Portfolio Rebalancing

Periodically adjusting portfolio weights back to target allocations after market-driven drift.

Portfolio Management

Definition

As asset prices change, portfolio weights drift from targets. A 60/40 portfolio may become 70/30 after a stock rally. Rebalancing sells outperformers and buys underperformers to restore targets—a contrarian strategy that enforces discipline. Calendar-based (quarterly/annually) and threshold-based (rebalance when weights drift 5%+) are common approaches.

lightbulb Example

Target is 60% stocks/40% bonds. After a rally, actual is 68%/32%. Rebalancing sells 8% of stocks (at high prices) and buys bonds (at relatively low prices), restoring 60/40 and reducing risk.

verified_user Key Points

  • Maintains risk profile consistent with investor goals
  • Contrarian discipline: sell high, buy low
  • Calendar or threshold-based triggers
  • Tax-loss harvesting can be combined with rebalancing

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