Hello, and welcome to another episode of the Odd Lots Podcast.
I'm Joe Wisenthal and I'm Tracy Alloway.
Tracy, I have a big, big confession to me. Is it going to actually like speak to everything that we do? Okay, you're ready for it.
I'm bracing myself to it.
So I sort of ascribed to the general belief that like markets are like fairly efficient, things are priced in indexing, probably pretty good strategy, own the market portfolio, things like that makes a lot of sense to me. A lot of people seem to generally believe this is generally true so far.
This is not a confession, okay.
But the confession is given that I don't really understand why the investment industry exists and why do some why do people trade at all? Why does anyone try to beat the market? Why is active management a thing? We all sort of accept these premises, and yet the investment industry continues to exist.
Well, I applaud your honesty, show, especially given that you work at a large financial organization dedicated to providing data and services to the financial industry. But I don't think it's actually an extremely unusual opinion. I think this has come up at various times that if the best thing for people to do is just index to the market and find the fund or the vehicle that does that at the lowest cost, then why do all these other services and efays and things like that actually exist.
Yeah, what are we doing here? What are we doing here? Right? Because we talk about all these different things, and you know, sometimes on the show we talk about real economy things and sometimes we talk about sort of strictly market things. But why is anyone paying attention? Why does anyone talk about this? Why is anyone trading on any of it?
Well, if I was going to hazard a guess, I would say there is something innately human about the idea that you can beat the system or outperform the market in one way or another. Like it feels unsatisfying to think that no one out there in the entire investment world is able to outperform the market. And yet if you listen to efficient market hypothesis and things like that, that's exactly what it'll tell you.
Or maybe you can outperform the market, maybe you just uperform someone else trying to match the market or something like that. Maybe you could beat me or I could beat you, but not necessarily the market. I don't know, it just blows. It's always has bothered me.
I love that you've started this podcast on the most existential note that you could possibly find.
Well, I think it's really fitting because today we are going to be speaking We're at a company that's sort of known for its deep, academic, data driven understanding of markets, and it has this incredible lineage of people who have been at the forefront of a lot of this research about market efficiency and what is where pockets of inefficiency might exist, and what is the best way to invest given certain premises of efficiency and what that even means
market efficiency, And so I think that we can have a conversation today that sort of gets at like some of these existential questions about how markets operate.
I think that sounds great. I think we are also going to be speaking to our second maybe rocket scientists, to have oh on the podcast after Josh Younger.
I love when we talk to actual rocket scientists because you know, obviously sometimes that is used as a cliche for very smart person. But as you mentioned, Josh Younger, former actual rocket scientist turned market econ guy, and yes we have another one today.
All right, let's do it all right.
I'm very excited we are going to be speaking today with Gerard O'Reilly. He is the co CEO and CIO at Dimensional, been here since two thousand and four. We're actually recording this at dimensionals headquarters in Austin, Texas right now. One of the major providers of mutual funds and ETFs, huge player in the industry.
The fastest growing, the.
Fastest growing ETF provider. As we're going to learn all about this company's philosophy. Girard, thank you so much for coming on.
Oud lots thanks for having me on the show.
So I mentioned that Dimensional sort of has this deep academic lineage. What do you sort of give us the quick history of the company and sort of like the ideas and the people from which this emerged.
Yeah, So the company began in nineteen eighty one, so we've been around for many decades now. And when you kind of go back and trace the history of the founders of the company, a lot of them had been at the University of Chicago, so they had studied under Gene Fama and others, and they had worked on the
first set of index funds in the early seventies. So David Booth and Rex Singfield and in the early eighties, David and Rex had identified a need in the marketplace, which was it was no real way out there to get systematic, broadly diversified exposure to small caps. They understood the limitations of indexing, They understood that that probably wasn't the best way to go, but they also understood some of the benefits of indexing transparency, low cost, broad diversification.
So they started the company based on a need in the market and a set of academic research that had been coming out at that time kind of demonstrating that small cap stocks had had higher returns than large cap stocks, and from there the company began. It has its roots in academia. When the company was first began, David and Rex went up to the University of Chicago and Gene Fama was there. He got on the board. He had folks like mac McCown, a very long time industry expert
on the mutual fund board. You had Myron Shoals, you had Martin Miller. Interesting thing about Dimensional is that we've been associated closely with five Nobel Prize winners and all of.
The best credential I.
Think of like the Mount Rushmore of academic finance. It sounds like they're all associated dimensional pretty much.
So I have a really basic and perhaps embarrassing question, but I think it kind of gets to some of our introductory remarks, and possibly I'm not the only one who has this question. When I think about dimensional I think about mostly indexing and really passive investing. But you do have a bunch of actively managed etf So in your mind, are you active or passive?
We're non index, so passive is probably fine because passive implies that you accept market prices, you trust market prices, and you try to extract information from market prices. Index two indexing you leave money on the table, and so we're non index but we're not in the business of trying to outguess market prices.
What does it mean? Okay, I guess, I guess to your point, Maybe in my mind I've always sort of elided the two or think that passive means index, so that they're roughly synonyms. But clearly they're not. So why do you talk a little bit further about what the difference is?
So maybe it would be helpful also to talk a little bit more or about markets. You made some comments about market efficiency and so on. I think that it's important to understand what a price actually represents the price of a stock or the price of a bond, and then you get a good idea of why not index,
but why be passive? And the example that we often use is if you want to place a bet on a sporting event, Typically you say, I think the favorite will win by x twenty points, thirty points, forty points. And so why bring this up as an example is because that spread how much the favorite is expected to win by is an example of using the wisdom of the crowds to predict the future. The bookie tries to keep the same number of people on one side of
the spread as the other side of the spread. If more people say i'll take you know, the favorite will win by more than the spread, the spread will change and you can look at how well that does it actually forecasting the outcome of the games. There was a study in the mid two thousands that looked at, you know, eight thousand MBA games and five thousand NFL games and found that the favorite won by more than the spread fifty percent of the time, exactly what you would explact.
So this notion of there's a wisdom of the crowds. There's a marketplace by which they can express their opinion. They express their opinion by putting real money on the table, and that gives you a forecast about something that's going to happen in the future. And so when you think about markets, think about them in the same way that prices are basically predictions or forecasts of the future, and they're informed by the actions of people trading in the marketplace.
And the question then becomes is what informations in the price of a bonder a stock. There's lots of academic, you know, studies around that. When it comes to the spread, it's okay, how much will the favorite in this sporting event win by? When it comes to the price of a bonder stock, the overwhelming academic evidence is that what's mainly in there is the return that people require to
hold the investment. And I think that's a really important point to make because it tells you that you don't have to be out there out guessing market prices, but you can use them to say which stocks or bonds do people require a high return to hold, and which stocksure bonds do people require a low return to hold, and I think that's one of the keys and the key insights that you kind of glean from this all
this academic literature, and that's what we do. We say, how can we extract that information efficiently for investors.
So it's not that market prices are always necessarily correct, but rather that you can kind of clean I guess the risk assessment of investors based on those prices and then adjust for that.
You can glean how much investors demand in returns to hold a stock or a bonder, many differences in those and the way I think about them always being right or not always being right, I think about them being fair and un biased. There's another set of academic studies that look at the performance of managers and what they find at the conclusion, the main conclusion you can draw from those studies is that they're unbiased estimates of the future.
They may not be always spot on, but you don't know when they're too high, and you don't know when they're too low. And what you find is if you use them effectively, you can manage risk better and you can increase expected returns. So you know, at the start, you said, why do people bother? Because let's take the US over the past one hundred years, the nominal rate of return on the US stock market has been about
ten percent over the past one hundred years. So that means that if you invest your money doubles every seven years. It's an explosive number. If you can take that ten and turn it into an eleven or twelve, Your money doubles every six so after a forty year horizon, you have doubled the money. Now, a lot of people's investment horizon in the humulation phase is thirty or forty years.
That's why people bother because the amount of consumption that you can afford by doing a little better than the market tends to be quite significant.
How would your framework of understanding the market apply to a phenomenon like say, this might be a little unfair, but you know an extreme example game stop for instance.
Yeah, So when you look at a situation like GameStop, and you look at any market mechanisms around that time, what was interesting is in order to keep what we think as prices as unbiased estimates of the future, there has to be some shorting going on, some long going on, and when one of those market mechanisms becomes a little bit more restricted. Well, then prices may deviate away from what people consider a fundamental valuation of the firm, So
that market mechanism itself is important to keep running. And as that market mechanism keeps running, then prices are just from day to day. But you'll have people who think they are too high, people who think they're too low, and they will express their opinion on one side or the other. When the people who think they're too high can't express an opinion, what happens. That's where prices may deviate.
The thing I would mention about a company like a game Stop is that when you have a systematic approach, it allows you to handle situations like that very very efficiently. So you accept the price for what it is. It used to be a micro value stock. Two weeks later it's a large growth company. Okay, if you're managing portfolio is along those types of pact categories, you know what to do.
Tell us a little bit more about the evolution of product offerings at Dimensional and you mentioned that the original a lot of the original research was sort of based on this idea that they were potential outperformance in small caps that were not easily exploited by the offerings that were available. And I know you started in mutual funds.
The one thing I always heard about Dimensional mutual funds is that there was sort of a screen to even get access to them, and you wanted the advisors who put some client money into Dimensional like that.
There's a great Michael Lewis article that I saw and it kind of described the process and I guess the late nineteen eighties of getting access to Dimensional and it's almost like a revivalist meeting where you had to like pledge your undying loyalty to efficient markets.
Yeah, lot of you talking about it. So what were those initial product offerings and then we can get into sort of how it evolved over time.
Yeah, So when the firm started in the eighties, the initial product offerings were small cap strategies. Okay, began with US small cap strategies, then moved to strategies outside the US, the UK, Japan, Europe, and so on and so forth. Then fixed income offerings came along, and the fixed income offerings started out short term and evolved to be global
pretty early on by the kind of early nineties. And there again, it's about using bond prices to understand differences and expected returns across bonds, effectively thinking about the shape of the yield curve. How much capital gain should I expect versus yield? Right, that's at its heart. Then the value research came along in the early nineties and the firm really started to grow in two ways. One, the product offering expanded, and what drives our product offering is
two things. One, we work very closely with financial professionals, so we don't go straight to retail. We work generally with financial professionals and we have deep relationships with them, so we understand what problems they're trying to solve, and that informs what strategies we bring to the market, and you can see that in our track record. If you look typically in the industry, the closure rate for funds
tends to be very high. For dimensional it's incredibly low because we understand the need that we're trying to solve before we launch a fund or an ETF and have a pretty good idea of who has that need and who else might have that need.
So you're sorry, you're not just like throwing. So it does feel like a lot of ETFs. You get these throwing things at the wall and we'll see if it sticks. And that's not your personal launching the.
Product that that's not our approach at all. It's work with clients who understand markets and it can express needs their fiduciaries for end investors, and how can we build products and solutions to meet their needs.
To Joe's point earlier, though, why not just cut out the middleman completely and sell directly, because presumably you could lower you're already pretty low fees even further.
We think that the combination of financial professional independent money manager is a pretty good combination in terms of serving the needs of families all across the country. Because you say, why not just hold the market you mentioned that at the beginning of the podcast and set it and forget it. There's a lot of value that a financial professional can bring to the table. And I'll get back a little
bit of the product offering in a moment. But this is is interesting in itself because until you define your goals with respect to your investment portfolio, you can't actually manage risk. You have no way to manage risk until you define your goals. Your goals define what assets actually have low uncertainty relative to what you're trying to achieve and that gives you a risk management asset. Financial professionals typically will work with families who may not understand finance
all that well, and we'll do two things. One, help them come with a financial plan and implement that financial plan with the right investment vehicles. And then too, help them stay disciplined and tune out the noise of all what goes on around markets. And so that's why we've gone down that path. And you mentioned that that started in the early eighties. You're right, and that became another kind of large part of our business through the nineties and the two thousands. Just back to the kind of
how we decide on new strategies. The other area then is new academic recas search our new research from our internal team. We have about one hundred plus folks on our internal research team, loss of PhDs and all types of disciplines. And as we learn something new about markets that can be implemented in a systematic way, we say, okay, great, let's provide those benefits to all of our existing clients, and it may lead to new strategies that we can offer existing and new clients going forward.
So, as you point out, you know some of these terms don't mean the same thing. Passive certainly does not necessarily mean indexing. What is the difference between systematic and active?
For me, I'll use systematic or rules based approach. Okay, we like rules based approaches when you can describe here are the rules that are going to be used to manage the portfolio, because then you can describe that to a financial professional. You can give them the tools to monitor what you've done, and they can see that you've did what you said you would do, and that builds
trust over time. Trust builds a longer investment horizon over time, and what we know about longer investment horizons is that the probabilities of success go up with the length of investment, probably realizing a positive value premium sized premium probability premium. So rules or systematic are very very important because it gives you a way to say that I can understand what to expect from these strategies given different market environments.
Traditional active there are probably a set of rules, but they're not as well articulated. It may be based on a hunch or some analysis, and the analysis may vary over time, and so the range of outcomes or the dispersion of outcomes that you get from the strategy is much greater, and you really can set as strong an expectation. A rules based approach is the right approach in my view. If you have the right innovation, you've got to do the research and keep on pushing forward the boundaries. The
right pricing. You mentioned that you know we have very well priced and then the right support, so you say, you know, when we had a advisors and so on come to conferences, what was that all about. It was providing the right support because education is key. If you understand what to expect and how bad it can be before the bad times happen, you will be much better prepared to handle those bad times when they almost certainly
will occur. So that support aspect is why we run conferences, why we write white papers, why we provide materials to financial professionals to help them understand the approach and communicate the approach.
Just on this note, could you maybe describe for us the process of coming up with a new product or a new systemic investing strategy. What does it look like from the initial research and maybe the pitching of the idea to the approval process, And could you maybe provide a favorite example where people were particularly creative, or one that illustrates the way dimensional is thinking about markets.
Yeah, for sure. So let's take the exam sample of profitability and it's going through its ten year anniversary. It's been ten years since Professor Novi Marx published one of the key papers on that particular topic, and so if you go back to you know, twenty eleven, twenty twelve, twenty thirteen, effectively there was new research coming out that showed profitability, which kind of takes income statement variables and scales them by balance sheet variables. It had the power
to predict future profitability. So it's an intrinsic firm characteristic. Tall parents have tall kids, Well run firms tend to remain well run firms for some period of time. And if you pair that up with other price based metrics like price to book, price to earnings, market cap, it actually enhanced your description of differences and returns across stocks.
So we decided that we were going to incorporate that in how we managed the portfolios, and so we went through a large process of educating clients on here's the research, here's how it will change the strategy that we manage for you, and here's the benefits that we perceive for
you all from this piece of research. The research goes through a very strong vetting process here internally, we have an Investment Research Committee that has Nobel Prize winners on a people like Gene Fama, people like Professor Martin ken french Is on a professor Novi Marx that vets the research very very thoroughly. And then we have a lot of expertise in how to implement and so that goes through the Investment committee, and the investment committee would review
all the ways that it would be implemented. So there's a kind of a large emphasis on education and then also implementation and doing it well. And then we bring that to the marketplace with a series of new strategies but also enhancements to all of our existing strategies. And I think that's worked out very very well. But we have these types of examples all the time that come where clients either express needs or there's new academic research, and that helps us, you know, improve what we do.
Always get better, that's our mantras. You can always get better at what you do.
So I understand your point about support for financial advisors, education for financial advisors, education about potential downsides, periods of downsides, what to expect that maybe the premium exists over a long time and then there could be bumps in the road. I'm curious about a specific example like value, which is cheap stocks depending on how you measure it. Supposedly there was a lot of research that said they would do better.
My understanding is that over the last at least fifteen years, that has not been an effective strategy, and some people have certainly called into question like was that wrong? Will it ever come back? Is that busted research? What has happened with value? And sort of you know, with the research that you've done it dimensional, how does that help you understand that factor.
When you have a time period like that, it's always important to be introspective, reevaluate your assumptions, re evaluate the data, and also understand what really happened. So I think that the idea that there hasn't been a value preom for fifteen years, I disagree with that in the sense of there's been many months, quarters, years where value stocks have
outperformed growth stocks. But what you had in the middle of that period ending in June twenty twenty was the worst three year period in the past one hundred years for which we have data here in the US of value stocks, in particular small value stocks versus large growth And you say, well, was that unexpected or was that
a change in markets? If you look at the returns of some of the large growth companies during that time period and even over the ten years ending in June twenty twenty, and you looked at the fangs or whichever latest acronymy you want to use, they had annualized compound return rates of thirty percent per year for about a decade. That's unexpected. You can't tell me that people you know, going back, you know, in twenty ten and so on, we're going to say these want to return thirty percent
a year for the next decade. That's an unexpectedly good outcome. And you can say why, Well, those firms did unexpectedly well. They served their clients' needs better than anybody had anticipated, grew their revenue better than anybody had anticipated, and became dominant firms in the market, and that was an unexpected event. You factor that in and you say, no, there's nothing broken here. It's just that there's a lot of volatility with these premiums, and this time period tells you that
you can have large unexpected events. But if you break down a lot of those sub periods, you've had lots of strong periods for value. So for example, after that worst three year period on record June twenty twenty, we went into one of the strongest two to three year periods on record for value versus growth. And so it's kind of tempting to try to summarize a fifteen year period with one observation, but typically that's not as helpful.
The one comment I would make the learning for that period is that sector weights matter a lot, and the value strategy, and in particular, you know, value strategies when you just look at them, generally tended to be underway technology. We use a lot of sector caps and sector constraints, and they were actually quite helpful for our relative performance
during that period and subsequent periods. And I think that was one thing that was probably additive that that data gave you in terms of understanding of how better to build value strategies from that period.
What about the definition of value itself, because over the past couple of years there's been this discourse that may bee traditional measures of value such as price to book, which doesn't take into account in tangible asset values. Maybe that's not the right way to do it. How are you thinking about actually measuring value?
So a couple of kind of quick reactions there. One, there are a lot of intangible assets that are in book value. So let's take some examples. If Company A acquires Company B, then there may be line items books through them merger and acquisition process that are called externally acquired in tangibles. And so as companies go through this M and A process, you get a lot of intangible
assets on a company's balance sheet. In fact, if you look at S and P five hundred companies, I think it's something like twenty five percent of the value of the assets are intangible assets externally acquired. And so that's grown since about the year two thousand because the accounting mechanisms for how you treated M and A activity changed in the year two thousand in the US. So you see a lot of intangible assets on companies balance sheets.
Perfect example is when Disney acquired what's the company I'm thinking of for Star Wars, oh, Lucasfilms. Lucasfilms, that was about two billion in intangible assets and two billion in goodwill appeared on Disney's balance sheet. What doesn't typically appear on the balance sheet is internally developed intangible assets, and there's very good reasons that they don't. They're usually expensed, not capitalized, and so they flow through the incomest not
the balance sheet. And the reason behind that is that as you do research and development, or you do things that develop brand and future intangible assets, the level of uncertainty around what the value of those will be when you're incurring the expense to build them is massively high. And we've done lots of work on this. So in short,
there's kind of a mix. There's a good chunk of intangibles on balance sheets and some that's internally developed intangibles that typically are not And when you look over time, in fact, I think that the way that the data is presented can be misleading because if you look actually at the percent of balance sheets that are intangibles, it
actually hasn't changed that much over time. It's just that when you compare to things like property and equipment are subsets of what's on the balance sheet, that you get the big changes. We've done a lot of work on this adjusted book values for intangibles with and without, and what really boils down to is that the estimates for eternally developed intangibles are too noisy to be useful, so
we don't use those. But when you combine it with profitability, asset growth things like that, it actually doesn't matter, and you have to use multiple variables for it not to matter. But it's actually not that relevant for computing value programs.
So I realized there's multiple ways we could take this conversation, and we could talk about different factors for a long time, but I also want to talk about the sort of industry and the nature of products. You started offering mutual funds, and as Tracy mentioned, there is this sort of whole process about getting access to them and education and screening, etc. Now you're really big. You're one of the fastest ETF When did you get into ETFs?
Our three year anniversary is this November?
Very so, given like ETFs have been a while, and it was late.
As soon as the actively managed ETFs were approved pretty.
Much right, Yeah, in about October twenty nineteen. There's what's called Rule sixty eleven, the ETF rule, And then about one year later we had ETFs in the marketplace.
And you're one of the fastest growing ETF companies. Can you just give it a little bit overview, like how big is that? How much of the ETF money is just sort of the same investor has switched from a dimensional mutual fund to a dimensional ETF, Like how big is that? And what is the relative weight of like the legacy or the mutual funds versus the ETF today? What are we talking about?
Yeah, the the ETF business for us, I'll take a step back, sure was why did we do it to begin with? One was the rule change that allowed us to do what we do in mutual funds and an ETF wrapper, which was important to us because we don't sacrifice the investment principles and the investment proper position. We want to be able to deliver equally good investment propositions
regardless of the rapper. And two is that the financial professionals, whether those are advisors or institutions that we were working with, we're using ETFs more and more frequently and we're asking for dimension to have an ETF lineup. So we said, okay, now that we have this new rule, we can do
what we did in mutual funds. So we launched the ETFs with that in mind, and we'll have you know, close to forty by the end of the year in terms of ETFs, and all launched with input from our clients on which are most important to you and for your businesses. There's no doubt that the industry has seen flows from mutual funds to ETFs. I think that's a trend that we've seen in the industry, and we have some advisors that have changed kind of transition from our
mutual funds to our ETFs. What's been interesting about the ETFs, though, is that allows us to access i would say, new new channels, new advisors, new wealth platforms that we traditionally
haven't played in. And so if you look at the kind of large broker dealers, the wirehouses, if you look at some of the bank trusts, all of those types of platforms and organizations, we traditionally haven't played there with mutual funds, but ETFs are lend themselves much more so there's been kind of many new clients actually have come on board over the past number of years, and that's also helped the ETF growth.
This was going to be my next question. Actually, we've said fastest growing a number of times now, and I think your assets under management are now above five hundred billion something like that. What proportion of inflows are new clients versus people migrating from mutual funds into ETFs.
It's a tricky question to answer because of the data constraints, but I'd say, you know, in terms of new flows into ETFs versus maybe transitions, what educated guess is maybe fifty to fifty something in around there thereabout. So we have about one hundred billion now in ETF assets. Globally, we kind of bounce around six twenty five to six fifty billion in terms of total firm assets on what
we manage on behalf of clients. And our mutual fund business is still very very large street of four hundred billion of US mutual funds. Our US mutual funds are still very important to us. We continue to innovate and push forward there. ETF is important. Kind of when Dave and I first got on the role, Davis is the
other co CEO. One of the things that we kind of agreed on is that let's make it convenient as we can for financial professionals, whether they're institutions or advisors to access this investment approach, and that's why the ETFs, that's why the enhancements to mutual funds, that's why lowering our account minimum with SMAs. It's all about, you know, convenience of use for the professionals to serve their clients.
So I know you said earlier that you consider yourselves more passive, but not in that sers and I kind of want to get your take on the overall rise of I guess extreme passive the indexation in the industry. And I know there's been a lot of hand ringing over this idea that if you're just benchmark to an index and you're trying to hug that index as closely as possible, you're actually still making an active investment decision.
It's just you're kind of outsourcing that active management to the benchmark index provider, so MSCI or SMP or whoever. What do you think about that argument?
Well, this goes back to Joe's opening remarks, which I kind of take as evidence that the academic evidence has won in the sense that academics for a long time have slitted the performance of active managers and say, you know, there's no real evidence here that people can now guess the market, and people who outperform by stockpicking and market timing are doing so by look versus skill. How you can't disentangle it too, And so there's been a large
flow of money into indexes. I think the people of indexed on index because there's a lot that you can do to actually get your fair share of the returns that the market is willing to offer, and in my view, indexing leave some of that money on the table. So let's take some examples. Tesla was added to the S and P five hundred in December of twenty twenty. We all remember that event. It was one of the biggest new entrants to the S and P five hundred on history.
And if you look at the price pressure that index managers exerted on Tesla's stock on the day that it was added to the S and P five hundred, on that day, the price was driven up, and then after that price pressure came down, the price came down. You say how much did that cost the index? It actually costs the index between five and ten basis points in one month, and you can come up with reasonable ways to make that estimate. In one month to add one
stock to the index. So here's the most liquid stocks in the entire world. And to accommodate a rebalancing event, people spend two to three times what's a typical expense ratio on an SMP five hundred index fund on adding the stock, but it's never reported. People don't notice it unless they do the research to actually find out, and there's an example of leaving money on the table by
having too rigid an approach. In my view, there's no reason that you need to hold a perfectly market cap weighted portfolio of stocks, and indexes typically aren't perfectly market cap weight in a aney event that it's much better if you have some flexibility to deviate for market cap weights to pursue higher returns, but also flexibility on how to turn the portfolio over and keep yourself focused day in day out. You don't need to wait for one
or two events each year to rebalance. So indexing is definitely an active decision with respect to how they're put together, how they decide to rebalance, and those active decisions have cost investors' money.
Suggestion earlier was the dimensional doesn't try to outguess the market, but you do try to outperform. Is this market structure awareness a key plank of that outperformance? I know you talked about systematic strategies and having a rules based approach, but is it also just understanding some of these market dynamics and recognizing alpha opportunities. For instance, when there is an index rebalancing event.
Spot on, there's two major sources. One is, does anybody think that all stocks of the same expected return are all bonds of the same expected return? No, there's differences in expected returns. And you can use a systematic framework that's based on valuation theory to identify those. Two is be efficient, don't do stupid things when you know they're stupid. Always good advice, always good advice. And that is about how do you understand how markets operate, how to trade?
How do you add value while you hold stock? In terms of the corporate actions that you elect. Some corporate actions, just as an example, an index will choose a way to have deal with the corporate action a stock is spinning something off or doing a tender or something like that, and the index providers may not always choose them the value maximizing way to deal with the corporate action. Index managers often follow the index provider. We say, well, why
would you do that? There's another election on this corporate action that actually improves value. Pick that one, right, There's things like that that add value. So there's a combination of the research to identify the systematic drivers of returns and then how do you implement. Implementation is key and those are two big drivers of how we outperform indices.
And by the way, just a quick stat if you look at our US mutual funds, eighty percent of them over the past twenty years that have been live for the twenty years have outperformed their benchmark indices, which is an incredibly unusual stat for our industry.
Real quickly, on the sort of like product distribution side ETFs, obviously I imagine Tracy or I could log into a brokerage and buy a dimensional ETF. But still focus from the sort of corporate strategy perspective is to distribute them or sell them through advisors.
That's correct, and I hope that you guys do that. We would love to have you as clients, but that is the approach. We know how to work with financial professionals, whether they're institutions or advisors. We know how to give them the tools to monitor what we do, and then we think that the advice they give to their and constituencies is typically the right way to go. So that's the approach where we don't market directly to the retailed public.
Can you talk to us a little bit more about cost because this has also been a big conversation in the fund industry, the idea of a race to the bottom, the idea that, especially in passive or indexing, the only thing that really matters is your cost ratio, and so you want to get that as low as possible. Is there a limit to how low that can go? And do you yourself feel pressure to get it as low as possible?
Right?
Just to sort of add out to that, like I'm thinking in the Tesla example, someone has to be paying attention to that or that is someone that you know that takes some level of human work to be thinking about these dynamics at which I imagine isn't free. So yeah, i' what is the limit.
Of Yeah, there's two things that go on there. One is the explicit expense ratio, and there has been a strong focus on expense ratios, and we've reacted similarly as we've gained efficiencies with our systems and scale, we've reduced our fees over time. Our weighted average fees come down by about thirty percent in the past, you know, four or five years. So that's one aspect, But the expense ratio is not the only part for total cost of ownership.
There's also things around implementation that are very very important with respect to the total cost of ownership. So we spend a lot of time on education, which is why we have those conferences and so on, and work with them professionals on what are some of the aspects that maybe aren't as obvious but go into the total cost
of ownership. Let's take an example of securities lending, and if you look at securities lending revenue, it can vary across asset category, but I'll take the extreme when emerging market's small, emerging markets small. Over the past few years, typically those strategies have gained forty basis points in securities lending revenue each year. Depending on how you do that, that can be a material percentage of the expense ratio given back to the investors through a process that you
can have going on inside the fund. So I think that they're the total cost of ownership is key, and you have to dig far deeper than the expense ratio to actually get there. When you look at the total cost of ownership of indices, it's actually much higher than the expense ratio because of the way that they're implemented and often the lack of focus on the asset category.
What's next for you? I mean, in sort of the big picture TRENDSFER we sort of trace the sort of lineage of the company and the introduction of various ETFs, what aspects whether it's sort of industry market structure of things like where do you see the future or where are you investing for growth.
One of the big areas that we've been working on recently is our application for exemptive relief for ETF share classes of mutual funds. And we think that if that becomes a high enough priority for the SEC and more folks in the industry are able to get that exemptive relief, we think that could be a big thing for the inserty.
Just why is this important? What is this and why is this important?
Well? This means is that let's say you have an existing mutual fund, OK, you could offer an ETF access point. So let's say an existing mutual fund is purchased by retirement investors through four oh one K accounts. Now you can offer an ETF access point. All of a sudden, you can commingle the retirement savers plus people who maybe have brokerage accounts that are in taxable accounts. That commingle provides economies of scale immediately to both sets of investors.
The SEC has to provide fund managers what's called exemptive relief, so permission to do this. But I think that if more of those types of structures appear in this country, I think that will be a game changer for the mutual fund industry and also for the end investor, because folks who want to make a move from mutual fund to an ETF could now do so without trading if this were put in place more broadly in a very
particular way. So I think that's a big one to keep an eye on, and we're definitely excited and energized by that possibility because we think it can be good for the end investor.
You know, we spoke a little bit about your assets under management more than six hundred billion now, but not the biggest by far. You know, Vanguard black Rock are still the sort of I guess giant whales in the market. How does their growth or their size affect what you do? And I guess how closely do you keep an eye on what your competitors are doing in order to either identify market opportunities or perhaps alpha generation opportunities.
So we definitely try to understand who's doing smart things with respect to investing, because, as I mentioned before, you can always improve on yourself and what you do. So if somebody comes out with a smart way to solve a problem, we're interested in learning. Learning that I think that in terms of how we decide where to go next and what strategies to launch. Typically, there we're not
looking at our competitors. We're looking at our clients, and our clients give us far more precise, informed, useful information on what can be helpful for them and therefore what can lead to more sustainable business opportunities for us. So in that sense, we're maybe a little bit different than others in the industry in that, you know, we kind of march to the beat of our own tune in some respects because we have these strong relationships with academics
and clients. They help us forge a path that we think is the right one, which may be different than others.
Just to get back to the competition real quickly, Tracy mentioned Blackrock and Vanguard, but also we've seen more and more ETF offerings from the likes of JP Morgan and more recently Morgan Stanley that have a lot of sort of natural internal distribution capabilities, and both have wealth management arms and so have advisors for whom they can have a seamless brand. How challenging of that from a competition perspective is that, because obviously Dimensional does not have its
own advisors or Dimensional Wealth Management. When companies that have this sort of end and sort of vertically integrated wealth solution their own people on the ground, their own local offices, their own ETFs, their own fund, how much of a challenges that from a sort of competitive standpoint.
We positioned it as a strength in a strength in the sense that with us in the loop in terms of as conflict free advice as you can possibly get, because we compete on the merits of our investment proposition only, and so that's how we compete, and so we have to convince independent you know organizations that are providing financial advice that the vehicles that we manage and deliver can put their clients in the very best position. So we
put it out there as a strength. It means that we can have to continue to innovate, we have to continue to be introspective, and that when you work with dimensional in our view, you're going to get always the leading edge of what academics have to say about investing in the right way to do it. And so that's how we've kind of positioned it. So it's a source of strength for us and something that keeps us on track,
keeps us disciplined, and keeps us improving. And you know that appeals to a lot of different financial professionals out there in the marketplace.
So one last question we mentioned in the intro but then we kind of glossed over it. But you did study, I believe, physics and you could have been a rocket scientist, but went into finance instead. You happy with that decision.
Yeah, very happy. I started out in theoretical physics actually in my undergrad Then I did a master's in high performance computing, and then I did a PhD at Caltech in aeronautical engineering. And so I really enjoyed it. It was great lessons learned in terms of how to be detail oriented but also see the big picture. I always think that if you're going to be a master it's something you have to be able to see the forest, the trees, and the leaves all at the same time,
and that's when true mastery actually happens. But applying those to the world of finance has been wonderful. Have been to Mention now almost twenty years and I've learned a lot of new things here and served a lot of people here and hopefully improved people's lives. So I think it's been a wonderful journey and I wouldn't change it for anything.
Gerard O'Reilly, thank you so much for coming out Odd Lives this it's a fascinating conversation.
Thank you for having me and enjoyed it.
Tracy, I really enjoyed that conversation. It is funny, like I guess maybe laziness is the right word using some of these terms sort of enterchang, oh, indexing, Yeah, passive, systematic, active, like sort of certain things that I just sort of maybe use one of the other and that actually it's useful to think about the distinctions between these terms.
Oh absolutely, I will say labels have their usefulness as well. Yeah, as sort of like quick catch alls. But the nuance that Girard used in describing their own strategy, so the idea of being passive but not indexed. Also the idea that you know, you can be an indexer, but there are different flavors and skills within indexing itself, so you can be a bad indexer and leave a lot of money on the table when you don't have to, right.
The Tesla example was fascinating. Also the idea that to your question, cost is not everything, or the cost that you see on the page is like this is our expense ratio, or this is the fee for being in. This is not necessarily the all in cost because maybe they're not doing a good job of getting revenue for you for securities lending, and that if you build in that capacity and you find ways to do that efficiently, that's really you know, yeah, that makes a difference.
Well, also, getting back to the starting point of you know, why does the finance industry exist at all? I thought Jared's point that it's not necessarily about trying to have a bunch of smart people beating the market, because according
to the efficient market hypothesis, that is impossible. But more about having financial professionals who are able to interpret clients' needs and figure out what kind of risk profile they need and then look at those risk adjustice returns in the market and figure out what's best.
And then that makes sense of the education. And these are all of those sort of the building, like those deep relationships with the advisors and why that's a particularly necessary aspect of the industry.
And the company.
But we're in Austin, and I think it's time for barbecue.
Let's go get barbaga.
Shall we leave it there?
Let's leave it there?
All right?
This has been another episode of the Odlots podcast. I'm Tracy Alloway. You can follow me at Tracy Alloway.
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