1971: The Beginning of a New Way to Invest, Based on Science


I’d rather be an investor in 2024 than in 1971. Back then, investment options were limited, opaque, and expensive. Portfolios were based on predictions and often highly concentrated.

Starting in the mid-1960s when computers became available, leading academics began developing and testing theories with stock market data. Within a short period of time, seminal research came out that paved the way for investing to shift from being a speculative sport to becoming a science.


Photo of David Booth on the street holding a portfolio case.
David Booth in the early 1970s.

So, what did these academics uncover? For one, professional money managers performed no better than you’d expect by chance. After fees, they performed worse than chance and their results looked random. Gene Fama at the University of Chicago developed the efficient market hypothesis, which offered a sensible theory as to why. His main insight was that markets do a good job incorporating all available information and driving it into prices. That’s great news for investors because it means you can win without having to identify pricing “mistakes” or predict the future. In many ways, it heralded the democratisation of investing.

I was lucky to be at the University of Chicago as many of these new ideas were being developed. It’s hard to describe how exciting it was. Groundbreaking ideas led to more research and more questions. It inspired me to put these ideas into practice.


Photo of Eugene Fama sitting at a computer.
Photo of the campus of the University of Chicago.
Professor Eugene Fama at the University of Chicago.

Fast-forward to 1971. One of the first index funds, which I worked on with Mac McQuown when he led the management sciences division at Wells Fargo Bank, was an initial step in applying these insights. Mac had what is now the “who’s who” list of academics consulting with the team. Several went on to earn Nobel Prizes. We asked ourselves, “If it’s difficult for investors to consistently pick winners, is there a way to beat the market without outguessing it?”


Photo of Mac McQuown sitting at a table.
John “Mac” McQuown at Wells Fargo in the early 1970s. (Photo is used with permission from Wells Fargo Corporate Archives.)

The group contemplated different weighting schemes and adding leverage as potential ways to perform better. That led to our launching an equally weighted New York Stock Exchange index fund. Two attributes emerged as important when forming an index portfolio: maximising diversification and minimising costly trading. Shortly after our launch, the trust department at Wells Fargo came up with the idea of simply tracking the S&P 500 Index using market-cap weighting. That caught people’s imaginations because it’s easy to explain and cheap to do.

Indexing was revolutionary at the time, because it meant that investors could finally capture market returns without trying to time the market or pick stocks. It also created a new standard of manager accountability that was easy to monitor. Unless the index fund matched the returns of the index minus its fees, managers weren’t doing their jobs. But what started as a way to hold managers accountable became an obsession with zero tracking error. This fixation on matching—rather than beating—benchmarks is unnecessarily rigid. It shortchanges the investor and leaves money on the table. That’s why, soon after creating the first index funds, my colleagues and I were driven to create something even better.

When we founded Dimensional in 1981, we wanted to give investors the opportunity to do better than indexing, while still maintaining the virtues of diversification and low costs. We call this better way Dimensional Investing. Our first advantage is structural, designing portfolios informed by financial science. Weighting stocks by market capitalisation, as many indexes do, is not the only way to form a diversified portfolio with exposure to a market segment. Subsequent research has found that not all stocks have the same expected returns, so we systematically emphasise dimensions of the market that historically have outperformed.


John “Mac” McQuown and David Booth at Dimensional in the 1980s.
Photo of Mac McQuown and David Booth sitting at a table.

Second, implementation matters. While many indexes rebalance as infrequently as once or twice a year, staying flexible allows you to buy and sell securities every day based on up-to-date information on what can improve returns. Engineering portfolios and implementing well is what Dimensional has been doing and improving upon for 43 years. Because we’re not beholden to a rigid goal of matching an index, we trade what we want to, and when.

That flexibility has been a key source of value, because it allows us to seek better prices than index funds may get. Myron Scholes and Robert Merton became Nobel laureates for their options pricing model, which highlighted the merits of flexibility. The insight applies well beyond options—more flexibility in implementation could give investors a better deal while still allowing them to benefit from the positives of indexing. Flexibility is key to distinguishing what we do at Dimensional from what indexers have been doing for 50 years.


Photo of Robert Merton and Myron Scholes standing and clapping.
Robert Merton and Myron Scholes at the Nobel ceremony in 1997.

It is remarkable to look back at 1971 and see how much the world has changed. When it comes to investing, people are having a much better experience today—fees are lower, transparency is higher, and our understanding of markets has advanced. We founded Dimensional with the belief that we could do better for investors, and looking back over the last four decades, we have.

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