Media Contacts
|
North America Faith Yando VP, Global Public Relations faith.yando@dimensional.com Phone: +1 (512) 306-4366 |
Australia/Asia Jim Parker VP, Communications jim.parker@dimensional.com Phone: +61 (2) 8336 7168 |
EMEA Andrew Webb Communications andrew.webb@dimensional.com Phone: +44 (0) 20 3033 3358 |
- Date:
- Title
By
Rob Carrick, The Globe and Mail
Date:
October 2012
2012-10- 1
The Globe and Mail, Canada's national newspaper, chronicles Dimensional's investment philosophy, roots in academic research, low fees relative to industry standards, and the competitiveness of Dimensional's fund performance.
By
Jessica Toonkel, Investment News
Date:
December 2010
2010-12-20
David Booth discusses how he shared the small cap risk/return story with clients in the early days and sums up several facts about Dimensional today.
By
Pauline Skypala, Financial Times
Date:
November 2010
2010-11-22
David Booth, chairman and co-CEO at Dimensional, is featured in a Financial Times article highlighting how the firm's ideas and investment approach have led to continued growth and fund outperformance.
Dimensional CEO David Booth talks to the Financial Times about his gift to the University of Chicago.
A thorough, consultative approach to wealth management will gain client trust and will provide the financial advisor with the background needed to offer an insightful investment solution, encouraging a long-term client relationship.
By
Tom Petruno, Los Angeles Times
Date:
December 2005
2005-12-15
Upon his retirement, Rex Sinquefield recalls how the embrace of market efficiency and the construction of a database of historical security prices paved the way for success of Dimensional's investment strategies.
The financial media has an agenda and it's not to provide investors with the most sensible advice.
Over time, the mutual fund industry has evolved along with the industry's knowledge of what works and what doesn't in the world of investing. Financial advisors have more tools available to them today to help make their clients' investing experience a successful one.
Financial advisors have an opportunity to redefine their roles and add more value for their clients by focusing less on pervasive industry practices like active management and research and concentrating more on their clients' needs and goals.
By
Ben Wilmot, Australian Financial Review
Date:
March 2003
2003-03-15
Rex Sinquefield and Ken French tell the Australian Financial Review that Dimensional's assessment of the securities market is the same no matter what the current economic or political trends. Discipline in money management has paid off for Dimensional in the entire global marketplace.
The Australian magazine IFA interviewed Gene Fama Jr. on topics from efficient markets to the emergence of fee-only financial advice. He gives a snapshot of Dimensional's philosophies, and explains how the firm interprets the latest market volatility.
Harvard Business School has conducted and published an independent case study of Dimensional Fund Advisors.
Strict professional criteria make it difficult for most investors to buy DFA funds. But those who do invest benefit from the firm's disciplined approach.
By
Crystal Detamor-Rodman, AIMR Exchange
Date:
May 2002
2002-05-15
A tax-efficient strategy begins with a broadly diversified portfolio. From there, it's critical to keep turnover low and minimize the impact of capital-gains tax and dividend-income tax.
Poorly managed, distressed companies have higher expected returns than high-profile growth companies that attract stock pickers' attention. Over time, distressed companies' higher costs of capital translate to stronger performance for investors.
By
Garrett Quigley and Rex A. Sinquefield, Journal of Asset Management
Date:
February 2000
2000-02-15
An examination of the performance of UK equity trusts finds, net of expenses, that they reliably underperform the market. The study also shows that good performance does not reliably persist but bad performance does.
David Booth and Rex Sinquefield founded Dimensional based on academic research rather than traditional analysis. Eighteen years later the University of Chicago—where much of the research originated—awarded them both with alumni honors.
Rex Sinquefield discusses active and passive management and the track records of past fund managers in the context of today's academic outlook. He further expounds upon the variety of philosophies and strategies used by Dimensional in its investment practices.
Professor Eugene Fama talks about his efficient market theory, how stocks in different asset classes tend to perform over the decades, and the Fama/French three-factor model of risk dimensions.
The late Merton Miller was a giant in the field of finance, a Nobel laureate, and a member of the Board of Directors of Dimensional Fund Advisors. In this interview he discussed his scholarship on the turbulent economy of the 1920s and '30s, and offered insight into the academic side of the world of finance.
The CRSP database was created at the University of Chicago in the '60s to take advantage of large computers and to compile information and prices on a vast array of securities.
The academic climate at the University of Chicago in the early '70s planted a seed in the professional relationship between David Booth and Rex Sinquefield, which came to fruition when they later joined forces to found an investment firm based on the very academic research that brought them together.


