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This material may refer to mutual funds offered by Dimensional Fund Advisors Inc. These mutual funds are only available in the United States of America. Nothing in this material is an offer or solicitation to invest in these mutual funds or any other financial products or securities. Figures (if any) in this material are in US dollars unless otherwise stated.

These articles contain the opinions of the author but not necessarily of DFA Australia Limited and does not represent a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product. The opinions of the author(s) are subject to change without notice. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable but it is not guaranteed. These articles are distributed by DFA Australia Limited for educational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice or an offer of any security for sale. Past performance presented is historical and is not indicative of future performance and no representation is made that the stated results will be duplicated.

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Active vs. Passive Management

by Rex A. Sinquefield

October 1995

A transcript of Rex Sinquefield's opening statement in a debate about active vs. passive management with Donald Yacktman at the Schwab Institutional conference in San Francisco, October 12, 1995.

The Dimensions of Stock Returns 2007

by Truman A. Clark

September 2007

In his most recent update on the size and value effects, Truman Clark explains the advantages of seeking exposure to these risk dimensions through core equity strategies.

The Dimensions of Stock Returns: 2002 Update

by Truman A. Clark

April 2002

Earlier research of Fama and French, that found size and book-to-market best explain the variation in stock returns, is updated through 2001.

Explaining Stock Returns: A Literature Survey

by James L. Davis

December 2001

Some of the important financial theories underlying the behavior of stock returns are summarized. Results of several empirical studies into these theories are also described.

Fixed Income Investing

by David A. Plecha

June 2002

Adding fixed income, particularly short-term bonds, to an equities portfolio will reduce volatility. Dimensional seeks to maximize expected return by minimizing the unrewarded risk of long-term instruments and by diversifying globally.

Index and Enhanced Index Funds

by David G. Booth

April 2001

Though they were only launched in the early 1970s, index funds have attracted many investors lured by the logic and overwhelming empirical evidence in support of indexing. This paper develops a case for the use of index funds and Dimensional's enhanced index funds.

The Informational Efficiency of Stock Prices: A Review

by James L. Davis

March 2006

Many studies have discussed whether securities are efficiently priced. The available evidence indicates that professional money managers have not been able to exploit cost-effectively any pricing errors that do occur.

The Information in the Term Structure: An Update

by James L. Davis

October 2000

For most forecasting horizons, the best predictor of spot interest rates is the current interest rate. This implies there is more information in the term structure about expected returns than future interest rates.

Is There Still Value in the Book-to-Market Ratio?

by James L. Davis

January 2001

Despite recent arguments to the contrary, there is no evidence of book-to-market ratio (BtM) becoming irrelevant for identifying value stocks. Compared to popular alternatives, BtM is at least as good at producing dispersion in average returns.

The New Indexing

by Eugene Fama Jr.

July 2000

Old-school indexers claim that holding anything beyond the market portfolio is akin to stock picking. But market risk is only one factor driving returns, and an index fund that takes advantage of other dimensions of risk is not betting—it's the new face of indexing.

Update of the Research Underlying Dimensional's Bond Strategies

by Eugene F. Fama

September 2003

Many investors and financial commentators believe high earnings growth rates and high rates of return go hand in hand. But earnings growth only determines the breakdown of total returns into dividend yield and capital gain. Total expected returns are determined by risk alone.