It's important to note, that whether it's intentional (doubt) or genuine mistake, he's misleading viewers when he says that Dimensional has outperformed other funds or indexes. In fact most of the Dimensional funds have underperformed markets, and they do so at higher (albeit approachable) TERs of 0.25.
There's a (rather short for his standards) video made by Paolo Coletti, professor of financial economy at Trento about dimensional performances.
It's in Italian, but both subtitles and Youtube's auto audio translation works fine.
He always includes data and google colabs so people can run tests and verify numbers themselves if they disagree.
Most of the Dimensional ETFs seem to be following some kind of value investment strategy where they take an index but nudge it a bit by some value factor which is claimed to be based on long standing research. It wouldn’t be surprising if this value factor has underperformed in recent years which have been dominated by the rise of growth stocks. The video you link to seems to be talking about these ETFs, although I haven’t dived into the numbers.
As far as I can tell the straightforward US & world equity ETFs I’m referring to above don’t have this value bias.
It's important to note, that whether it's intentional (doubt) or genuine mistake, he's misleading viewers when he says that Dimensional has outperformed other funds or indexes. In fact most of the Dimensional funds have underperformed markets, and they do so at higher (albeit approachable) TERs of 0.25.
There's a (rather short for his standards) video made by Paolo Coletti, professor of financial economy at Trento about dimensional performances.
It's in Italian, but both subtitles and Youtube's auto audio translation works fine.
He always includes data and google colabs so people can run tests and verify numbers themselves if they disagree.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_tBfYHh1J4
Most of the Dimensional ETFs seem to be following some kind of value investment strategy where they take an index but nudge it a bit by some value factor which is claimed to be based on long standing research. It wouldn’t be surprising if this value factor has underperformed in recent years which have been dominated by the rise of growth stocks. The video you link to seems to be talking about these ETFs, although I haven’t dived into the numbers.
As far as I can tell the straightforward US & world equity ETFs I’m referring to above don’t have this value bias.
The value ones mentioned by Felix do.
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