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How to Calculate Portfolio Rebalancing

What is Portfolio Rebalancing?

Portfolio rebalancing restores your target asset allocation after markets shift the proportions. It enforces buy-low/sell-high discipline and keeps your intended risk level consistent.

Formula

Rebalance when allocation drifts > 5% from target; Amount to rebalance = Current portfolio value × (Target % − Current %)
Target
Target asset allocation (Percentage)
Current
Current allocation (Percentage)
Value
Total portfolio value (Currency)
Drift
Allowable allocation drift (Percentage (typically 5%))

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1Compare current weights to target weights
  2. 2Sell over-weight; buy under-weight assets
  3. 3Rebalance annually or when any asset drifts > 5% from target
  4. 4Do it in tax-advantaged accounts to avoid capital gains

Worked Examples

Input
Target 60/40 stocks/bonds; stocks grew to 70%
Result
Sell ~10% of portfolio from stocks; reinvest in bonds

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I rebalance?

Annually or quarterly if you have time. When allocation drifts > 5% from target. Frequent rebalancing (monthly) has tax/trading costs; annual is common.

Does rebalancing improve returns?

No, it locks in discipline and controls risk. Buy low, sell high naturally via rebalancing. Expected return same; volatility lower. Psychological benefit significant.

What are rebalancing costs?

Trading fees, tax on gains if selling appreciated assets. In tax-deferred accounts (401k), costs zero. In taxable, consider tax-loss harvesting while rebalancing.

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