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A Rich Life

The Old Ideas on Saving & Investing Don't Work -- Here's What Does

  • "Valuation-Informed Indexing Is the Same Song We Sing. Glad You Belong to the Same Choir We Do."





    Carolyn McClanahan, Director of Financial Planning
    for Life Planning Partners, Inc.

  • "Retirees Now Frequently Base Their Retirement Decisions on the Portfolio Success Rates Found in Research Such as the Trinity Study.... This Is Not the Information They Need for Making Their Withdrawal Rate Decisions."




    Wade Pfau, Academic Researcher

  • "The P/E10 Tool Could Drastically Change
    How the Entire Investment Industry
    Operates and Measures Risk."





    Larry, A PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "The Your Money or Your Life Book
    for a New Generation."





    Beatrix Fernandex, Book Reviewer
    for Dollar Stretcher Site

  • "A Newer School of Thought Believes That the Safe Withdrawal Rate Depends on How Stocks Are Priced at the Time You Begin Making Withdrawals."





    Scott Burns, Dallas Morning News Finance Columnist

  • "A Fascinating Retirement Calculator."







    Michael Kitces, Maryland Financial Planner

  • "The Evidence is Pretty Incontrovertible. Valuation-Informed Indexing...Is Everywhere Superior to Buy-and-Hold Over Ten-Year Periods."




    Norbert Schenkler,
    Co-Owner of Financial WebRing Forum

  • "Every Detail Shows Rob's Respect
    for His Information and His Reader."






    Audrey Owen, Owner of Writer's Helper Site

  • "You’ve Accomplished Something Radical
    With Your Idea of Passion Saving."





    Mark Michael Lewis,
    Money, Mission & Meaning Talk Show Host

  • "Big Moves Out of Stocks Should Not Be Done at All. But Strategic Asset Allocation Can Be Done At Very Rare Times, Maybe Six Times in an Investor’s Lifetime, Three Times When the Market Is Stupidly High and Three Times When Stupidly Low."



    John Bogle, Founder of Vanguard Funds

  • "Valuation-Informed Investing and Passive Investing
    Share More of a Common Ancestry
    Than It Might Appear at First."





    Jacob Irwin, Owner of Passive Investing Blog Carnival

  • "It Is Great to See a Finance Journalist Who Understands That Valuations Matter. Efficient Market Zealotry Is Rampant in the Journalism Community. I Just Love Your Valuation-Based Return Calculator."




    Rich Toscano, Pacific Capital Associates

  • "There Is Always An Unlimited Supply of Complainers Against Any Good Idea."






    Mr. Money Mustache Blogger

  • "Rob: This Has Been One of the Most Insightful and Helpful Comments I Think Anyone Has Ever Posted. Thank You for This Lesson and for Sharing Your Knowledge on This Subject!"




    My Money Design Blogger

  • "There Is An Extensive Literature About the Predictability of Long-Term Stock Returns. There Is an Extensive Literature About Short-Term Market Timing. My Question Is About Long-Term Market Timing. The Literature Seems Slim."



    Wade Pfau, Retirement Income Professor
    at The American College

  • "Your Ideas Are Sound."







    Rob Arnott, Financial Analysts Journal Editor

  • "For Years, the Investment Industry Has
    Tried to Scare Clients Into Staying Fully Invested
    in the Stock Market at All Times, No Matter
    How High Stocks Go. It's Hooey.
    They're Leaving Out More Than Half the Story."



    Brett Arends, The Wall Street Journal

  • "There Are Time-Periods Where Stocks Are a Terrible Addition to That Portfolio. Yet Inexplicably, We As Planners STILL tend to Suggest That It Is 'Risky' to Not Own Stocks When in Reality the Only Risk Is to Our Business."




    Michael Kitces, Maryland Financial Planner

  • "Valuation-Informed Indexing Provides More Wealth for 102 of 110 of the Rolling 30-Year Time-Periods While Buy-and-Hold Did Better in Eight of the Periods."






    Wade Pfau, Academic Researcher

  • "There Is a Growing Behavioral Economics Movement, But It So Far Has Had Limited Impact. Economists Are Not Fond of the Softness and Imprecision of Psychology. These Notions Are Considered Vaguely Unprofessional and Flaky."



    Robert Shiller, Yale University Economic Professor

  • "I Would Occasionally Get a Response Post
    Saying I Was 'the Best Since Rob Bennett
    Challenged Us to Think.'"




    A Popular Bogleheads Forum Poster Named "Retired at 48" Who Was Banned for Challenging Buy-and-Hold

  • "New Research by Rob Bennett Shows That
    Even a 4% Withdrawal Rate Could Cause Failure
    If You Start Retirement When
    Stock Market Valuations Are High.”




    Bernard Kelly, Consultant

  • "FuhGedDaBouDit!"




    William Bernstein, Author of
    The Four Pillars of Investing
    (When Asked Whether We Can Use the Old School Safe Withdrawal Rate Studies to Plan Our Retirements)

  • "This [The Stock-Return Predictor]
    Is a Very Handy Little Tool."






    Felix Salmon, Market Movers Blog

  • "A Much Simpler Way to Bring
    the Valuation Issue to Focus."
    (Referring to The Stock-Return Predictor)





    Karteek Narayanaswarmy, Blogger

  • "It's Informative, It's Based on Solid Data and It Provides Useful Results." (Referring to The Stock-Return Predictor)






    Political Calculations Blog

  • "Meet Three Couples Who Left the Corporate World to Do the Kinds of Work That Satisfied Them."






    Liz Pulliam Weston, MSN Money Columnist

  • "I Like Rob's Fresh Views and Tips
    on the Subject of Saving Money."






    The Digerati Life Blog

  • "A Very Solid Approach to Investing."







    Michael Harr, Founder of Walden Advisors

  • "Rob Bennett Has Been on a Tear With One Outstanding RobCast After Another."





    John Walter Russell, Owner of
    Early-Retirement-Planning-Insights.com Site

  • "It’s Time for a Different Way to Look at Investing, and Rob Is Onto Something Here."






    Kevin Mercadante, Owner of Out of Your Rut Blog

  • "My Afternoon Train Reading."
    (Referring to Rob's Article titled
    Why Buy-and-Hold Investing Can Never Work)





    Barry Ritholtz, Owner of The Big Picture Blog

  • "What Is It With Guys Named Rob?
    Longtime Index Agitator Rob Arnott Has Now
    Been Joined on These Pages by a
    Vanguard Diehard Agitator Named Rob Bennett."




    Jim Wiandt, IndexUniverse.com Publisher

  • "He Offers a Fresh New Perspective
    that Will Motivate You to Get on Track
    With a Solid Savings Plan."





    Lynn Terry, Click Newz Blog

  • "While Browsing at www.PassionSaving.com the Other Day, I Discovered an Article Featuring Ten Unconventional Money-Saving Tips. Each of These Offers a New Way to See Money."




    J.D. Roth, Owner of Get Rich Slowly Site

  • "Rob Has Ideas About Investing That Many Bloggers Find 'Interesting.' His Posts Are Often Controversial and Always Thought Provoking."





    Miranda Marquit, Planting Money Seeds Blog

  • "Is There a Way to Turn Saving Into Something Fun? If There Was, I Bet a Lot More of Us Would Do a Lot More Saving. I Found a Website Where This Basic Premise Is Explored in Great Depth."




    The Great WeiszGuy Blog

  • "I Have Much More Confidence in My Ability to Understand What Is Happening....I Thank You for Your Public Service, and, In Another Dimension, for the Personal Courage It Took to Make It Happen."




    Elizabeth, A PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "I Was Hooked on the Idea of [Passive] Index Indexing, But Something Inside Made Me Wonder "Too Good to Be True?" and "What's the Downside?" I Happened on to Your Site and Valuation-Informed Indexing Seems to Make Sense."



    Coleen, PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "Reads Like a Casual Conversation
    with a Likable Guy Who Wants Nothing More
    Than to Help Others Experience the Same Joy
    and Happiness He Has Found."




    Kara, Reader of Rob's Book

  • "Your 'Secrets' Are Exactly Like Magic Tricks: Once Revealed, They Look So Simple, Yet You Need Somebody to Show You How It Works."





    Kramerizio, Secrets of Retiring Early Reader

  • "Rob's Da Man! Never in the History of the Diehards Forum Has One Poster, Always Making Civil and Well Thought-Out Posts, Managed to Irritate So Many Without Anyone Being Able to Articulate a Good Reason As to Why."




    Mephistopheles, Bogleheads Forum Poster

  • "I’ve Been Surprised at How Controversial This Idea Is, but If Most People Are Buying and Holding, They Are Emotionally Invested in This Strategy."





    Jennifer Barry, Live Richly Blogger

  • "The Findings for [Long-Term] Market Timing Are So Robust That It Hardly Matters How We Do It."






    Wade Pfau, Asociate Professor of Economics

  • "The Elegant Simplicity of His Ideas Throughout Warms the Heart and Startles the Brain."






    Tom Gardner, Co-Founder of the Motley Fool Site

  • "Mr. Bennett Evidences an Unusual Skill....
    You'll Have to Buy a Copy....Extraordinary....
    A Massive Heap of Crap."




    John Greaney,
    Owner of the Retire Early Home Page Site

  • "By Reading All the Information on Your Website I Was Able to Develop a Part of Me I Didn't Know I Would Be Able to Become."





    Javier, PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "Innovative Financial Thinking."







    No Limits, Ladies Blog

  • "Knowledgeable."







    Hope to Prosper Blog

  • "Holy Toledo! This Is Great Stuff!"






    Bill Schultheis, Author of
    The New Coffeehouse Portfolio

  • ""He Offers Down-to-Earth But
    Nevertheless Eye-Opening Insights About
    the Why and the How of Early Retirement."





    Secrets of Retiring Early Reader

  • "Challenges Unfounded Assumptions."







    Bill Sholar, Founder of the Early Retirement Forum

  • "Seminal."






    John Greaney, Owner of Retire Early Home Page Site
    (Pre-May 13, 2002 Version)

  • "It’s Always Good to Read Something New That Challenges Your Way of Thinking."






    Invest It Wisely Blog

  • "Rob, Thanks for All of Your Articulate, Well-Written and Well-Reasoned Commentary."






    Elle, a Poster at the Joe Taxpayer Blog

  • "Although Rob and I Don’t See Eye to Eye
    on Every Detail, His Site Is a
    Valuable Resource for Research."





    Ken Faulkenberry, Portfolio Manager

  • "Thanks, Rob. I Love Seeing So Many
    Personal Finance Bloggers Who Offer Such
    High Quality Content on Their Own Sites Come Here
    to Weigh In [on Your Ideas]."




    Married With Debt Blogger

  • "A Ton of Tremendously Useful Content."







    Network Abundance Radio

  • "Your Enthusiasm Is Infectious."







    Ruth, a PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "I Woke Up at 4:00 am and Stared at the Wall for 20 Minutes....Thank You for Doing What You Do."






    Tasha, A PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "It Might Just Give You
    a New Way of Looking at Saving."






    Kevin Surbaugh, Owner of Debt Free 4Ever Blog

  • "'Staying Too Long in a Job Where You Don’t Feel Relevant Takes a Toll,' Said Rob Bennett, Who Worked for Years in a Well-Paying Corporate Communications Job Where He Didn’t Have Enough to Do."




    The New York Times

  • "You Have Started One of the Most Interesting
    and Stimulating Discussions This Board has Seen
    in a Long Time."





    Poster at Motley Fool Site

  • "A Respected Author and Commentator, Mr. Bennett has Dedicated Himself to Educating Average Investors to Avoid the Most Common Errors."





    Liberty Watch Site

  • "I've Gone from Shattered Dreams of Early Retirement to Glimpses of Hope to Reassurance from Quantitative Research."





    Patricia, A PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "Some of the Most Helpful and Insightful Market Discussions on the Web Take Place on These Pages."





    A Poster at the Safe WithDrawal Rate Research Group
    (Founded by Rob)

  • "Rob is the Only Person I Know (If Only via Message Board) Who has Completely Opted Out of Participation in the Stock Bubble. And You Know What? He Has Benefited Immensely from Doing So."




    Poster at Motley Fool

  • "Makes the Subject of Saving Edgy and Fresh."







    Maxine, A Reader of Rob's Book

  • "Rob Bennett, the Author of a Book Called Passion Saving, Thinks the Saving Problem Is Partly One of Packaging. So He Prefers to Couch it in the Language of Freedom."





    The Wall Street Journal

  • "This Tip Comes from Rob Bennett
    of the Finance Site PassionSaving.com."






    Lifehacker.com

  • "I LOVE This Article and
    Am Proud to be Publishing It!"




    Chuck Yanikoski, Executive Director of
    The Association of Integrative Financial
    and Life Planning

  • "Rob Bennett: Some People Disagree With Him, and He Rubs a Lot of People the Wrong Way. But He Has Interesting Ideas About Valuation-Informed Indexing, and He Delves Into a Lot of What Makes a Successful Investing Strategy."



    Miranda Marquit, Planting Money Seeds Blog

  • "Rob….Wow…..Your Response Sent Shivers
    Up the Ol’ Pilgrim Spine."






    Neal Frankie, Owner of the Wealth Pilgrim Blog

  • "I Have Counseled My Clients to Allocate a Percentage to Equities Based Upon Market Valuations....I Feel Like I've Found a Kindred Spirit. Fascinating Web Site."





    Tom Behlmer, Financial Planner

  • “A Simple Age-Based Asset Allocation Formula Is Not Appropriate, and Any Sensible Asset-Allocation Formula Should Combine Both Age/Investment Horizon and Market Valuation Levels.”




    RationalInvestor.biz

  • "Had a Guest Post This Week from Rob Bennett, Where He Discusses the Benefits of Value-Informed Indexing, Which I Find Very Intriguing."





    Sustainable Personal Finance Blog

  • "I Can Appreciate Rob's Comments.... Buy-and-Hold?
    For the Most Part, a Long Obsolete Theory."






    Neal Deutsch, Certified Financial Planner

  • "Utterly Brilliant!"







    Secrets of Retiring Early Reader

  • "Your Website Is So Enjoyable That It Is Keeping Me From My Research As I Am So Excited That I Have Found Such a Valuable Resource."





    Stuart, a PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "What We're Talking About Here Really
    ...Is Empowerment."






    Motley Fool Poster

  • "The Return Predictor Is Based upon the Principle that Over the Long Term, Stock Market Prices Will Reflect the Ten-Years Earnings Growth of the Underlying Companies. Prices Return to a Common Growth Pattern."




    Links.com Review of The Stock-Return Predictor

  • "Rob’s Arguments in Favor of Value Investing Actually Make a Lot of Sense In a Way That Should Make Any Rational Buy-and-Holder Uncomfortable."





    Pop Economics Blog

  • "What I Don't Understand Is How Rob Can Correspond in Such a Sweet and Polite Way
    -- Yet He Irritates Me to No End!"





    Financial WebRing Forum Poster

  • "You Go About It in a Manner that is Catastrophically Unproductive by Adding Missionary Zeal that Inflates Your Importance and Demeans Others. The Whole Idea That There is a New School of Safe Withdrawal Rates Reeks of Personal Aggrandizement."



    Scott Burns, Dallas Morning News

  • "Inflammatory."







    Morningstar.com Site Administrator

  • “What Warren Buffett Did Was Essentially Quite Close to What Rob Bennett Has Written. Buffett Has in Fact Been Cleverly Incorporating Long-Term Market Timing Based on Valuation of the Market in His Allocation of Money to Stocks.”



    Investor Notes Blog

  • "This Report Offers A Fresh Perspective That Is Rarely Found In Other Financial Literature."






    Secrets of Retiring Early Reader

  • "Rob Bennett Says That Market Timing Based on Aggregate P/E Ratios Can Be a Far More Effective Strategy. This Claim Is Consistent With Shiller's Analysis and I Can See How It Might Be So."




    Rajiv Sethi, Economics Professor at Columbia Univeristy

  • "Retiring Early Was A Concept I Did Not Entertain. I Was Going to Retire at 65 After Putting in 40 Years. Now I Am Glad To Say That All That Has Changed."





    Secrets of Retiring Early Reader

  • "In a Couple of Days, I Had
    Devoured the Entire Book."






    Reader of Rob's Book

  • "FIRECalc May Not Be the Last Word
    on Safe Withdrawal Rates."






    Jonathan Clements, Wall Street Journal

  • "It Seems to Me That Some on This Board Feel Threatened by the Arrival of Rob and His Ideas. They Feel a Threat to Their Perceived Elite Status."





    Motley Fool Poster

  • "You've Got to Say One Thing for Rob. He Has NEVER Lowered Himself to Ad Hominen Attacks -- Subliminal or Otherwise -- on Any Other Person on This Board. Not Once. Ever. At Least Give Him Credit for That."




    Motley Fool Poster

  • "I Have Never Seen Rob Show Incivility. No Matter What. Truly Amazing. Either He Is Really the Output of an Artificial Intelligence Program, or the Man's on the Way to Becoming a Saint!"




    Early Retirement Forum Poster

  • "You're the Politest Guy on the Internet.
    Such a Soft Touch!"






    Jonathan Lewis

  • "Props for Keeping Your Cool in the Married with Debt Article. Best of Luck Combating Buy-and-Hold."






    Money Mamba Blogger

  • "I Caught Up [at the Financial Bloggers Conference] With a Fairly Controversial Financial Blogger
    Named Rob Bennett, Who Struck Me As the
    Nicest Guy Around. There -- I Said It!"




    Digerati Life Blogger

  • "In Rob Bennett's Case, He Was Banned for No Known Listed Forum Policy. Except His Viewpoint Was Different From Other Bogleheads and [He Was Perceived As] a Threat."




    Investor Junkie Blog

  • "Mr. Bennett, You Are Spot on About Integrating Some Type of Valuation Filter to One's Stock Allocation. Astute Investors Have Incorporated Some Type of 'Valuation Timing' Into Their Investment Decisions Since the Beginning of Time."



    Poster at the Psy Fi Blog

  • "His Insights Into What Is Really Going On In The Stock Market Are Quite Compelling."






    Future Storm Blog

  • "It Was an Epiphany...Valuation-Informed Indexing Beats Buy-and-Hold Over Most Long-Term Holding Periods at Much Lower Volatility."





    Sam, a PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "I Am Intrigued By Your Ideas."







    Adam Butler, Portfolio Manager

  • "I Read the Book and I Loved It.
    The Philosophy Resonated with Me.
    I Am a Believer in Your Concept."





    Dr. Peter Weiss, Author of More Health, Less Care

  • "If Your Investment Ideas Can Do for Investing
    What Weston Price’s Ideas Did for Food,
    You’ve Got Our Attention."





    End Times Hoax Blog

  • "I Have Looked at His Website and Reviewed His Research and Find It Both Compelling and Completely Logical and Common-Sense-Based."





    Poster at Free Money Finance Blog

  • "If Investors Paid More Attention to Valuations, We Would Have Fewer Boom-and-Bust Cycles. The Investing Institutions Are Definitely Going to Avoid It Because It Affects Their Income."




    Hope to Prosper Blog

  • "The Calculators on Your Site Are Great Resources. It Amazes Me How So Many People Can Say 'Valuations Matter' Yet, in the Next Breath, They'll Say That We Should Ignore Valuations."




    John Marlowe, Logistics Analyst at Hess Corporation

  • "Must Read As Per My Viewpoint
    For All Value Seekers."






    Ajit Vakil, Value Investing Congress

  • "His Approach Is Both Mathematically Rigorous
    and Easy to Understand."






    Online Investing AI Blog

  • "There Is Nothing More Doubtful of Success Than a New System. The Initiator Has the Enmity of All Who Profit By Preservation of the Old Institution and Merely Lukewarm Defenders in Those Who Gain By the New One."




    Machiavelli

  • "Difficult Subjects Can Be Explained to the Most Slow-Witted Man If He Has Not Formed Any Idea of Them. But the Simplest Thing Cannot Be Made Clear to the Most Intelligent Man If He Believes He Knows Already What Is Laid Before Him."



    Tolstoy

  • "I Am Not Afraid. I Was Born to Do This."







    Joan of Arc

  • "I Certainly Have Seen the Academic Profession Squelching Unfashionable ideas and Have Often Been on the Wrong Side of It. Kuhn Shows How Most Pathbreaking Scientific Ideas Are Rejected at First, Usually for Decades.”




    Carol Osler, Brandeis International Business School

  • "First They Ignore You, Then They Ridicule You, Then They Fight You, Then You Win."






    Ghandi

  • "We Cannot Assume the Existence of Predictability Just Because There Are No Studies That Fully Reject It."






    Valeriy Zakamulin, Economics Professor

  • "I Am Also Extremely Grateful to Rob Bennett for Motivating This Topic and Contributing His Experience and Encouragement."





    Wade Pfau, Academic Researcher

  • "Rob Bennett Was an Early Pioneer in 3rd Generation Modeling by Advocating (Through Various Online Forums) that Withdrawal Rates Must Be Adjusted for Market Valuations Consistent with Research by Campbell and Shiller."



    Todd Tresidder, Financial Mentor Blog

  • "I Am Fascinated by the Growing Body of Research that Revolves Around the P/E10 Ratio by Robert Shiller, Doug Short, Wade Pfau, Michael Kitces, John Hussman, Crestmont Research, Jim Otar, Mike Philbrick, Adam Butler & Rob Bennett."



    Kay Conheady in Advisor Perspectives

  • "Rob Is an Enigma in the Personal Finance World. He Has Interesting Theories on Investing Based on Market Valuations. But He Weaves a Tale Which Makes the Stories of Alexander Litvinenko & Gareth Williams Seem Tame by Comparison."



    Don't Quit Your Day Job Blog

  • "In Recent Years, the 4 Percent Rule
    Has Been Thrown Into Doubt."






    The Wall Street Journal

  • "A Safe Withdrawal Rate Is Very Dependent
    on the Valuation of the Stockmarket
    at the Retirement Date."





    Economist Magazine

  • "I Have Read Everything I Can About Valuation-Informed Indexing. Buy-and-Hold Is Extremely Problematic. I Respect the Passion, Hard Work and Research That You Have Put Into This Very Important Issue. Your Work Has Huge Value."



    Carl Richards, Owner of Clearwater Asset Management

  • "The World of Personal Finance Blogging Needs More Rob Bennetts. He’s Passionate. He’s Intelligent. He’s Writing Things That Go Against the Grain."





    Financial Uproar Blog

  • "Beyond Awesome."







    Larry, a PassionSaving.com Site Visitor

  • "The Wealth Management Industry Seems Intent on Containing This Discussion for Fear Clients Might Discover that the Emperor Has No Clothes."





    Adam Butler, Portfolio Manager

  • "Recommended Reading."







    Jesse's Cafe Americain Blog

  • “All Who Are Still Holding Equities at Present Levels Because Their Financial Adviser Insists that Timing Market Cycles Is Impossible to Do -- Read This!"





    Juggling Dynamite Blog

  • "The Fact that Aggressive and Short-Term Market Timing Was Unproductive Did Not Mean That There Were Never Times When It Would Be Wealth-Maximizing to Get Out of the Market."



    Scott Burris,Director of the Center for
    Health Law, Policy and Practice

  • "The Amount of Return You Can Expect From a Diversified Equity Portfolio Is Inversely Correlated to the Market Valuation at the Start of the Holding Period. It Is One of the Most Robust Statistical Relationships in Modern Finance."




    Todd Tresidder, Financial Mentor Blog

  • "Why Would Your Job Be Jeopardized
    By Such a Sensible Claim?"





    Marcelle Chauvet, Econmics Professor
    at University of California

  • "Received Worrisome E-Mail from Rob Bennett. Warns of Risk with Buy-and-Hold Investing
    -- I Have No Clue."





    Vivek Wadhaw, Business Week Columnist

  • "As Attorney, Tax Expert and Financial Writer Rob Bennett Told Us, the Problem Is That, By the Time Shiller Published His Research, Many Big Names Had Already Endorsed Buy-and-Hold."




    ZeroHedge.com

  • "This Seems to Me to Be a Fundamental Challenge to Some of the Most Basic Tenets of the Boglehead Paradigm."






    Bogleheads Forum Poster

  • "You Want to be Very, Very Wary of Anything Connected with Rob Bennett, the Most Infamous Troll in the History of Investing Forums on the Internet."





    Alex Fract, Owner of Bogleheads Forum

  • “I’ve Had My Fill of Those Long-Winded Posts that Include Distortions, Unsubstantiated Claims, Misquotes and Comments Taken Out of Context.”




    Mel Lindauer, Co-Author of
    The Bogleheads Guide to Investing

  • "Haven't You Noticed Yet That NO ONE Discusses Your Ideas, NO ONE Mentions Your Name, NO ONE Goes To Your Web Site."





    One of the Greaney Goons

  • "I've Had Similar Experiences. I Know of Two Young Professors Who Wanted to Do Research on Fundamental Index and Reported to Me That Their Colleagues Advised Them That This Line of Research Could Derail Their Career Prospects."



    Rob Arnott, Financial Analysts Journal Editor

  • "As with Drug Studies Funded by Drug Companies, It Would Be Churlish to Suppose that the Chicago School of Business Was in the Bag. But It Would Also Be Idealistic to Assume That There Was No Funding Bias at All."




    Bogleheads Poster

  • "This Sort of Intimidation Is Not Acceptable. The Cigarette and Pharmaceutical Industries Found Research Supporting Their Products By Funding It. But That Was Big Money Supporting Outcomes, Not Dissuading Others."




    Lyn Graham, 25-Year CPA

  • "Financial Economists Gave Little Warning to the Public About the Fragility of Their Models. There Is No Ethical Code for Professional Economic Scientists. There Should Be One."



    Paper Titled The Financial Crisis and
    the Systemic Failure of Academic Economics

  • "The Situation [Referring to the Intimidation Tactics Used to Silence Academic Researcher Wade Pfau's Reporting of the Dangers of Buy-and-Hold Investing Strategies] Seems Well Below Any Professional and Academic Acceptable Standards."



    Albert Sanchez Graells, Law Lecturer

  • Many Academics Can Become Quite Strident When Their Views Are Challenged. Academia Is Often Subject to Self-Serving Bias That Obliterates Ethical Bounds."





    Ted Sichelman, Law Professor

  • "I Don't Like Too Much the Conspiracy Idea. I Am Not Pressured By Anyone in My Research."






    Roberto Reno, Economics Professor

  • "This Is What Investing Should Be -- Calculated, Deliberate, Confident, Informed and Simple."






    Aaron Friday, Owner of Aaron's Blob Blog

  • "It Is Obvious that Rob, in Attempting to Identify New Safe Withdrawal Rate Strategies...Is Goring Your Ox. If Rob Improves on [the] Safe Withdrawal Rate Methodology, the Implication Is Clear: You Are All, Metaphorically, Out of Business."



    Bogleheads Poster

  • "I Applaud His Effort to Inject Another Piece of Objectivity Into a Very Complex, Highly Subjective Topic -- Making Money in the Market."





    Bogleheads Poster

  • "Naturally, I Am Finding That Valuation-Informed Indexing Can Allow You to Reach a Wealth Target With a Lower Saving Rate and to Use a Higher Withdrawal Rate in Retirement Than You Could With a Fixed Allocation."



    Wade Pfau, Professor of Retirement Income
    at The American College

  • "A Careful Examination of Past Returns Can Establish Some Probabilities About the Prospective Parameters of Return, Offering Intelligent Investors a Basis for Rational Expectations About Future Returns."




    Jack Bogle, Founder of Vanguard Funds

  • "The Ability to Estimate the Long-Term Future Returns of the Major Asset Classes Is Perhaps the Most Important Investment Skill That An Indivisual Can Possess."




    William Bernstein, Author of The Four Pillars of Investing

  • "The Stock Market Resembles Roulette. In Both Cases, the Accuracy of Sensible Forecasts Rises Over Time."






    Andrew Smithers, Co-Author of Valuing Wall Street

  • "Returns Are for the Most Part a Matter of Simple Arithmetic...Much of Our Industry Seems Fearful of Basic Arithmetic of This Sort."





    Rob Arnott, Financial Analysts Journal Editor

  • "How Can It Be That One-Year Returns Are So Apparantly Random and Yet Ten-Year Returns Are Mostly Forecastable? In Looking at One-Year Returns, One Sees a Lot of Noise. But Over Longer Time Intervals the Noise Effectively Averages Out and Is Less Important."




    Yale Economics Professor Robert Shiller

  • "The Notion That Rich Valuations Will Not Be Followed By Sub-Par Long-Term Returns Is a Speculative Idea That Runs Counter to All Historical Evidence. It Is an Iron Law of Finance That Valuations Drive Long-Term Returns."




    John Hussman

  • "It's January and the Temperature Is Below Freezing. If You Asked Me Whether It Will be Warmer or Cooler Next Tuesday, I Would Be Unable to Say. However, If You Asked Me What Temperature to Expect on April 9, I Could Predict "Warmer Than Today" and Almost Surely Be Right."



    Michael Alexanfer, Author of Stock Cycles

  • "If the Response Is "Who Knew?", It Won't Be Much Comfort for Retirees in the Employment Line at Wal-Mart. This is Especially True Since a Rational Understanding of History and the Drivers of Longer-Term Stock Returns Can Help Retirees To Avoid That Surprise."




    Ed Easterling, Author of Unexpected Returns

  • "New of the Demise of the Random Walk Has Only Very Slowly Spread, In Part Because Its Overthrow Came as a Shock. If the Random Walk Hypothesis Were Correct, the Most Likely Return Would Be the Historic Average Return. The Evidence, However, Is Strongly Against This."



    Andrew Smithers, Co-Author of Valuing Wall Street

  • "I Don't Think We Can Debate the Merits of This Type of Forecasting [Referring to the Numbers Generated by The Stock-Return Predictor] Unless We Believe 'This Time It's Different.'"



    Poster at Bogleheads Forum
    (Before the Ban on Honest Posting Was Adopted There)

  • "I've Seen Absolutely Nothing From You That I Can Use in a Tangible Fashion to Formulate an Investment Plan. Your Ideas Are So Mushy That It's a Complete Waste of Time to Even Consider Them."




    Bogleheads Forum Poster

  • "Do You Really Think Your Tool
    [The Stock-Return Predictor]
    Is 'Wiser' Than the Market?
    If It Was That Easy,
    Everybody Would Be Doing It."



    Bogleheads Forum Poster

  • "The Expected Return of Stocks [As Reported By The Stock-Return Predictor] Needs To Be At Least the Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) Rate for Stock Investing To Make Sense."




    Bogleheads Forum Poster

  • "I Have Used Valuations to Adjust My Asset Allocation For Many Years With Very Favorable Results."





    Poster at Bogleheads Forum
    (Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting)

  • "I Don't Care If You Do or Don't Believe That the Market Will Behave Similarly in the Future As It Has in the Past. Either Way, This [The Stock-Return Predictor] Is an Excellent Way to Understand What the Market Has Done In the Past."


    Poster at Bogleheads Forum
    [Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting]

  • "My Role Is To Give People Who Don't Like What the Historical Stock-Return Data Says About the Effect of Valuations on Long-Term Returns Somebody To Yell At On Internet Discussion Boards."



    Rob Bennett at Bogleheads Forum
    (Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting)

  • "It Really Is a Shame and Indefensible That So Many Feel the Need to Jump Into It With No Interest of Posting on the Topic But Just to Disrupt. Are You That Insecure? Some on the Forum Have an Interest in This Topic. If You Don't, Stay Out!"



    Poster at Bogleheads Forum
    [Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting]

  • "Irrational Behavior Does Follow Patterns. But How Many Experts in Behavioral Finance Believe That Such Knowledge Can Be Used to Predict Markets? Basically, None. Your Model Cannot Attain the Level of Predictive Value You Claim."



    Poster at Bogleheads Forum
    [Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting]

  • "The Safe Withdrawal Rate Studies Are Based on History. This [The Retirement Risk Evaluator] Shows, Based on the Same History, What the Probabilities Are for the Future at Various Starting Points. If the First Has Value, Then Surely This Does Too."



    Poster at Bogleheads Forum

  • "There Are Hundreds of People Who Contributed to This. This Calculator [The Stock-Return Predictor] Demonstrates in a Compelling Way the Power of This New Internet Discussion-Board Communications Medium."




    Rob Bennett at the Bogleheads Forum
    (Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting)

  • "A P/E10 of'26' Is Bad. Now Look at the 30-Year Return Predicted by the Calculator -- 5.4 Percent Real. That's Not Bad. There Are All Sorts of Strategic Implications That Follow From Understanding That Stocks Provide Different Sorts of Returns Over Different Sorts of Time-Periods."




    Rob Bennett

  • "I Would Never Invest in Anything Without Having Any Idea What the Expected Return Is. For Instance, I Would Not Walk Into a Bank And Say "I'll Take One Certificate of Deposit, Please" WIthout Asking What Rate They Are Offering."



    Poster at Bogleheads Forum
    [Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting]

  • "I've Seen Things Said on Investing Boards That I Have Never Heard Said in Discussions of Any Non-Investing Topic. The Question of Whether Valuations Affect Long-Term Returns Is a Topic That Causes People More Emotional Angst Than Does Abortion or Impeachment Proceedings or the War in Iraq."



    Rob Bennett at the Bogleheads Forum

  • "It's Not Possible For Those Who Have Come to Believe That Stocks Are Always Best to Accept that Valuations Matter. The Two Beliefs Are Mutually Exclusive. If Valuations Matter, There Is Obviously Some Valuation Level At Which Stocks Are Not Best. The Two Paradigms Cannot Be Reconciled."


    Rob Bennett

  • "The Great Safe Withdrawal Rate Is Over. Rob Bennett Has Won.The Technical Evidence Supporting This Assertion Is Rock Solid."




    John Walter Russell,
    Owner of the Early Retirement Planning Insights Site
    [This Statement Was Put Forward on August 3, 2003.]

  • "I Am Afraid that the Emperor SWR [for "Safe Withdrawal Rate"] Has No Clothes."





    A Poster at the Early Retirement Forum
    [This Statement Was Put Forward on October 8, 2003.]

  • "I Cite You and John Walter Russell in My Paper as the Earliest and Strongest Advocates of This Approach [New School Safe Withdrawal Rate Research]."




    Wade Pfau, Professor of Retirement Income
    at The American College

  • "Dear Rob -- I Just Became Aware of Your Past Research in September. Since Then, I've Read Archives From Many Discussion Boards and Websites, and I Always Find Your Writing to Be Very Interesting and Intriguing."



    Wade Pfau, Professor of Retirement Income
    at The American College

  • "I Think Rob Bennett Did Provide An Important Contribution in Terms of Describing a Way for P/E10 to Guide Asset Allocation for Long-Term Conservative Investors. I Also Think He Was Right on the Issue of Safe Withdrawal Rates."


    Wade Pfau, Professor of Retirement Income
    at The American College

  • "What Studies Show This [That Long-Term Timing Doesn't Work]? In Particular, Are There Some Academic Studies That I Haven't Found Yet? That's All I Want to Know."




    Academic Researcher Wade Pfau at the Bogleheads Forum After His Own Search of the Literature Turned Up Not a Single Such Study

  • "Because the Precise Timing of This Mean Reversion Is Not Known in Advance, Expecting the Result to Happen in the Short-Term Will Not Be Possible. But Long-Term Investors Who Can Be Patient Can Wait for This Mean Reversion and Will Eventually Come Out Ahead."




    Academic Researcher Wade Pfau

  • "Your Work Is at Odds with the Ethos of the Board -- Here the Theme is John Bogle's Philosophy, Which Eschews Market Timing. This Board Came Into Existence to ESCAPE One Individual, the Very Individual With Whom You Have Openly Aligned Yourself."




    A Lindaurhead (to Researcher Wade Pfau)

  • "The Problem With Long-Term Market Timing Is That It Takes Too Long to Find Out If You Are Right or Wrong."






    A Poster at the Bogleheads Forum

  • "Why Is It Such an Odious Violation of the Tenets of Bogleheadism to Explore Whether Someone Who Has Enough Patience Might Be Able to Benefit from the Transitory Nature of Speculative Returns (the Idea That the P/E Ratio Eventually Ends Up Where It Started)?"




    A Poster at the Bogleheads Forum

  • "Let Me Explain Why I Posted About This Here. Valuation-Informed Indexing Has Had Critics for Years. But Until Norbert Did It In 2008, Nobody Seemed to Have Provided a Serious Investigation of It. I Couldn't Understand Why. That Bothered Me."



    Researcher Wade Pfau at the Bogleheads Forum
    (Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting)

  • "If You Really Don't Like Market Timing in Any and All Forms, You May Not See Any Point in an Empirical Investigation. You View Me as One of a Long Line of Hucksters Trying to Sell You Some Snake Oil. I Don't Want to Be Such a Person."



    Researcher Wade Pfau at the Bogleheads Forum
    (Prior to the Ban on Honest Posting)

  • "Having a Completely Ineleastic Demand for Equities Is a Bit Bonkers. No One Acts That Way with Life's Other Important Commodities. Campbell Advocates a Linear Valuations-Based Strategy so That You Wouldn't Be Making Big Changes. This Would Be Like Rebalancing But More Flexible."



    A Poster at the Bogleheads Forum

  • "The Whole Idea of Valuation-Informed Indexing Belongs to You. Do You Mind if I call the Paper 'Valuation-Informed Indexing'? I Would Give You Credit. I Have Been Toying With the Idea of Sending the Paper to the Journal of Finance, Which Is the Most Prestigious Journal in Academic Finance."


    Academic Researcher Wade Pfau, in an E-Mail to Rob

  • "I Definitely Need to Cite You as the Founder of Valuation-Informed Indexing, As I Have Not Found Anyone Else Who Can Lay Claim to That. Shiller Pointed Out the Predictive Power of P/E10 But Never Discussed How to Incorporate It Into Asset Allocation, As Far As I Know."




    Academic Researcher Wade Pfau

  • "I Tested a Wide Variety of Assumptions About Asset Allocation, Valuation-Based Decision Rules, Whether the Period Is 10, 20, 30 or 40 Years, and Lump-Sum vs. Dollar-Cost Averaging To Show That the Results Are Quite Robust to Changes In Any of These Assumptions."




    Academic Researcher Wade Pfau

  • "Yes, Virginia, Valuation-Informed Indexing Works!"




    Academic Researcher Wade Pfau
    (Wade Holds a Ph.D. in Economics from Princeton.)
    (The Buy-and-Hold Mafia Threatened to Get Wade Fired From His Job When He Reported His Findings.)

  • "I Wrote Up the Programs to Test Your Valuation-Informed Indexing Strategies Against Buy-and-Hold and I Am Quite Excited. You Say in the RobCast That VII Should Beat Buy-and-Hold About 90 Percent of the Time. I Am Getting Results That Support This."




    Academic Researcher Wade Pfau

  • "Never Underestimate the Power of a Dominant Academic Idea to Choke Off Competing Ideas, and Never Underestimate the Unwillingness of Academics to Change Their Views in the Face of Evidence. They Have Decades of Their Research and Academic Standing to Defend."




    Jeremy Grantham

  • "There's So Much That's False and Nutty
    in Modern Investing Practice."






    Warren Buffett

  • "Following Conventional Wisdom Has Led a Generation of Investors Down the Road to Ruin."






    Steve Hanke

  • "It Is Sad That the Idea That Price Doesn't Matter...Should Ever Have Been Seriously Considered".






    Andrew Smithers, Co-Author of Valuing Wall Street

  • "The Conventional Wisdom of Modern Investing Is Largely Myth and Urban Legend."





    Rob Arnott, Former Editor of
    Fianncial Analysts Journal

  • "Economics Is a Dog's Breakfast of Theoretical Ideas and Alleged Causal Relationships That Are At All Times Unproven and In Dispute."





    Terence Corcoran, Editor of National Post

  • "Since They Did Not Diagnose the Disease, There Is Little Popular Confidence That They Know the Cure. What If Economics Is, Actually, At the Same Level as Medicine Was When Doctors Still Believed in the Application of Leeches?"




    Gideon Rachman, Financial Times

  • "One of the Most Remarkable Errors
    in the History of Economics."



    Yale Economics Professor Robert Shiller
    (Referring to the Logical Leap from the Finding That Short-Term Price Changes Are Unpredictable to the Conclusion That the Market Sets Prices Properly)

  • "Everything Has Fallen Apart."






    Peter Bernstein, Author of Against the Gods
    (Referring to Old Views About How Markets Work)

  • "We Wonder Why Funds and Banks, Full of the Best and Brightest, Have Made Such a Mess of Things. Part of the Reason Is That We Have Taught Economic Nonsense to Two Generations of Students."




    John Mauldin, Thoughts From the Frontline

  • "Perhaps Most Scandalously, the Theory [Behind Buy-and-Hold] Remained Received Wisdom Long After Empirical and Theoretical Arguments Had Demolished It Within the Academic Community."




    John Authers, Financial Times

  • "I Love the Humans Dearly (the Title of the Book I Am Writing Is Investing for Humans: How to Get What Works on Paper to Work in Real Life) But They Can Be a Trial at Times. Hey! Helping the Humans Learn What It Takes to Invest Effectively Is Not All That Different From Being Married!



    Rob Bennett

  • "We Are Going to See Hearts Melt Following the Next Crash. I Will Be Working Side-By-Side With All of My Many Buy-and-Hold Friends to Rebuild Our Broken Economy."





    Rob Bennett

  • "Wow, I Did Not Realize You Had Achieved This Much Success and Had Many Devoted Believers/Followers. That’s Great, Then Ignore the Opposition. It Is Great to Have Opposition: That Means You Are Doing Something Right."




    Robert Savickas, Associate Finance Professor
    at George Washington University

  • "I Do NOT Believe I Know It All. I Believe That Shiller Discovered Something Very Important and It Appalls Me That More People Are Not Exploring the Implications of His Findings. My Aim Is To Launch a National Debate."




    Rob Bennett

  • "I Can See How Many Readers Would Be Put Off by the Somewhat Sensational/Scandalist Tone and Would Not Persevere to Read, Thinking You Are Losing Your Mind."




    Robert Savickas, Associate Finance Professor
    at George Washington University

  • "I LOVE Everything About Buy-and-Hold Other Than the Failure to Encourage Investors to Take Price Into Consideration When Setting Their Stock Allocations. That's a Mistake That Was Made Because Shiller’s Research Was Not Available at the Time The Strategy Was Being Developed."



    Rob Bennett

  • "Valuation-Informed Indexing Sounds Like a Real Thing. If It Is and I Can Thoroughly Understand It, Then It Will End Up In My Classrooms and in My Students' Minds (Of Course, With References to You and Wade)."




    Robert Savickas, Associate Finance Professor
    at George Washington University

  • "I Can Confirm Wade Pfau's Experience. Whenever I Send My Papers to the Financial Analysts Journal or Similar Traditional Journals, I Get Rejected."





    Joachim Klement, CIO at Wellershoff & Partners

  • "As a Fan of Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, I Know That Progress Can Be Frustratingly Slow and What Is Typically Needed Is Either a Crisis or the Ascent of a New Generation of Scientists Who Did Not Build Their Careers on the Old Models and Theories."




    Joachim Klement, CIO at Wellershoff & Partners

  • "We Trace the Deeper Roots [of the Financial Crisis] to the Economics' Profession's Insistence on Constructing Models That, By Design, Disregard the Key Elements Driving Outcomes in Real World Markets."




    Knowledge@Wharton

  • "Rob Gets Himself So Worked Up Over What Someone Else Is Doing With Their Own Money and Not Bothering Rob in the Least. As Long As They Aren't Knocking on Your Basement Door, What Do You Care? They Are Happy and Content. Leave Well Enough Alone and Focus on Your Own Account."


    Dab, One of the Greaney Goons

  • "I've Been on Forum Since the BBS Days and I Think Rob is Special. He Could Be an Internet Meme If He Put Some Effort Into It. Someday, He Will Realize That the Only Thing He's Good At Is Being an Epic Loser. He Just Needs to Embrace That Idea and Run With It. Watch Out, LOLCats, Here Comes Pathetic Guy!"


    Wabmaster, One of the Greaney Goons

  • "Your Lies Are Not Even in the Realm of the Possible, Much Less Actually Credible, Much Less Actually True."






    Drip Guy, One of the Greaney Goons

  • "I'm Your Friend. I Am Not a Boil on Your Ass."






    Rob Bennett, In a Response Comment
    to One of the Greaney Goons

  • "You Guys [the Greaney Goons] Are the Same Jokers Who Have Done This Before, Sparring with Rob Over Nonsensical Issues On This Site and Others, Leveling Personal Attacks, and You Don't Even Use Real Names! Rob Is Entitled to His Opinion, But the Fact That You Challenge Every Jot and Tittle of What He Says Makes It Clear You Have An Unholy Agenda. Please Take It Elsehwere."

    Kevin Mercadante,
    Owner of the Out of Your Rut Site

  • "Rob, Take This As Friendly Advice. You're a Smart and Articulate Guy and You Could Be Making Valuable Contributions to This Discussion. I've Dealt with the Mentally Ill Before and I've Found That They Sometimes Can Be Reasonable If Gently Redirected."



    Goon Poster

  • "Always Remember Others May Hate You, But Those Who Hate You Don't Win Unless You Hate Them, and Then You Destroy Yourself."





    Richard Nixon

  • "I’m a Numbers Guy. And I Believe I Understand Rob’s Thesis, that Future Returns, Over the Next Decade, Have a Tight Inverse Correlation to the PE10 for the Starting Point. Remember, Correlation Doesn’t Need to be 100%, Only That There’s a Bell Curve of Potential Outcomes that Shift Meaningfully Based on the Input."


    Owner of Joe Taxpayer Blog

  • "What a Difference a Threat to Get the Father of Two Small Children Fired From His Job Has on an Investing Discussion, Eh? Long Live Buy-and-Hold! It’s Science! With a Marketing Twist!"




    Rob, Referring to the Wade Pfau Matter

  • "I Respect Rob and His Analysis. He's Bright, Energetic and Passionate. [The Goon Stuff] Is Really Nonsense. I Enjoy a Thought-Provoking Conversation With People I Respect."





    Owner of Joe Taxpayer Blog

  • "The Fact that Shiller is a Proponent of the Approach Takes it from a Fringe View to Mainstream, in my Opinion."






    Owner of Joe Taxpayer Blog

  • "I Have had Academic Researchers Tell Me That They Dream of the Day When They Will be Able to do Honest Research Once Again. I Have had Investment Advisors Tell me That They Dream of the Day When They Will be Able to Give Honest Investing Advice Again."



    Rob Bennett

  • "Let’s Call a Spade a Spade, Shall We? Wade Pfau Stole Your Research and Put His Name on it, Throwing You Just a Tiny Crumb of Acknowledgement to Ward Off a Lawsuit. He’s Profiting Handsomely By His Theft, Leading a Charmed Life, Widely Published, Widely Respected. While Rob Bennett Continues to Toil in Total Obscurity. It’s So Incredibly Unfair, I Think If It Happened to Me, It Could Actually Drive Me Insane."

    One of the Greaney Goons

  • About Us
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    • 20 Dangerous Money Myths — They Think We’re Stupid!
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  • Valuation-Informed Indexing
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  • The Buy-and-Hold Crisis
    • Academic Researcher Silenced by Threats to Get Him Fired From His Job After Showing Dangers of Buy-and-Hold Investing Strategies
    • Academic Researcher Silenced By Threats to Get Him Fired From His Job After Showing Dangers of Buy-and-Hold Investing Strategies — Teaser Version
    • Corruption in the Investing Advice Field — The Wade Pfau Story
    • The Bennett/Pfau Research Showing Middle-Class Investors How to Reduce the Risk of Stock Investing by 70 Percent
    • Buy-and-Hold Caused the Economic Crisis
    • The True Cause of the Current Financial Crisis — Questions and Answers
    • Investing Discussion Boards Ban Honest Posting on Valuations
    • Wall Street Journal Calls Buy-and-Hold a “Myth,” Endorses Valuation-Informed Indexing

Invest It Wisely Blog Links to My Article on the Intimidation Tactics Employed by the Buy-and-Holders to Silence Academic Researcher Wade Pfau

October 30, 2012 by Rob

I was thrilled to see Kevin at Invest It Wisely link in this post to my article on the intimidation tactics employed by Buy-and-Holders to silence Academic Researcher Wade Pfau.

It is my belief that this is the most important article published in the fields of economics and politics in my lifetime. I believe that the day that the New York Times writes up the story told in this article is the day that we will begin to put today’s economic crisis behind us and begin the move to the greatest period of economic growth experienced in U.S. history. When that day comes, Kevin will be able to say he had it first. He has earned our gratitude and affection and respect with his show of courage re this matter.

The Wade Pfau article is here.

Juicy Excerpt: There is now 30 years of academic research showing that the claim that it is not possible to time the market is false. There really is a wealth of research showing that short-term timing (changing your stock allocation because of a guess at to how stocks will perform over the next year or two) does not work. There is zero research showing that long-term timing (changing your stock allocation in response to big valuation shifts with an understanding that you may not see a benefit for doing so for as long as 10 years) doesn’t work. To the contrary, there is now a mountain of research showing that long-term market timing ALWAYS works. There has never been one time in 140 years (that’s as far back as we have records) when long-term timing did not produce far higher returns at greatly reduced risk.

This article exposes the cover-up. It shows how the academic researchers in this field are pressured to perform only research that helps the industry big shots and to refrain from doing research that would help millions to invest more effectively when publishing such research would undermine the industry’s most cherished marketing slogans (the phrase “timing never works” has been repeated so many times that millions of investors assume that there MUST be research supporting the claim).

The public policy implications are huge. In ordinary circumstances, stock-market prices are self-regulating. When prices get high, the long-term value proposition of owning stocks drops. That should cause investors to sell and the sales should bring prices back to fair-value levels. The relentless promotion of Buy-and-Hold strategies made the market dysfunctional. Stock were overpriced by $12 trillion in 2000. Prices always return to fair-value levels over the course of about 10 years. So we knew in 2000 that consumers were going to lose about $12 trillion in buying power by the end of the first decade of the 21st Century. There’s your economic crisis!

Filed Under: Reactions to Pfau Silencing Tagged With: economic crisis, Invest It Wisely, Rob Bennett, SWRs, Wade Pfau

“It Does Hurt Me When I Get No Reaction (From Most) or a Hostile Reaction (From the Goons). And the Hurting Slows Down My Efforts to Get the Word Out.”

October 23, 2012 by Rob

Set forth below are the text of some words that I recently posted to the Goon Central board re me efforts to send out 1,000 e-mails letting people know about the Wade Pfau Story:

this very unhealthy turn, of calculated and purposeful escalation of annoyance-on-purpose Providing notice of a coming hurricane drags people down, Drip Guy.

Are the people who tell people in an area about to be hit meanies because they do so?

Most people don’t want to hear this message. I get that loud and clear.

I don’t think I am a meanie for doing what I can to get the word out.

Now —

It does hurt me when I get no reaction (from most) or a hostile reaction (from the Goons). And the hurting slows down my efforts to get the word out as extensively as I should be getting it out. That tells me that, even though I SAY that I don’t view myself as a meanie, there must be some part of me that is buying into the crazy idea that I am. I am one of the humans. I am flawed.

I fight those feelings. That’s the point of this thread.

I have had to fight this battle over and over again over the past 10 years and all signs are that I will be fighting it over and over again in days to come. I’ll win some. I’ll lose some. But if we all go down (I don’t think we will, but I no longer put the odds at zero or at anything close to it), I’ll be able to say that I went down swinging. I HATE it when a guy who can hit gets called out looking.

Today is a small move forward. Tomorrow I might be back where I was yesterday. The next day I might short forward more than I did today. The courage comes and goes. I’m just a reporter reporting to you the story.

My actions are certainly purposeful and calculated and they certainly do annoy. Morningstar was right when they called my words “inflammatory.” I don’t go along with the “unhelpful” part, though. I do this in an effort to be helpful. If you find someone else to take on the job, I’ll step aside. No matter how scared I am, I know someone has to do this job. If no one else steps forward, I will continue to wake up each day with a prayer that I find the courage needed to do it to the best of my ability.

My best wishes to you and yours, in any event.

Rob

Filed Under: Intimidation of VII Advocates Tagged With: investment research, investor emotions, SWRs, Wade Pfau

“Why the Heck Would I Want to Destroy the Credibility of the Academic Researcher Who Has Done More Than Any Other to Advance the Investing Strategy That I Believe Is Going to Pull Us Out of This Economic Crisis?”

October 10, 2012 by Rob

Set forth below is my response to a comment that was put to the blog last week charging me with having advanced a “screed” re Academic Researcher Wade Pfau:

You Goons say this sort of thing all the time, Trebor.

I am the biggest Wade Pfau booster alive on Planet Earth. Wade did the research showing that Valuation-Informed Indexing dramatically increases returns while also dramatically reducing risk. I am the person who developed the VII strategy. Why the heck would I want to destroy the credibility of the academic researcher who has done more than any other to advance the investing strategy that I believe is going to pull us out of the economic crisis? That’s insane.

What you are getting at, of course, is that I have argued that Wade made a terrible mistake to sacrifice his personal integrity and flip to the Goon side. He did. That’s going to follow him around for the rest of his lifetime. He will likely have lawsuits filed against him in days to come. He could land in prison. Is the popularity he has achieved by agreeing to side with the Goons and keep the Buy-and-Hold Tragedy going a few more months or a few more years worth it? I certainly do not think so.

Wade has two small children to worry about. I think in fairness that that should be mentioned. That’s a bit of an explanation. But it is not an excuse. If Wade does not possess the courage to stand up to the Goons, he needs to find another line of work. An academic researcher needs to report his findings honestly and accurately. People look to the academic research to learn the realities. You cannot let internet Goons intimidate you into saying things you do not believe.

Here is my grand summing-up article reporting on the many blog posts I wrote on my 16 months of e-mail correspondence with Wade:

http://arichlife.passionsaving.com/the-buy-and-hold-crisis/academic-researcher-silenced-by-threats-to-get-him-fired-from-his-job-after-showing-dangers-of-buy-and-hold-investing-strategies/

I love Wade, Trebor. I loved the work we did together. I miss working with him. I respect him and admire him. It breaks my heart to think about what he has done both to himself and to the many people who look to him to give helpful guidance on stock investing. I implored him not to go down the path he has gone down. Is there anything you can think of that I could have said that I did not say? If you suggest anything that makes sense, I will say it.

I will always be Wade’s friend. Any time he wants to contact me, he will get a warm welcome. You call that a “screed”.” I call it friendship. As far as I am concerned, Wade and I remain friends to this day. Wade doesn’t see it that way because he is ashamed of his betrayal. That’s something he needs to work out on his own. If he reaches a point where he wants to reestablish contact, I can promise you with 100 percent certainty that I will be there for him. Nothing would make me happier.

Please take good care. If you happen to be in contact with our friend Wade, I hope you will send him my warm regards.

Rob

Filed Under: Silencing of Wade Pfau Tagged With: academic research, Rob Bennett, SWRs, Wade Pfau

Rob Bennett’s Responses to Academic Researcher Wade Pfau: #10 — Brief Responses to Miscellaneous Points

July 28, 2012 by Rob

Set forth below are my responses to a number of points made by Wade that can be addressed with a limited number of words.

It is hard to have public communications with you after all the attacks you made toward me at your blog following the Bill Bengen incident.

I said that Wade was not posting with complete honesty. His position was that Bengen got the numbers wrong in his retirement study (Bengen himself acknowledges this) but that there was not need for Bengen to correct the study.

I do believe I am still on the Good Side.

I believe that Wade believes this. I believe that Wade has done a huge amount of very important and grounds-breaking work. I have fond feelings re the 16 months we were working together. I learned a lot from him. I know he will be successful in days to come. I certainly wish him all good things.

Planners have been receptive to the idea that 4% is not safe in recent years. I’m getting the message out. 

Both of these statements are true.

There are many people who think that the whole idea of 4% being a safe withdrawal rate is just ridiculous.

Why didn’t any of these people speak up during the nine years when I was on my own trying to get the discredited retirement studies corrected? There are millions of people who will likely be suffering failed retirements in days to come because of our failure as a society to get those studies corrected promptly. A failed retirement is a serious life setback.

Drawdowns from a volatile portfolio are inherently risky. 

Wade’s own research shows that this is not necessarily so. Wade’s study on Valuation-Informed Indexing shows that the maximum drawdown for a Buy-and-Hold portfolio is 61 percent. But the maximum drawdown for a Valuation-Informed Indexing portfolio is only 20 percent. There’s not that much risk associated with stock investing for those who follow a strategy that even in a worst-case scenario (we are talking about the worst case seen in 140 years) causes a portfolio drawdown of only 20 percent.

Volatility on the upside presents zero problem. Valuation-Informed Indexers subject themselves to only a very limited amount of volatility on the downside. Stocks are an insanely risky asset class for those who ignore valuations. But there is no law of the universe that requires retirees to do this. All responsible investment advisors should be imploring their readers not to do this.

Your insight about valuations is important and useful and I still discuss it, but it is ultimately just one piece of a much broader story.

I certainly agree that valuations is not the only thing investment analysts need to look at. But Wade’s own research shows that it is by far the most important factor. I think it would be fair to say that valuations is 80 percent of the stock investing story. An investor who gets valuations right and gets everything else wrong will probably end up okay. An investor who gets valuations wrong and gets everything else right will almost certainly not do well in the long term.

Current conditions matter more than historical averages

Bogle’s most important insight was that investors need to focus on the long term. I view Bogle as the second most important investing analyst of all time largely because of the far-reaching implications of this all-important insight. Wade is rejecting that insight with these words. He is saying to focus on “current conditions.” It is the focus on current conditions that makes investing so emotional an endeavor. Conditions are never as bad as they look when they look bad and conditions are never as good as they look when they look bad. The key to success is getting over the natural inclination to focus on current conditions by using the historical record to come to an informed and emotionally balanced understanding of how things always play out over the long run. It is not that you want to look at “historical averages.” It is that you want to learn from history how stock investing works and then use that knowledge to help you keep your head when others are freaking out over current conditions.

It is why financial economists find it so perplexing to discuss the concept of a safe withdrawal rate. There isn’t one. The U.S., even since 1871, represents a rather unique period in world history.

Everybody understands this. Every SWR study, both Old School and New School, comes with a caveat that the number being reported is safe only if stocks perform in the future somewhat as they always have in the past. There is of course no guaranty that this will be the case. But the historical record is all we have to go by in trying to employ human rationality to understand stock investing. Rule out consideration of the historical record and you leave academic researchers like Wade with nothing to do. Wade himself made this point in his correspondence with me when Buy-and-Holders faulted his research on grounds that it studied “only” 140 years of data (that’s the entire record available to us today).

The worst-case that showed up during this time can hardly be expected to be representative of the future.

Properly calculated SWRs have always provided powerful insights in the past. The P/E10 value that applies today identifies a range of possible returns that will apply in 10 years. Where the actual return will fall on that range is determined by investor emotion and thus is unknown in the current day. So properly calculated SWRs do not tell you all you would like to know. But identifying the range of possibilities is a huge help. For a retiree to fail to take the properly calculated SWR ito consideration when putting together his retirement plan is a big mistake, in my view.

I do think valuations may help gain insights about what the withdrawal rate will be, but this certainly does not make the estimates safer.

This statement self-contradicts. He is saying that added knowledge is a plus but that added knowledge is not a plus.

The relationship between valuations and withdrawal rates can change as well. We are still prone to black swans.

Wade asserts this without offering support for the statement. If we were to see a 65 percent drop in stock prices next year, that would not put us in black swan territory. That’s what you would expect to see, given the valuation levels we saw in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The crash of the early 1930s was not a black swan event to those who understand the effect of valuations. Given the valuation level we saw in 1929, the path that returns took in the following years was what you would expect; the losses were not much less than the losses that were most likely or much greater than what was most likely.

I am not aware of any showing that the relationship between valuations and safe withdrawals has ever changed. The only thing that changes is the spot where we happen to land on the range of possibilities. That spot is unknown in advance because it is determined by investor emotion. We can only identify the range of possibilities. But that’s a very big help to investors who make use of knowing it.

Trying to estimate safe withdrawal rates after incorporating valuations does not “correct” anything. End of story.

If you say so, Wade.

It is dishonest for you to pull out all these 1.5 year old quotes from me and ignore what I’ve learned and said since then.

Wade possessed a Ph.D. in Economics from Princeton at the time he made those statements.

I did not write to the Trinity authors to ask for a correction, I wrote to apologize to them for being too publicly critical of their study

The Goons certainly didn’t read Wade’s comments that way. Drip Guy went off his rocker when he saw Wade say that he had asked the Trinity authors for a correction. His comment is at the thread on my blog where Wade told us that he had contacted the Trinity authors. Wade reported to me a few days later that he had not yet received a response. He was telling me this because he knew how long I had worked to get a correction in the discredited retirement studies. Why would I want to know whether or not the Trinity authors had responded to an “apology”? I think it is possible that there was some sort of apology contained in Wade’s e-mail. I am certain that he took a soft approach in asking for a correction. But the entire context of his comment “I’ve taken care of it” was that he had requested a correction. This comment came after long discussions of whether a correction was needed or not and immediately following a post of mine in which I argued that we will be seeing a political explosion when middle-class investors learn of the 10-year cover-up of the errors in the studies.

I’ve said the Trinity study is not helpful for new retirees. You’ve said that this doesn’t go far enough because the study needs to be corrected. But what you really mean is: you want to become rich and famous and you think this will happen if there is a formal process to republish old studies acknowledging you for “discovering” an “error” in them and providing your proposed “correction.” 

I am the person who discovered the errors in the studies. I did this 10 years before a consensus was achieved in this field that the studies are in error. Had the errors been corrected at the time I first requested corrections, millions of people would have been spared one of the worst life setbacks imaginable and the people who have participated in the 10-year cover-up would have been spared billions of dollars in legal liabilities. Is there something bad about giving me the credit I merit for the role I played here? We all want to spare people from suffering failed retirements, no? Sure, I want to be paid for the good work I have done. The people who produced the discredited studies won a great deal of fame and wealth for causing the millions of failed retirements. The people who participated in the 10-year cover-up have been rewarded handsomely. I think it would be fair to say that things are more than a little mixed-up in InvestoWorld when the only one in this field who is singled out as not deserving of fame and wealth is the one who spoke up about the need for the studies to be corrected.

Wade is here acting like he wants to be part of a Boy’s Club in which all members of the club protect the other members of the club when doing so works to the detriment of the investors that the club members are supposed to serve. I care about my readers. I want them to have access to good information. Those leading the cover-up have denied me the ability to make a living for 10 years as part of their effort to keep information about the errors in the retirements studies from the middle-class investors who need to know about them. Yes, I would like to be paid for the good work I have done and to receive all the credit that is due me for discovering these errors ten years before any of the big names in the field. I did not feel that I was hurting the feelings of the people who made the errors. I presumed that they would want to know about them as soon as possible because that’s what I would want if the tables were turned. Should I apologize for discovering the errors in the retirement studies? Would that make the people who covered up the errors for ten years feel better about the great amount of human misery they have brought on with their supreme acts of irresponsibility?

How does a person get to a place where he gives voice to these sorts of words? What is it about the Buy-and-Hold model that drives so many otherwise good and smart people off the deep end?

intercst knows how to push your buttons. 

Threats to kill my wife and children push my buttons. I’m funny that way.

My research has not been impacted by any alleged threats, and it is really insulting and disgusting all of the times you’ve suggested otherwise. 

Wade’s decision not to do more research on the superiority of Valuation-Informed Indexing was affected by the “hostile atmosphere” (Wade’s term) he encountered when in the presence of Buy-and-Hold advocates. He said that he was not going to do that research because it was “controversial.” It was the hate directed at him by the Buy-and-Holders, combined with the failure of big-name Buy-and-Hold advocates like Bogle to offer their support, that persuaded Wade that this issue was too hot for him to handle. Wade’s change in position re whether the discredited retirement studies should be corrected was obviously affected by the pressures applied to him. It is not possible that anyone not feeling intense pressures to believe otherwise would not believe that discredited retirement studies should be promptly corrected. The praise that Wade directed to John Greaney, the fellow who threatened to kill my wife and kids if I continued to post honestly on SWRs, was obviously a result of pressures applied to him. My guess is that those words were written by Greaney and that Wade merely put his name to them in exchange for a promise on the part of the Goons not to continue to try to destroy his career.

I certainly do not say that Wade has doctored his research, either before or after he was threatened. I believe that there is zero chance that anything along these lines ever happened.

You owe Mr. Bengen an apology, because it does look like the 2000 retirees are going to be okay after all with 4%.

This is not so. The retirements that began in 2000 and were based on the Old School SWR studies are in serious trouble. Even if this were so, I would not owe Bill Bengen an apology. His study got the numbers wrong. If the retirements survive, that doesn’t change that. If someone is irresponsible enough to tell someone that it is safe to drive drunk and the person follows this advice and lives, the person who gave the bad advice still gave bad advice. The historical data shows that a retirement beginning in 2000 and using a 4 percent withdrawal has only a 30 percent chance of surviving 30 years. That’s not “safe” according to any reasonable understanding of the word.

Again, it’s all about covering up for one’s friends in the Boys Club. Does the effect on the retirees even get considered by the “experts” in this field? These sorts of comments evidence a very serious public policy problem. If anyone had told me on the morning of May 13, 2002, that this callous indifference to human suffering is this common in this field, I would have rejected the possibility out of hand. What sort of madness is it that causes people to create a “controversy” over whether errors in retirement studies should be corrected or not? Is that a hard one? We really need as a society to get to the bottom of this and fix the problem. There are millions of investors who place their trust in “experts” in this field. I put the word “expert” in quote marks because I don’t see how the word applies to people who do not understand the need to get numbers in retirement studies accurate. This is the ABCs.

I’m not sure if you can even distinguish a mean from a median.

I can distinguish a mean from a median. Just barely. The numbers stuff is not my strong point. I think it would be fair to say that I do a much better job than most of the big shots in this field of distinguishing honesty from dishonesty, responsible behavior from irresponsible behavior, courage from cowardice. That’s the job that has been assigned to me. I did not ask for that job. It was assigned to me when the reaction to my May 13, 2002, post was not “Wow, thank you Rob for letting us know about those errors so that we can quickly correct them before our retirement studies do even more harm to even more people!” but instead “We are going to kill your wife and children, Rob, if you continue to talk about this!”

Wade obviously did not create this problem. The full reality is that he has done much more than most to fix it. Still, Wade will presumably be working in this field for many years to come. He should be as concerned as I am that it soon become possible once again for people of intelligence and integrity to feel comfortable working in this field. We should ALL want that. We should ALL be on the same side re issues of personal integrity. Means and medians are not the only things that matter in this world of ours.

I’m not sure how a properly calculated lower confidence bound for a 2000 retiree could have been higher than zero.

This is an uninformed and confused statement. The SWR for an asset class that provides a long-term average return of zero is 3.33 percent (SWR studies presume that the portfolio will be reduced to zero over the course of 30 years). The 1.6 percent SWR that applied for an 80 percent stock portfolio in 2000 is a shockingly low number. The number is so low because the first 10 years of a retirement has a disproportionate effect on the retirement’s long-term survival prospects. For Wade’s claim that the SWR for an asset class that provides a long-term average return of 6.5 percent real is zero is not a serious one.

In January 2011 I still thought that Valuation-Informed Indexing I was all your creation, and it was only later that I internalized that this is old stuff since the stock formula plans of the 1940s and 1950s. VII is Lucille Tomlinson’s variable-ratio plan from 1953.  

If all that I have argued for 10 years was known to all on the morning of May 13, 2002, what has all the noise been about?

Benjamin Graham argued in his book Security Analysis (written in the 1930s) that investors should be going with a 75-percent stock allocation when prices are low, a 50-percent stock allocation when prices are moderate, and a 25-percent stock allocation when prices are high. That’s Valuation-Informed Indexing! The idea of investing rationally has obviously been around since the first market was opened for business. The problem we have today is that for the past 30 years the “experts” in this field have been telling millions of middle-class people that it is okay for them not to consider price when setting their stock allocations (the claim is that long-term market timing is not required or even that there might be circumstances in which long-term market timing might not work). This demonstrably false and dangerously irresponsible claim has caused millions to suffer huge losses. The collective losses have grown so large that we are now in an economic crisis, a crisis that will likely become the Second Great Depression in the event that stocks continue to perform in the future anything at all as they have always performed in the past.

Investing analysis was not an academic pursuit in Benjamin Graham’s time. At the time Buy-and-Hold was developed, there were many smart and good people who believed that the market is efficient. If that were so, Graham’s insight that it is necessary for investors to change their stock allocations in response to big price swings would not be valid. Graham’s insight is valid. There is now a mountain of research showing this. The problem we have today is that thousands of investment advisors have for three decades now been advancing demonstrably false claims about how investing works and about what the academic research of the past three decades shows us about how stock investing works. The collective legal liability for this mountain of demonstrably false claims is now in the trillions of dollars. The question at the root of our discussions is — How do we as a society make the transition from this dark place we are in today to the very bright place we will be in when we work up the courage to permit honest posting on SWRs and many other critically important questions.

Valuation-Informed Indexing marries the powerful insights of the smartest investors who have ever lived (the Value Investors, who root their ideas in the teaching of Graham and Warren Buffett) with the three breakthrough ideas of the Buy-and-Holders: (1) the idea of using academic research to guide one’s investing decisions and to avoid emotional responses; (2) the idea that average investors, people who do not have the time or inclination to do much research, should invest in indexes rather than in individual stocks; and (3) the idea that investors should focus on long-term results. That’s it. It is a simple concept. But it is a very, very, very powerful concept. Wade’s research and the excitement he felt when he produced the research showing that Valuation-Informed Indexing always provide far higher returns at greatly reduced risk, shows this. Investors who make the switch from Buy-and-Hold to Valuation-Informed Indexing to Buy-and-Hold thereby reduce the risk of stock investing by 80 percent. That’s no small thing.

We certainly should be grateful for the contributions made by Lucille Tomlinson. We should also be grateful for the contributions of John Bogle. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Warren Buffett. We should also be grateful for the contributions of John Walter Russell. We should also be grateful for the contributions of William Bernstein. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Wade Pfau. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Eugene Fama. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Rob Arnott. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Jeremy Siegel. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Andrew Smithers. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Benjamin Graham. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Michael Kitces. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Scott Burns. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Ed Easterling. We should also be grateful for the contributions of Cliff Asness.

Oh.

And we should also be grateful for the contributions of that passionate fellow whose only claim to expertise in this field is that he happened to figure out what buttons he needs to push to get his words to appear on the computer screens of internet searchers everywhere. I cannot remember the fellow’s name. But we probably should say a hearty “Thank You!” to that fellow as well. He put up a post on the morning of May 13, 2002, pointing out the errors in the Old School safe-withdrawal-rate studies 10 years before any of the big shots in this field caught on to the concept. Boring, I know. But still… It never really hurts to say a hearty “Thank You!” to someone trying to help out, does it?

Here’s one thing I know for sure. We will begin making a whole big bunch more progress in a whole big bunch less time when we start devoting a little less mental energy to worries over who is going to get the credit for the transition from Buy-and-Hold to Valuation-Informed Indexing and a little more mental energy to what we need to do to get the word out about what works to the millions of middle-class investors who today are in desperate need of this information. That’s my sincere take re that one, in any event.

Filed Under: Silencing of Wade Pfau Tagged With: retirement planning, SWRs, Wade Pfau

Rob Bennett’s Responses to Academic Researcher Wade Pfau: #6 — The Investing Advice Field Is Today 100 Percent Corrupt

July 24, 2012 by Rob

First, I will set forth seven factual statements that support the remarkable assertion advanced in the headline.

Then, I will set forth seven caveats that provide the context needed to come to a full appreciation of the unfortunate reality.

1) I put a post to a Motley Fool discussion board on May 13, 2002, pointing out the errors in the Old School safe-withdrawal-rate studies. These are studies that people use to plan their retirements. That the studies were in error was confirmed five days later, when John Walter Russell posted a sensitivity analysis on the studies. The studies have not been corrected to this day.

2) For nine years, both experts and ordinary investors denied that the Old School safe-withdrawal rate studies are in error.

3) In the past year, numerous big-name publications have acknowledged that the studies are in error. Yet they STILL have not been corrected.

4) Academic Researcher Wade Pfau wrote to the authors of the Trinity Study asking that they correct the errors in their study. They did not respond to the e-mail.

5) A group of internet Goons led by the author of one of the discredited studies threatened to send defamatory e-mails to Wade’s employer to get him fired from his job.

6) Wade relented. He now says that, while the studies are in error, there is no need for them to be corrected.

7) I have reported these facts on numerous occasions and tried to get others to do so. No one other than me has reported on the intimidation tactics.

Each of those seven factual statements on its own supports a conclusion that the investing advice field today is 100 percent corrupt. The combined effect of all seven is to leave no reasonable person in any doubt (so says I!).

It’s not just that I say that the Old School retirement studies are in error. That is acknowledged! There is today a widespread consensus on this point.

Yet the studies remain uncorrected! How could that not be financial fraud?

But even that reality does not convey the full extent of the corruption. No one has reported on the intimidation tactics that were employed to get Wade to flip to the Goon side.

Are these intimidation tactics not news? Do we not want academic researchers to give voice to their sincere beliefs?

Before I depress you too much, I rush to add the caveats, which also need to be considered by those wishing to understand the full reality.

1) There is no reason to believe that Buy-and-Hold was intended to be a Get Rich Quick scheme. It IS that. But the reason it is that is that the concept was developed at a time when all of the research needed to construct the model properly was not available.

2) Millions of smart and good people possess a sincere belief in Buy-and-Hold.

3) The experts in this field acknowledge that valuations affect long-term returns.

4) A minority of experts have in recent years given voice to doubts about Buy-and-Hold.

5) Making the transition from Buy-and-Hold to Valuation-Informed Indexing will require a rewriting of all the textbooks in the field. Yale Economics Professor Robert Shiller was not kidding when he described his findings as “revolutionary.”

6) “Cognitive dissonance” is a real phenomenon. It is written up in the psychological literature.

7) There is much evidence that experts in this field and publications in this field would do more to tell their clients and readers about the implications of Shiller’s findings if they would not lose business and/or readers as a result. Many influential people are waiting for their clients or readers to show an openness to hearing the message before presenting it to them.

In an objective sense, the investing advice field is 100 percent corrupt.

But one element of the crime of financial fraud is a negative subjective intent. It is clear that that negative subjective intent is not present in most cases. The confusion that millions of people are experiencing over the implications of Shiller’s findings is so great that my personal belief is that the crime of financial fraud should be found to exist only in those cases in which some element of negative subjective intent is demonstrated, such as cases where there are death threats or acts of defamation of improper board bannings or threats to do harm to the employment prospects of honest researchers.

Still, to have the investing advice field found to be 100 percent corrupt even in just an objective sense is unsettling stuff.

The good news is that the future is bright. Shiller’s insights are the most important insights in the history of this field. We fight discussion of them and we fight discussion of them and we fight discussion of them and we fight discussion of them. One fine day we will stop fighting discussion of them and begin enjoying the benefits that come from having the discussions we need to have to come to an acceptance of these powerful and enriching insights.

We humans are corrupt. Bad humans! Very, very, very bad!

But we’re redeemable.

I think!

 

Filed Under: Silencing of Wade Pfau Tagged With: financial fraud, investing advice, investing experts, SWRs, Wade Pfau

Rob Bennett’s Responses to Academic Researcher Wade Pfau: #4 — The Safe Withdrawal Rate Concept Is Here to Stay

July 22, 2012 by Rob

I am the person who discovered the error in the Old School safe-withdrawal-rate studies. The error is that the studies do not contain an adjustment for the valuation level that applies on the day the retirement begins. Yale Economics Professor Robert Shiller published research in 1981 showing that valuations affect long-term returns. The error in the Old School SWR studies is likely to cause millions of failed retirements in days to come, in the event that stocks perform in the future anything at all as they have always performed in the past. I went public with what I knew in a post to a Motley Fool discussion board on the morning of May 13, 2002.

For most of the next ten years, the “experts” in this field either denied that the studies were in error or ignored the problem. Since the 2008 price crash, it has become increasingly clear that we are going to see millions of failed retirements and that lawsuits in the hundreds of billions of dollars (collectively) are going to be brought against those responsible for the ten-year cover-up. So we have seen numerous articles in big-name publications in recent months acknowledging that it is not possible to calculate the SWR accurately without taking valuations into consideration.

But we have not yet seen a single one of the Old School studies corrected. The new company line is that the studies are obviously in error but that there is no need to correct them.

I take strong exception to the continued cover-up for five reasons.

One, there are still people finding these studies as the results of internet searches. The searches those people run may not pull up the articles reporting on the errors in the retirement studies. By failing to correct the studies, we are causing additional failed retirements.

Two, many of the people who placed their trust in the “experts” who encouraged them to make use of the long-discredited retirement studies could still save their retirements if we told them how they must change their stock allocations to do so. Corrections of the studies would need to be accompanied by suggestions re what to do now. Those suggestions might spare hundreds of thousands of middle-class retirees from suffering one of the worst life setbacks imaginable.

Three, corrections would clarify the cause of this national catastrophe. Many of the articles acknowledging the errors have employed mumbo-jumbo language that fails to identify the key problem — that Shiller’s research showed that the Buy-and-Hold Model for understanding how stock investing works is flawed right down to its core and needs to be junked and replaced by the Valuation-Informed Indexing Model (Valuation-Informed Indexing is Buy-and-Hold corrected for the errors discovered by Shiller).

Four, investors’ discovery of the ten-year cover-up of the errors in the retirement studies is likely going to cause a political explosion. The sooner those responsible for the cover-up come clean, the better we will be able as a nation to manage and survive the crisis.

Five, acknowledgment of the error presents the opportunity for an amazing learning experience. I was a Buy-and-Holder on the morning of May 13, 2002, when I put forward the post reporting on the error in the studies. I abandoned my belief in Buy-and-Hold on the evening of August 27, 2002, when John Greaney, the author of one of the discredited studies, threatened to kill my wife and children if I continued to press for corrections in the retirement studies and over 100 Buy-and-Holders cheered him on. My reaction to that experience was that Buy-and-Hold must be a fatally flawed strategy to generate such strongly negative emotional reactions in such a high percentage of the investors who follow it. It was because of my abandonment of Buy-and-Hold that I was able to develop the scores of powerful investing insights I have reported on in the ten years since. All of the experts in this field and all investors can share in these insights once we stop doing battle over the absurd question of whether retirements studies that get the numbers wildly wrong should be corrected or not and instead direct our energies to learning what our experience with this situation teaches us about the dangers that follow from heavy promotion of Get Rich Quick investing strategies.

Academic Researcher Wade Pfau came close to being a hero re this issue. I had been trying for close to ten years to persuade the experts in the investing field to press for corrections. Wade was the first person to take me up on the idea. He sent an e-mail to the three authors of the Trinity study, a much cited Old School SWR study. The Greaney Goons, a group of highly abusive internet posters who have worked for 10 years to keep investors from learning of the errors in the retirement studies, threatened to send defamatory e-mails to Wade’s employer with the aim of getting him fired from his job for the “crime” of acting with honesty re this matter. Wade has had much experience both with the Goons and with experts in the investing field who advocate Buy-and-Hold strategies and who have tolerated and even encouraged the Goons on numerous occasions. Fearing for damage that might be done to his career as a result of his honesty on the SWR matter, Wade adopted the Goon-approved position that the studies are indeed in error but that there is no need for them to be corrected.

Several years ago I developed a calculator (“The Retirement Risk Evaluator”) that uses an analytically valid approach to identifying the safe withdrawal rate. In earlier days, Wade offered numerous positive comments about the methodology used to develop the calculator. But his current public position is that there is no need to know the safe withdrawal rate or perhaps no possible way to know it. Wade and other experts seeking to hide from millions of middle-class investors the irresponsibility of the 10-year effort to cover up the error in the Old School studies are suggesting that the SWR concept be abandoned.

This is a terrible mistake.

Wade has done research on “safe savings rates.” He promotes this concept as an alternative to the safe withdrawal rate concept. It is not that. It is a supplement to the safe withdrawal rate concept. The safe savings rate concept certainly has value. Wade certainly should be encouraged to continue his research along these lines and applauded for the many insights he has developed with his work in this area. But there is no justification for abandoning the safe withdrawal rate concept. The SWR concept does something different from what is done with the safe savings rate concept. Those seeking to plan retirements effectively need to make use of both concepts.

Identifying the safe withdrawal rate answers a unique question — What inflation-adjusted percentage of my retirement-date portfolio amount may I take out to cover living expenses each year with virtual certainty that I will have enough assets for my retirement to last 30 years? Many aspiring retirees need to know the answer to that question. There is no way to answer it other than through use of a valid SWR methodology.

Wade’s safe savings rate tells investors how much they need to save each year to achieve a well-financed retirement plan many years later. People need to know that. But people also need to know the safe withdrawal rate that applies for their retirement plan.

Another idea that has become more popular since the error in the SWR studies was widely acknowledged is the idea of retirees setting up multiple pools of savings, with one pool being used to cover essential spending and being invested in safe asset classes and with another being used to cover luxury spending and being invested in risky asset classes. This is another excellent concept that should be explored in depth. But this concept also is not a replacement of the SWR concept. A retiree who employs the multiple-pools-of-saving concept still needs to know what the remaining value of the pool invested in risky asset classes will be in a worst-case return scenario. Few retirees want to live the rest of their lives with zero ability to spend on luxuries. It is the SWR concept that aims to answer this question.

There was never anything wrong with the SWR concept. The concept was a big advance at the time the Old School studies were developed. The mistake was the failure to include a valuations adjustment in the calculations. Shiller’s “revolutionary” (his word) research shows that it is impossible to analyze any investing question effectively without taking into consideration the effect of valuations. The argument that we no longer need to know the SWR takes us backwards rather than forwards. It’s not SWRs we need to avoid, it’s improperly calculated SWRs we need to avoid.

It was my effort to learn how to calculate the SWR properly that led to the investigations through which I developed the Valuation-Informe Indexing model for understanding how stock investing works. Most investors have little idea how big an influence the valuations level that applies on the day they buy stocks has on their long-term return. Comparing the SWR that applies for a retirement that begins at a time of low valuations (1982) with the SWR that applies at a time of high valuations (2000) illustrates the importance of taking valuations into consideration in every investing decision. The SWR for a high-stock portfolio in 1982 was 9 percent. The SWR for a high-stock portfolio in 2000 was 1.6 percent. This means that an retiree with a $1 million portfolio could with complete safety take out $90,000 every year of his remaining life if he retired in 1982 but only $16,000 if he retired in 2000.

That’s a shocking difference!

But it shouldn’t be!

To those who understand the implications of Shiller’s research, the difference in SWRs makes perfect sense. Stocks were priced at one-half their fair-value price in 1982 and at three times their fair-value price in 2000. The SWR should be six times larger in 1982, if Shiller is right that valuations affect long-term returns. Round down the number 1.6 to 1.5 to make the math easy and then multiply by six and you get 9 percent. The SWR changes in response to valuation shifts in precisely the way we would expect if we were analyzing how stock investing works with logic and not with the out-of-control Get Rich Quick emotions that make Buy-and-Hold strategies so appealing to so many.

Those who retire at a time when stocks are priced as they were in 2000 need to know that they need to accumulate a portfolio of six times the size of the portfolio they would need to accumulate for a retirement beginning in 1982 to have the equivalent in income-producing assets financing their retirements. Properly calculated, the SWR illustrates the essential point in a compelling way. We should not be denying investors the SWR concept to keep the long-discredited Buy-and-Hold concept alive another week, another month, another year. We should be reporting the SWR accurately and honestly and using the differences that apply in times of low valuations and high valuations to teach investors that they should not take the numbers on their portfolio statements even a little bit seriously when those numbers are the product of the mass promotion of Get Rich Quick/Buy-and-Hold investing strategies. It is not the SWR concept that should be abandoned but the profoundly dangerous Buy-and-Hold “idea” that there is no need for investors to practice price discipline when buying stocks.

Perhaps the internationally renowned portfolio strategists Danny and the Juniors put it best when they argued in an influential 1958 paper that:

I don’t care what any experts say —

The Safe Withdrawal Rate is here to stay!

Filed Under: SWRs Tagged With: Rob Bennett, SWRs, Wade Pfau

Academic Researcher Wade Pfau’s Responses to My Reporting on Our 16 Months of E-Mail Correspondence

July 18, 2012 by Rob

The purpose of this blog entry is to set forward in one place links to the responses that Academic Researcher Wade Pfau has made to my reporting on our 16 months of e-mail correspondence.

1) Wade’s first response came when I told him of my plans to report on our e-mail correspondence. He said of this e-mail at a later date: ““About that first email I sent you in our exchange, please under no circumstances try to summarize or excerpt from it. If you must use it, please include the entire message with nothing left out. I think that is only fair, because you will then have free reign for your rebuttal, and I won’t be around for further rebuttals to that.”

Juicy Excerpt: “I don’t have any hard feelings toward you, but it is hard to have public communications with you after all the attacks you made toward me at your blog following the Bill Bengen incident. You strongly misinterpreted what I wrote at your blog and attacked me so thoroughly, and that makes it hard to see any paths forward in communicating with you publicly.”

2) Wade’s second response came in the form of a post to his blog. In this blog, he praised John Greaney, the leader of the Goons, as the hero of our ten years of discussions on safe withdrawal rates.

Juicy Excerpt:  “Rob desperately wants someone besides him to say that the Trinity study needs to be “corrected,” but I’ve explained that this isn’t how research works. Rather, new studies with new methodologies come to replace old studies. This is a case, however, in which old studies were already available to suggest that we shouldn’t project the findings of the Trinity study forward to future retirees.”

3) Wade’s third response came in a comment to one of my blog posts reporting on our e-mail correspondence. I refrained from responding at the time on the thinking that it was more fair to let Wade have the floor to himself for at least that one blog post.

Juicy Excerpt: “You shouldn’t have posted my private emails. That is so unethical. And it really doesn’t help to build you up. Posting my outdated private emails will only give second thoughts to anyone in the future who might have been willing to give you the benefit of the doubt.”

4) Wade’s fourth response came in a comment to another of the blog posts reporting on our e-mail correspondence. In this case, I set forth my responses in comments that followed his comment.

Juicy Excerpt: “If I *did* lack personal integrity, I could have made this all stop just by saying the meaningless sentence you want so desperately to hear: “I think the errors in the traditional safe withdrawal rate studies must be corrected by using Rob’s analytically valid method.” But I don’t believe that.”

5) Arty, a long-time contributor of comments to my blog (and a mighty fine one!), offered a comment that I think can fairly be said to express Wade’s views. I suggest that those looking to understand Wade’s take re all this consider giving Arty’s comment a look. I responded to Arty’s comment at the blog.

Juicy Excerpt: “Speaking only from a human point of view, if Wade requested you not share personal correspondence, I hope you can find a way to honor his request for those things he wishes to remain between the two of you only…. we can discuss his work—as it should be on its own merits— without the private communications.”

I will be advancing my responses to a number of points raised by Wade (and Arty) in blog entries that I will post in coming days.

Addendum:  Wade posted a sixth presentation of his take on things in a comment made to a blog entry in which I reported on an article on my work that appeared at the The Big Picture blog. My take on the points raised by Wade’s comment follow as additional comments to that blog post.

Juicy Excerpt: Congrats Rob, It’s your finest hour. I hope you can learn a lesson from this. The blogger completely bypassed ‘the Wade Pfau story’ and wrote solely about the underlying investment ideas. In this regard, I’m glad to see his post. Your 1,000 email campaign probably would have been a lot more effective had you stuck to the issues that the blogger discussed, rather than turning it into a personal vendetta against me. No one likes to see a negative campaign.

Filed Under: Silencing of Wade Pfau Tagged With: investment research, John Greaney, Mel Lindauer, Rob Bennett, SWRs, Wade Pfau

Purcellville Police Warned of Possible SWAT-ing Attacks by Goon “Defenders” of Mel Lindauer and John Greaney

July 17, 2012 by Rob

I have notified the Purcellville police that I may be the target of SWAT-ing attacks by the internet goons who have advanced posts at various investing discussion boards and blogs in “defense” of Mel Lindauer and John Greaney, the two individuals who have led the 10-year-long Campaign of Terror against the Retire Early and Indexing discussion board communities and the Personal Finance Blogosphere.

Wikipedia defines SWAT-ing (or Swatting) as “an attempt to trick an emergency service (such as a 9-1-1 dispatcher) into dispatching an emergency response team. The name is derived from SWAT (Special Weapons and Tactics), one type of such team. Such action places law enforcement and citizens at risk and are criminal actions. In addition, it reduces law enforcement coverage and costs taxpayer money.” The Wikipedia entry explains that: “CNN interviewed Erick Erickson to discuss an incident in which he had been the victim of swatting. The caller to 911 claimed: ‘I just shot my wife, so…. I don’t think I could come down there…. She’s dead, now…. I’m looking at her…. I’m going to shoot someone else, soon.’ —911 caller. That incident prompted Sandy Adams to push for a Justice Department investigation.”

I am the person who discovered the errors in the Old School safe-withdrawal-rate studies (the studies do not contain an adjustment for the valuation level that applies on the day the retirement begins). I shared my discovery with my fellow community members at a Motley Fool discussion board on the morning of May 13, 2002. John Greaney, the author of one of the discredited studies, has for the past 10 years led a brutal Campaign of Terror against all board and blog communities that have shown an interest in discussing the errors in the Old School SWR studies. The effort was led at Indexing communities by Mel Lindauer, co-author of The Bogleheads Guide to Investing, who made a positive reference to the Greaney study in his book and who has posted in “defense” of Greaney and the Old School studies at the Bogleheads Forum discussion board.

When Academic Researcher Wade Pfau contacted the authors of the Trinity study (another discredited Old School SWR study) seeking a correction, the LIndauerheads and Greaney Goons threatened to send defamatory e-mails to his employer in an effort to get him fired. I have in recent months been reporting on my 16 months of e-mail correspondence with Wade, in which he made many references to the “hostile environment” he experienced when posting on the internet about his research findings showing that the Old School retirement studies get the numbers wildly wrong and about his fears that the Lindauerheads and Greaney Goons would be successful in their efforts to destroy his career if he did not agree to play ball with them.

Wade has announced that he will no longer be doing research on Valuation-Informed Indexing, the investing strategy that I developed as a result of the loss of confidence I experienced in Buy-and-Hold after seeing many Buy-and-Holders fail to speak up in strong terms in opposition to the Campaign of Terror (Wade’s research shows that Valuation-Informed Indexing has provided far higher returns than Buy-and-Hold at greatly diminished risk for the entire 140 years for which we have stock return data). He also announced that, while he still believes that the Old School studies get the retirement numbers wildly wrong, there is no need for them to be corrected. He has praised Greaney as the hero of the  10 years of discussions and has characterized me as “unethical” for insisting that the discredited retirement studies be corrected before they cause more failed retirements.

I have contacted the Purcellville Police re this matter previously — much of the history of my efforts to resolve the matter by contacting the appropriate authorities is described here. I have seen an escalation in the threats since I began reporting on Wade’s decision to capitulate to the demands of the Goons. On July 6, 2012, I received an e-mail containing the following text: “Coming.tanks 4 address and phone number.will help me find u.” One of the Goons recently started a thread at the site owned by Greaney setting forth this image in the thread-starter:

 

Greaney Site Gun Image

John Greaney’s argument for why there is no need to correct the errors in the Old School safe-withdrawal-rate studies

 

I have made public notice at earlier times that I expect to bring civil lawsuits for the recovery of damages to my internet writing business against the owners of web sites that permit Lindauer and/or Greaney “defenders” to post defamatory comments about me or about those who have posted in support of correction of the Old School studies or Valuation-Informed Indexing or in opposition to the Campaign of Terror against our board communities or who in some other way lend support to the efforts of Lindauer and Greaney to continue the ten-year cover-up of my discovery of the errors in the studies. I also expect to help the millions of middle-class investors who have suffered financial losses as a result of the 10-year cover-up to recover the financial damages they have suffered. And I of course will cooperate in any way I can at congressional hearings and in criminal proceedings against those who have posted in “defense” of Lindauer and Greaney.

I intend for this blog entry to put all concerned parties on notice that I would expect SWAT-ing actions to be considered in the criminal and civil and congressional proceedings that I expect will follow the next crash in the price of stocks.

Filed Under: Intimidation of VII Advocates Tagged With: John Greaney, Mel Lindauer, Rob Bennett, SWAT-ing, SWRs, Wade Pfau

Ed Rager, Mel Lindauer and Taylor Larimore to Rob Bennett: “You’ve Constantly Misquoted, Distorted, and Disrespected Jack Bogle and Bill Bernstein. Your latest Post “Jack Bogle’s Big Mistake” Was, in Our Opinion, the Final Straw. Jack and Bill Both Join Us at Our Private Events Because They Enjoy Meeting with Friendly, Like-Minded Diehards in a Relaxed and Secure Atmosphere….You Will Not Be Allowed to Attend.”

July 16, 2012 by Rob

While I was looking through my old e-mails to recover the ones that I sent to the Morningstar site administrators and reported on in the last few blog entries, I came across the e-mails that I sent to sign up to attend the Vanguard Diehards Conference with John Bogle in 2007. I had intended to ask Bogle questions about the cover-up of the errors in the Old School safe-withdrawal-rate studies, which I had reported on at a Motley Fool discussion board on May 13, 2002, and which have not been publicly acknowledged by the “experts” in the investing advice field until recent months. I thought that these e-mails too were worth reporting on. I did not receive a response to the question I posed in the last e-mail.

Set forth below are the texts of three e-mails: (1) the e-mail that I sent to Ed Rager on February 17, 2007; (2) the response that I received from Ed on February 18, 2007; and (3) the reply that I sent on Feburary 19, 2007.

Ed:

This is Rob Bennett (“hocus” on the boards). I’d like to make my reservation to attend Diehards VI.

I live in the area. So I do not need a hotel reservation.

My personal information is:

[….]

Please let me know what I need to do to transfer the registration fee of
$189.

Thanks for all the work you did putting this together.

Rob

Hi Rob:
Our Diehards get-togethers are private social meetings of friends and like-minded souls who love, admire, and respect Jack Bogle and his teachings.  You’ve constantly misquoted, distorted, and disrespected Jack Bogle and Bill Bernstein.  Your latest post “Jack Bogle’s Big Mistake” was, in our opinion, the final straw.  Jack and Bill both join us at our private events because they enjoy meeting with friendly, like-minded Diehards in a relaxed and secure atmosphere.  We want them to continue to enjoy and attend our private social events.  Therefore, we regret to inform you that you will not be allowed to attend.
Ed, Taylor and Mel
<br>
Ed, Taylor and Mel:Boo, baby!These statements are of course absurd.Have you notified Jack Bogle of what you have done?

If you have notified him, would you please let me know his reaction?

Rob

Filed Under: Intimidation of VII Advocates Tagged With: Bogleheads, Ed Rager, John Bogle, Mel Lindauer, Rob Bennett, SWRs, Taylor Larimore, Vanguard Diehards

Rob Bennett to the Morningstar.com Site Administrator: “A Poster Named ‘Galeno’ [This Was Greaney’s #1 Supporter on the Board] Put Forward Four Consecutive Posts Rejecting Out of Hand the Idea of Substantive Discussion and Putting Forward Threats of Physical Violence Against Me. One Was a Threat to Come to My House with a Baseball Bat to Kill My Wife and Children”

July 14, 2012 by Rob

Yesterday’s blog entry reported on an e-mail that I sent to the Morningstar.com site administrator on April 18, 2006, relating to abusive posting by Mel Linduaer (co-author of the book “The Bogleheads Guide to Investing”). I sent a follow-up e-mail later that day. I will report tomorrow on the response that I received from Morningstar.

Mstar Casey:

This is my second response to your e-mail. The earlier response supplied the background facts. This post provides links.

Here is a link to a post put forward by Greaney (he posts as “Intercst.”):

http://boards.fool.com/Message.asp?mid=17762586&sort=postdate

Mark33 asked that the personal attacks stop and that a substantive discussion be permitted. A poster named “Galeno” (this was Greaney’s #1 supporter on the board) put forward four consecutive posts rejecting out of hand the idea of substantive discussion and putting forward threats of physical violence against me. One of these was a threat to come to my house with a baseball bat to kill my wife and children.

The posts making the threats were deleted, but there is a quote to one of the threats in the post linked above. The section quoted reads: ” No way! I, for one, am against any and all “substantive” discussions with or about brickhead (aka hocus). I want Jihad! I say let loose the dogs of personal attack. The nastier the better as far as I’m concerned.” Greaney put forward the post linked above, endorsing the threats.

Here is a link to a post in which Greaney reports that he has received an e-mail from Galeno saying that he was suspended from the board for putting up the posts that made the threats of violence. I did not report the threats. Some other community member obviously did so.

http://boards.fool.com/Message.asp?mid=17765010&sort=postdate

Greaney speaks in opposition to the suspension, implicitly endorsing the threats. This endorsement did far more harm to the board than did the actual threats, as Greaney was founder of the board and respected by a number of community members. A large number of our best posters left in the following months.

This is a link to a post by Prometheuss, another leading Greaney supporter. The post comments on a death threat put forward by Galeno and comments negatively on the fact that the death threat post was removed.

http://boards.fool.com/Message.asp?mid=18207722&sort=postdate

Prometheuss: “My comment on galeno’s post was pulled for ‘incivility’. First, I want to apologize to galeno if he took offense at my ‘rude or discourteous’ post. Saying, “You doctors should stick to your drugs and leave bullets to soldiers like me” was rude and demonstrated a lack of courtesy to galeno on my part. Anyway, I will try to cover the important points I was trying to make in a non-offensive way here. Most folks think they know a lot about guns from watching movies or TV, but things are a lot different in the real world….”

Please let me know if you have further question re this matter or need further examples of the nature of the problem that I was making reference to in the post that I put to the Morningstar board.

Rob

Filed Under: Intimidation of VII Advocates Tagged With: Bogleheads Forum, internet death threats, John Greaney, Mel Lindauer, Morningstar, SWRs

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