a series of events with family and good friends, many former colleagues of mine. On Friday night we had a happy reunion with a group that made up a wine making team, beginning in 2012, and continuing until Covid shut us down. Most of the team is now retired, and much of the talk was about retirement, pensions, Medicare, grandkids, travel, and how much fun it was to get together again.
The next day we drove from southern NJ to attend a life celebration for Chris – a good friend, colleague, and wine team member. He passed away at in January from a glioblastoma at 63. Many of the attendees were former colleagues, most now retired. Again, the occasion was marked with lots of discussions of grandkids, travel, old work war stories, and retirement.
After the celebration, we drove to Maryland’s eastern shore to spend a few days with my wife’s nursing school roommate. Her family has had a second home on the Sassafras river for more than 60 years. She lost her husband a few years back. Since then she has used me as a sounding board for her retirement plan. She’s a great friend and I’m happy to help in any way.
What triggered the idea for this article was an offhand comment about one of the most important events in the history of personal finance, an event that likely impacted most of the friends and family I saw this past weekend. We were discussing family weddings with my brother-in-law and sister in law. They had celebrated their 50th anniversary earlier this year. My sister-in-law-recalled that her cousin was not able to attend their wedding because he had a critical event at work that prevented him from being there. And that event is the theme of this article.
My brother-in-law and sister in law were married on January 10, 1976. The critical event that prevented her cousin from attending the wedding was the initial registration of the First Index Investment Trust. This was the very first index mutual fund available to individual investors. In 1981 it was renamed the Vanguard 500 Index Fund. Her cousin had been recruited away from Fidelity by Jack Bogle to help create the IT infrastructure for the index fund. Fifty years later, he is still a project manager for Vanguard.
The fund was officially launched to investors on August 31, 1976. A corresponding ETF, VOO, became available on September 9, 2010. Depending on your data source, VOO is the largest ETF in the world.
It occurred to me that the majority of the family, friends, and former colleagues I saw this past weekend benefited greatly from the creation of the Vanguard 500 Index Fund, and index funds in general. I worked for decades a few miles from the Vanguard headquarters in Malvern, PA. Some of the earliest financial conversations I recall with colleagues were about the 500 Index fund.
This summer we will celebrate America’s Semiquincentennial birthday. But I’ve also put a reminder on my calendar for August 31, 2026, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the creation of something that has helped to provide so many of us a secure financial future.
thanx to bogle and malkiel for helping millions of retail investors
everyone should read their books
Index 500 was my very first mutual fund purchase in the IRA I established around 1983. For a long time it was my only fund.
Thanks, Rick. I was reminded of how long the grandfather of index funds had been around during a recent conversation with my wife. We were considering a “what if” scenario of investing a small percentage of income for a lifetime, rather than spending it on an increasing lifestyle. Folks in my age cohort have had access to a powerful investment tool that can transform the lives of ordinary families. I am so thankful to Jack Bogle.
Another great post Rick. Keep ‘em coming!
In my employer 401(k) retirement plan the S&P 500 index fund at Vanguard was the lowest expense cost option and has often been the the only low expense cost option in many plans that I saw in tax clients plan options have over the years.
After retirement I did a trustee to trustee direct rollover of my 401(k) balance to a traditional IRA to eliminate the quarterly administrative expense that the employer 401(k) plan charged in addition to the expense that the individual fund choices charged.
My understanding is Mr. Bogle typically never praised the low expense index funds that included foreign equities but I have adopted the thinking of Jonathan Clements wrote about in How Much Abroad and I am now a happy owner of Vanguard Global index fund (VT) exchange traded class.
Low cost index funds certainly have made my investing easier and more profitable. Now I just need to control myself and stay the course on my investing.
Thanks for reminding me of the 50th.
Per Forbes,”Jack Bogle is estimated to have saved investors approximately $1 trillion in investment fees and costs by founding Vanguard and popularizing low-cost index funds. His relentless focus on reducing fees, known as “The Vanguard Effect,” has saved investors roughly $100 billion per year.”
Based on the last sentence I don’t believe this includes the compounding of the annual savings.if not that number would be multiples of trillions.
I am so happy that more than 30 years ago I discovered Vanguard and Jack Bogle after leaving a job and needing to find somewhere to invest my pension and profit sharing money.
This is why Jack is my number one investing idol.
Thanks Rick. I wish I’d gotten into index funds earlier!
Same here! “Better late than never” seems to apply…
Rick, I’m sad to hear about the loss of your friend.
Thanks for the history of the Vanguard 500 Index Fund. I wish I knew then, what I know now.
Rick, sounds like a wonderful but slightly bitter sweet trip. Fifty years since the inception of index funds! I’m grateful the innovation occurred during my personal timeline… I wonder how many years extra I would have had to work, if they never gained traction?
Remember Mark that at the time the fund was derided as Bogle’s folly. I can still hear his iconic laugh from the grave.