I’ve added Podcast #57 to the “RobCasts” section of the site. It’s called Buffett is the Scarecrow, Shiller is the Tin Man, Bogle is the Cowardly Lion.
There should not be enemy camps. Each “camp” should be learning from insights developed in the others.


I am interested in your reaction and comments
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/bus/columnists/sburns/stories/DN-burnscol_25bus.ART.State.Edition1.c59a.html
The article looks at an important question that is the focus of much of the work done at this site — the effect of valuations on safe withdrawal rates.
Scott is absolutely right that the price crash increases returns from this point forward. That helps all of us, including retirees. He is right to focus on this good news. There is entirely too much doom and gloom going around re stock investing today. The price crash was much needed. It is in many ways a good thing.
He’s wrong, though, to say that the SWR is over 4 percent at times of high valuations. Plug some numbers into the Retirement Risk Evaluator. The SWR was 2 percent at the top of the bubble. People who used those studies are in all likelihood going to suffer busted retirements. They should have been warned about this years ago, when the errors in the studies were first discovered.
Scott has been informed about the analytical errors in the Old School SWR studies. I have engaged in e-mail correspondence with him about them.
It is important that we tell people the good news about the recent price crash. It is also important that we tell people the bad news about times of high prices, like the time we experienced from 1995 through the first part of 2008. Passive Investing advocates argue that there is no need for investors to lower their stock allocations at times of insanely high stock allocations. I strongly disagree.
Scott is looking at important research. But he is interpreting it through the perspective of a long-time advocate of Passive Investing. That’s why his message is half sensible and half not. The same thing (the effect of price changes on future returns) that makes today’s news not as bad as many make it out to be made yesterday’s news not as good as many made it out to be. All valuation increases come with bad news attached and all valuation drops come with good news attached.
Rob