Most actively managed emerging markets funds charge 0.75% or more in annual fees, and the majority still fail to beat their benchmarks over a full market cycle. Dimensional Emerging Core Equity Market ETF (NYSEARCA:DFAE | DFAE Price Prediction) is built on the premise that a rules-based, factor-tilted approach can do better at a fraction of the cost, and so far in 2026, the data supports that case.
What DFAE Is Actually Trying to Do
DFAE is not a passive index fund, but it is not a traditional active fund either. Dimensional Fund Advisors manages it as a systematic strategy that tilts toward smaller companies and value-priced stocks across emerging markets. The idea is that these factors, small-cap and value, have historically delivered higher returns over long periods, even if they come with more volatility along the way. The fund holds a broad, diversified basket of emerging market equities spanning India, China, Brazil, South Korea, Mexico, and beyond, with no single holding exceeding 0.81% of the portfolio. That level of diversification is intentional: the return engine here is factor exposure, not stock picking.
At 0.35% annually, the expense ratio undercuts most active emerging markets peers by a wide margin, which matters because costs compound just like returns do.
How 2026 Performance Stacks Up
Year-to-date through March 3, DFAE is up 7.03%, edging past the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (NYSEARCA:EEM), which returned 6.78% over the same period. The short-term gap is modest, but it reflects the factor tilt beginning to assert itself in an environment where smaller-cap and value-oriented emerging market stocks have found favor.
The longer-term picture is more compelling: over five years, DFAE has returned 40.04% compared to EEM’s 23.38%, a divergence that reflects the cumulative benefit of the small-cap and value tilts compounding over time alongside the fund’s lower cost structure. That five-year spread is where the factor tilt thesis earns its credibility.
The Tradeoffs Worth Understanding
The small-cap and value tilts that drive DFAE’s edge can also drag on performance for extended stretches when large-cap growth dominates, as it did through much of the 2010s. Investors who held through those years would have experienced prolonged underperformance relative to cap-weighted benchmarks. Patience with the strategy is not optional, it is the price of admission.
Emerging markets also carry risks that developed market funds do not: currency volatility, geopolitical exposure, and less predictable regulatory environments. DFAE’s geographic breadth across India, China, Brazil, and others reduces single-country risk, but it does not eliminate it. The fund’s 2.03% dividend yield provides some income cushion, but this is fundamentally a growth-oriented vehicle.
The fund is structured as a long-term, factor-driven emerging markets vehicle. Dimensional’s own research suggests the strategy’s edge has historically materialized over multi-year periods rather than shorter time frames.