Portfolio Rebalancing — What It Means and Why It Matters for Your Finances
Portfolio rebalancing is the process of realigning your asset allocation to match your target. Learn how rebalancing works, when to do it, and common strategies.
Definition
Portfolio rebalancing is the process of buying and selling assets in your investment portfolio to restore your original target allocation. Over time, as different assets grow at different rates, your portfolio drifts from your intended mix. Rebalancing brings it back in line.
For example, if you target 80% stocks and 20% bonds, a strong stock market year might push your portfolio to 88% stocks and 12% bonds. Rebalancing means selling some stocks and buying bonds to return to 80/20.
How It Works
Rebalancing follows a cyclical process:
- Set a target allocation — e.g., 80% global equities, 15% bonds, 5% cash
- Monitor drift — check how far your actual allocation has moved from the target
- Trigger rebalancing — when drift exceeds your threshold (typically 5% absolute)
- Execute trades — sell overweight assets, buy underweight ones
- Repeat — on a calendar schedule or threshold-trigger basis
There are two main approaches:
- Calendar rebalancing — rebalance on a fixed schedule (quarterly, semi-annually, or annually)
- Threshold rebalancing — rebalance whenever any asset class drifts beyond a set percentage from its target (e.g., ±5%)
Research suggests both approaches produce similar long-term results. Annual or semi-annual rebalancing strikes a good balance between maintaining discipline and minimizing transaction costs.
Example with Numbers
You start the year with PLN 100 000 allocated as:
| Asset | Target | Start Value |
|---|---|---|
| Global equities | 70% | PLN 70 000 |
| Bonds | 20% | PLN 20 000 |
| Cash | 10% | PLN 10 000 |
After a year where equities gained 20% and bonds gained 3%:
| Asset | New Value | Actual % | Target % | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Global equities | PLN 84 000 | 76.0% | 70% | Sell PLN 6 620 |
| Bonds | PLN 20 600 | 18.6% | 20% | Buy PLN 1 510 |
| Cash | PLN 10 000 | 9.0% | 10% | Buy PLN 1 060 (from equity sale + dividends) |
Portfolio total: PLN 110 600 After rebalancing, you're back to 70/20/10.
By selling equities at a high point and buying bonds, you're systematically selling high and buying low — the essence of disciplined investing.
Why It Matters
Controls risk. Without rebalancing, a portfolio naturally drifts toward its highest-performing (and often riskiest) asset. After a multi-year bull market, an unbalanced portfolio might be 95% stocks — far riskier than you intended.
Enforces discipline. Rebalancing forces you to sell winners and buy underperformers — the exact opposite of emotional investing. This counterintuitive behavior is one reason rebalanced portfolios often outperform unmanaged ones on a risk-adjusted basis.
Maintains your risk profile. Your target allocation reflects your risk tolerance, time horizon, and financial goals. Rebalancing keeps your portfolio aligned with your actual needs.
Captures reversion to mean. Asset classes tend to cycle. By periodically selling outperformers and buying underperformers, you position yourself to benefit when cycles turn.
Common Mistakes
Rebalancing too frequently. Monthly rebalancing generates excessive transaction costs and potential tax events with minimal benefit. Annual or semi-annual is usually optimal.
Ignoring tax implications. Selling winners triggers capital gains tax (19% in Poland — the Belka tax). When possible, rebalance by directing new contributions to underweight assets rather than selling.
Emotional resistance. It feels wrong to sell your best-performing assets. But that's precisely the point — rebalancing prevents you from riding momentum into a crash.
Forgetting to rebalance at all. The most common mistake. Set a calendar reminder or use a platform that offers automatic rebalancing.
Overcomplicating allocation. A portfolio with 15 different asset classes is nearly impossible to rebalance effectively. Keep your allocation simple — 3–5 asset classes is plenty for most individual investors.
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