DFMC is a new micro cap ETF from Dimensional (DFA) for U.S. micro cap stocks, the industry’s first actively managed share class ETF.
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So DFA has had their famous Micro Cap Portfolio Institutional Class mutual fund DFSCX, their first creation, since 1981. It has famously beaten the market over the long term and set the stage for factor investing. The strategy itself has been the cornerstone of the firm and was its first fund.
Now Dimensional investors can buy a new share class of the same fund via a new ETF, for which the ticker is DFMC, which started trading on March 20, 2026. This is the first instance of an actively managed ETF share class being added to an existing mutual fund. Now investors across both share classes will benefit from the ETF’s comparatively greater tax efficiency.
Dimensional originally applied for this structure with the SEC 3 years ago in 2023, and it’s just now coming to fruition. Vanguard previously had the patented competitive moat here, but that patent expired in 2023. Other firms have filed for such exemptive relief from the Investment Company Act of 1940, but Dimensional were the first to get approval.
For the regulatory nerds, we’re specifically referring to the provisions governing a fund’s capital structure, which historically prevented a single portfolio from issuing both ETF and mutual fund share classes simultaneously.
“We have worked closely with the SEC and the firm’s mutual fund and ETF boards over the last several years to broaden investor access to the potential benefits of ETF share classes, including increased tax efficiency and reduced costs from scale,” said Co-CEO and Co-CIO Gerard O’Reilly. “It is fitting for Dimensional to add an ETF share class to its very first fund—a dedicated micro cap strategy that can provide diversification from the broad market and increasingly concentrated large cap strategies.”
Dimensional plan to attach 12 more ETF share classes to existing mutual funds by the end of the year:
Source: Morningstar Direct, SEC, and Dimensional.com. Data as of March 20, 2026. *Expected expense ratios from SEC filings.
Costs for the new ETF’s should be close to that of their corresponding mutual funds. DMFC has a net expense ratio of 0.41%, the same as the mutual fund DFSCX.
So why does any of this matter in any practical sense? Is there any tangible benefit?
This new dual-share class structure will allow firms to maintain their institutional mutual fund lineup for 401k’s and retirement accounts, while also providing more tax-efficient ETF versions to the RIA community. This is a win-win, as it removes more friction for tax-conscious advisors who prefer an ETF wrapper, and mutual fund shareholders will benefit from the ETF share class’s creation and redemption process, which mitigates capital gains distributions.
That is, redemptions in the mutual fund share class can be handled via in-kind transfers, a tax management mechanism that benefits all share class holders, without triggering taxable events at the fund level.
Dimensional didn’t pioneer this idea, but there’s no denying this approval will spark a new era for product innovation in the fund landscape, which should be a net positive for investors of all kinds. The dual share class topic has been the center of speculation for many years, and now Dimensional’s approval makes it a verified reality. DFMC is a proof of concept that could mark the beginning of a structural shift in how active mutual funds are distributed.
This isn’t just marketing jargon. This is a live fund with a 4-decade track record. The new ETF share class is inarguably a meaningful distinction for anyone doing their due diligence.
Let’s also zoom out to briefly discuss micro caps themselves. Investing in them is notoriously difficult to do, much less do well. Micro cap stocks are illiquid and highly volatile, the research coverage is thin, and transaction costs can quietly but substantially erode otherwise potentially juicy returns.
Dimensional’s tried-and-true approach to this segment – emphasizing systematic exposure to small, value-oriented, and high-profitability companies while keeping turnover in check – is made much more efficient by the ETF wrapper, more so than would be seen with, say, a large cap fund. Remember that this is the same fund that made DFA famous over 40 years ago.
What do you think of DFMC? Do you own it? Let me know in the comments.
Disclosure: None.
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