Dimensional Fund Advisors launched its first actively managed ETF share class on March 20, 2026, attaching an exchange-traded wrapper to an existing strategy without forcing a single shareholder to sell a position. Behind that launch sit roughly 98 pending applications at the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to State Street’s Jeff Sardinha. The most consequential structural change to the mutual fund in a decade has stopped being theoretical. For advisors holding clients in legacy mutual funds carrying embedded capital gains, the ETF share class conversions arriving through 2026 are less a new product to buy than a tax-status upgrade on funds clients already own.
The mechanics are unglamorous and the stakes are large. A mutual fund that adds an ETF share class becomes one portfolio with two ways in, and the ETF sleeve carries the in-kind redemption machinery that has let exchange-traded funds defer capital gains distributions for thirty years. The question advisors face in the second half of 2026 is no longer whether the structure works. It is which funds clients hold that are about to get the upgrade, and what that does to rebalancing and tax-loss harvesting plans built around the old wrapper.
Key Takeaways
- Dimensional launched the first actively managed ETF share class on March 20, 2026, and has filed to add ETF shares to more than a dozen US equity funds, with 100-plus mutual funds eligible.
- Roughly 98 ETF share class applications are pending at the SEC, per State Street’s Jeff Sardinha, though not every filer will convert.
- Dimensional holds $286.3 billion in active ETF assets (13.3% share), ahead of JPMorgan Asset Management at $268.7 billion (12.5%) and BlackRock’s iShares at $128.5 billion (6%).
- The structure lets existing mutual fund holders access ETF tax efficiency without a taxable sale, a benefit Vanguard alone held under a patent that lapsed in 2023.
- The SEC attached conditions on fee fairness, daily holdings disclosure, and exchange privileges that advisors should read before assuming every conversion behaves identically.
What Is an ETF Share Class, and Why Does It Matter Now?
A share class is a different entry point into the same pool of securities. Mutual funds have used share classes for decades to separate retail buyers from institutional ones, or to split out different fee arrangements. The ETF share class extends that idea to the wrapper itself. The underlying portfolio does not change. The fund simply offers an exchange-traded version alongside the traditional mutual fund version, and the two share the same manager, the same holdings, and the same track record.
What makes this matter in 2026 is the tax treatment riding inside the ETF wrapper. When an ETF processes redemptions, it can hand securities to authorized participants in kind rather than selling them for cash. That in-kind transfer is not a taxable event for the fund, so the ETF rarely distributes capital gains. Mutual funds, by contrast, sell securities to meet redemptions and pass the resulting gains to every remaining shareholder. An investor who never sold a share can still receive a taxable distribution at year-end because other investors left the fund.
Bolting an ETF share class onto a mutual fund routes redemption pressure through the tax-efficient door. Gerard O’Reilly, Dimensional’s co-chief executive and co-chief investment officer, framed the payoff plainly: broader adoption of the structure “can offer millions of American investors potential benefits of increased tax efficiency and cost savings from economies of scale.” For an advisor, the translation is that a client’s existing fund position can become materially more tax-efficient without triggering the gain that selling and rebuying would create.
Why Dimensional Moved First

Dimensional filed for ETF share class relief in 2023 and had been talking with the SEC about the design since 2019. The firm was positioned to move quickly because it already runs one of the largest active ETF franchises in the country. As of early 2026 Dimensional held $286.3 billion in actively managed ETF assets, a 13.3% share of that market, putting it ahead of JPMorgan Asset Management, which built the largest active ETF book before Dimensional’s recent surge, at $268.7 billion and a 12.5% share. BlackRock’s iShares sat at $128.5 billion and 6%.
That scale matters because the share class only pays off when there is a working ETF operation behind it. A firm with no authorized participant relationships, no capital markets desk, and no ETF distribution cannot simply flip a switch on its mutual fund lineup. Dimensional spent years building the active ETF infrastructure first, which is why its conversion path runs through more than 100 existing mutual funds rather than a handful of pilot products.
The first-mover advantage is real but narrow. The patent that gave Vanguard a two-decade monopoly on this exact structure expired in 2023, and the SEC’s willingness to grant relief to Dimensional signaled that the door was open to everyone else. The competitive question shifted overnight from “can we do this” to “how fast can we file.”
Who Is in the SEC Queue Behind Dimensional?
Sardinha, who tracks the filings at State Street, put the count near 98 applications pending at the SEC. He expects more than just Dimensional to launch within a year, while cautioning that not all 98 firms will follow through. Some filed defensively. Others lack the ETF plumbing to act even if approval comes.
The names in the queue read like a roster of the largest active managers in the country, the firms with the most to lose if their mutual fund assets keep bleeding into competitors’ ETFs. The migration pressure is not abstract. T. Rowe Price has already pivoted hard toward active ETFs, building a $25 billion franchise as its traditional fund assets faced redemptions, and Capital Group’s rise past Vanguard in brand strength tracked the same active-ETF momentum. For these managers, the ETF share class offers a way to keep existing mutual fund assets in place while giving those assets the tax profile that has been pulling money out the door.
Investor appetite supports the rush. A Brown Brothers Harriman survey found that 94% of respondents expect active ETFs to reach $10 trillion within a decade, implying roughly 20% annual growth, and 66% said they prefer active management to passive. The share class is the bridge that lets a mutual fund manager participate in that growth without abandoning the fund business that still holds the bulk of its assets.
The Tax Mechanics Advisors Actually Need to Explain

The client-facing benefit is specific and worth stating in plain numbers. Consider a client holding $400,000 in a Dimensional mutual fund with $150,000 of embedded gains. Under the old choice set, capturing ETF tax efficiency meant selling the mutual fund, realizing the $150,000 gain, and paying the capital gains tax before rebuilding the position in an ETF. At a 23.8% federal rate, that is roughly $35,700 in tax to change wrappers.
The ETF share class removes that toll for the funds that get one. The client keeps the same position, and the manager converts the share class or the client exchanges into the ETF shares of the same fund, a transaction the SEC’s relief is structured to treat as nontaxable. The embedded gain stays embedded. Going forward, the position sheds the year-end capital gains distributions that the mutual fund version would have passed through.
That changes two things advisors do every year. Year-end tax projections built around expected mutual fund distributions need to be revisited for any fund that converts, because the distribution that drove the estimate may no longer occur. And tax-loss harvesting calculus shifts, since a position that no longer throws off gains is a different planning object than one that does. The harvesting playbook that pairs realized losses against fund distributions loses one side of its ledger when the distributions stop.
Where the Structure Could Disappoint
The SEC did not grant the relief unconditionally, and the conditions are where the structure can underdeliver. The agency required filers to address fee fairness between mutual fund and ETF shareholders, daily holdings disclosure for the ETF sleeve, exchange privileges between the share classes, and the accounting differences the two wrappers carry. Each condition is a place where one firm’s implementation can differ from another’s.
Daily holdings disclosure is the condition most likely to surprise managers. Mutual funds disclose holdings quarterly with a lag. ETFs publish daily. A manager running a strategy where the positions themselves are the edge may find that adding an ETF share class forces a transparency it never wanted. That is a reason some of the 98 filers may sit on approval without launching.
The tax benefit also depends on the ETF sleeve actually attracting in-kind redemption activity. A share class that stays tiny relative to the mutual fund body may not generate enough redemption flow to clean out gains efficiently. The structure is a mechanism, not a guarantee, and a fund where the ETF share remains a rounding error will deliver less of the promised efficiency than the marketing implies. Advisors should treat “it has an ETF share class now” as the start of due diligence, not the conclusion.
What This Changes for Model Portfolios
The conversion wave lands at the same time advisors are rebuilding model portfolios around tax efficiency as a default rather than a feature. A fund that converts to add an ETF share class becomes easier to hold in a taxable model, because the year-end distribution risk that made some active mutual funds awkward in taxable accounts recedes. That widens the menu of active strategies a model builder can use without flagging a tax concern to the investment committee.
It also pressures the funds that do not convert. An active mutual fund sitting next to a converted competitor with an identical strategy and a better tax profile becomes harder to defend in a taxable allocation. The same active-versus-index migration that has run for years now gains a second axis: active funds that adopted the ETF share class versus active funds that did not. Recent flow data shows the broader rotation continues, with taxable bond funds drawing inflows even as equity mutual funds shed assets to ETFs. For the week ended May 20, 2026, the Investment Company Institute reported $17.36 billion of outflows from long-term mutual funds against $32.54 billion of net ETF issuance, and April active funds saw $21.25 billion leave while index funds drew $124.14 billion.
The managers reading those numbers know the share class is partly a defensive move. Keeping mutual fund assets in place by giving them an ETF wrapper is cheaper than watching them redeem and chase the assets into a new product.
Questions to Raise Before Your Next Rebalance
The conversion wave rewards advisors who get ahead of it and penalizes those who learn about a fund’s new structure from a client’s tax form. Three questions belong on the agenda for the next investment committee meeting.
1. Which funds your clients hold are in the SEC filing queue, and what is each manager’s stated timeline? The 98 pending applications are public. Map them against the funds that actually appear in client accounts. A fund that converts mid-year changes the distribution math for every taxable holder, and you want that on the calendar before the year-end projection, not after.
2. Does the ETF share class on a converted fund have enough scale to deliver real tax efficiency, or is it a rounding error on the mutual fund body? The structure only works when the ETF sleeve attracts in-kind redemption flow. Ask the manager for the ETF share class assets relative to the total fund. A share class that is 1% of the fund is a label, not a tax strategy.
3. How does a conversion change your tax-loss harvesting plan for that position? A fund that stops distributing capital gains is a different planning object. The harvesting framework that paired realized losses against expected distributions needs a second look for any holding that converts, because one side of that trade may be about to disappear.
About Me
Associate Editor of financial news at Market signals where he writes and edits original analysis in and around the wealth management, as well as other parts of the financial markets and economy. He has more than five years of experience editing, proofreading, and fact-checking content on current financial events and politics.






