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What Is Rebalancing?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 8, 20264 min read
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Rebalancing is the process of returning a portfolio to its target asset allocation by selling outperforming assets and buying underperforming assets.

Why Rebalancing Matters

Portfolio allocations drift as assets grow at different rates:

Original allocation: 70% stocks, 30% bonds

After 5 years (stocks up 50%, bonds up 10%):

  • Stocks: $175,000 (was $70,000)
  • Bonds: $33,000 (was $30,000)
  • Total: $208,000
  • New allocation: 84% stocks, 16% bonds

Your portfolio is now too aggressive. If a market crash occurs, losses will be larger than intended. Rebalancing returns it to 70/30.

How Rebalancing Works

Step 1: Calculate current allocation

  • Stocks: 84% of $208,000 = $174,720
  • Bonds: 16% of $208,000 = $33,280

Step 2: Calculate target allocation

  • Stocks target: 70% of $208,000 = $145,600
  • Bonds target: 30% of $208,000 = $62,400

Step 3: Rebalance

  • Sell $29,120 of stocks
  • Buy $29,120 of bonds

Result: Back to 70/30 allocation

Rebalancing Frequency

Monthly: Too frequent; wastes money on transaction costs

Quarterly: Still too frequent for most investors

Annually: Optimal balance; captures significant allocation drift without excessive costs

As-needed (threshold-based): Rebalance only when allocation drifts >5% from target

Example: If target is 70/30 and allocation becomes 75/25, rebalance. If it becomes 71/29, don't (drift is minor).

The Emotional Benefit

Rebalancing forces contrarian behavior:

In 2020 (bull market):

  • Stocks were booming
  • Emotions: "Buy more stocks!"
  • Rebalancing: "Sell some stocks; buy bonds"
  • Timing: Sell near the top (good)

In 2022 (bear market):

  • Stocks were crashing
  • Emotions: "Sell everything!"
  • Rebalancing: "Sell some bonds; buy stocks"
  • Timing: Buy near the bottom (good)

Rebalancing mechanically forces you to do the opposite of what emotions recommend—buying low, selling high.

Returns Impact

Research shows rebalancing improves long-term returns by roughly 0.1-0.2% annually, depending on asset volatility.

On a $1 million portfolio:

  • 0.15% improvement = $1,500/year
  • Over 30 years at compound growth: $100,000+ in extra wealth

This isn't a large improvement, but it's reliable and comes from disciplined behavior (not complex strategies).

Tax Implications

In taxable accounts: Rebalancing creates capital gains (selling appreciated assets = taxable event)

Strategy: Rebalance by directing new money to underweighted assets (buying bonds instead of stocks) rather than selling stocks.

In retirement accounts (401k, IRA): No tax consequences for rebalancing; you can freely sell and buy without tax impact.

This is one reason retirement accounts are superior—you can rebalance without tax friction.

Automatic Rebalancing Strategies

1. New money direction

  • Target 70/30
  • Allocation drifts to 75/25
  • New $10,000 contribution goes entirely to bonds (25% of $40,000 = $10,000 in bonds)
  • Gradually returns to 70/30

2. Target-date funds

  • Automatically rebalance internally
  • No action required
  • 0.03-0.15% expense ratio

3. Automated rebalancing

  • Many brokers offer automatic rebalancing
  • Set it and forget it
  • Rebalances quarterly or annually

Rebalancing During Crises

Rebalancing is most valuable during crises, but most psychologically difficult:

2008 financial crisis:

  • Stocks down 50%
  • Investors who rebalanced (selling bonds, buying stocks at 50% discount) prospered
  • Investors who panicked and sold everything suffered

Benefit of rebalancing: It forces you to have a plan before emotions take over. You've already decided: "If stocks crash, I'll buy." When they crash, you execute the plan.

Rebalancing Costs

Transaction costs: Minimal with modern brokers ($0 trading commissions)

Tax costs: Can be significant in taxable accounts if rebalancing creates gains

Spread costs: Selling and buying creates bid-ask spreads (usually 0.01-0.05% for stocks)

Total costs are typically <0.2%, so annual rebalancing paying 0.2% cost to gain 0.15% return is roughly break-even (but improves discipline, which has value).

Rules of Thumb

Simple approach:

  • Rebalance annually on a fixed date (e.g., January 1)
  • Set and forget
  • No complex calculations

Threshold approach:

  • Set tolerance bands (e.g., 70% ±5% = 65-75%)
  • Monitor allocations quarterly
  • Rebalance only when drifting outside bands
  • Reduces unnecessary trading

Rebalancing a 3-Fund Portfolio

Target allocation:

  • 50% VTI (U.S. stocks)
  • 30% VXUS (International)
  • 20% BND (Bonds)

Annual rebalancing:

  1. Calculate current dollar amounts and percentages
  2. Determine how much to buy/sell to return to 50/30/20
  3. Execute trades
  4. Done for the year

Simple, disciplined, and effective.

The Bottom Line

Rebalancing is not exciting, but it's mathematically sound and psychologically valuable. It forces discipline, improves returns slightly, and ensures you maintain your target risk level.

The best portfolio isn't the one with the highest return—it's the one you'll stick with during crashes. Rebalancing helps ensure you stick with your plan when emotions run high.

◆ Sources

  1. Rebalancing Explained — Investopedia
  2. Investor.gov — Asset Allocation & Rebalancing
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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