Investment Strategies Part 3: Rebalance Regularly Between Asset Classes and Subcategories (2024)

Investment Strategies Part 3: Rebalance Regularly Between Asset Classes and Subcategories (1)The investment metric correlation helps you continually take your gains off the table for safe spending. And it helps you determine what constitutes an asset class and which subcategories to consider for further diversification. Once these categories are defined, correlation can also reveal how much of a bonus to expect from your returns when you rebalance between two categories.

In his 1996 article “The Rebalancing Bonus,” William J. Bernstein presented a brilliant formula to approximate the extra return you can expect by rebalancing your portfolio regularly. We rarely focus on a formula in this column. But there is deep wisdom here, both for portfolio construction and for determining which categories are worth regular rebalancing. Here is the formula:

B1,2 = P1P21σ2(1 – c) + (σ1 – σ2)2 / 2}

Where B is the bonus, P is the percentage allocation, sigma (σ) is the standard deviation (SD) and c is the correlation between the two assets.

The implications of the formula are useful, even for average investors. We can learn six valuable lessons from Bernstein’s model.

First, notice the approximate size of the rebalancing bonus. A 50-50 allocation between two investments with a 0.5 correlation where each investment has an SD of 20% might be typical for equity investments. Such a mix has a rebalancing bonus of 0.5%. We will use the formula to demonstrate ways to boost this bonus. Even a half percentage point is noteworthy.

Investment professionals divide an extra 1% into hundredths of a percent, called “basis points.” Earning an extra 50 basis points is huge. Investment advisors bend over backward for an extra 10. So rebalancing pays.

Second, the rebalancing bonus is the sum of all possible rebalancing bonuses. Our example of a 50-50 allocation has a 0.5% bonus because there is only one potential allocation mix to rebalance. With three categories allocated 33-33-33, the bonus rises to 0.67%. Each of the three rebalancing opportunities contributes 0.22%. Four categories split 25-25-25-25 provide a 0.75% bonus by giving six smaller rebalancing opportunities. Five categories of 20% each give 10 separate pairs of rebalancing for a 0.80% bonus.

Investors are taught to minimize the number of investments and investment categories. Although there is a gradual law of diminishing returns, diversification provides investment gains any time the investment itself is worthwhile and the correlations are low. With computer support for the analysis and rebalancing, investors can handle a large number of categories and holdings.

Third, note that the rebalancing bonus is proportional to the product of the percentage allocated to each holding. With a 50-50 allocation, the product is at its maximum at 0.25. A 60-40 allocation is nearly as high at 0.24. With a 70-30 allocation, the product drops to 0.21. And 80-20 drops all the way to 0.16.

The bonus is at its maximum when roughly equal allocations are made to each asset category. The smallest allocation should be at least half the size of the larger allocations. Our example, with four equal holdings of 25-25-25-25, resulted in a 0.75% bonus. An allocation of 30-20-30-20 is still high with a 0.74% bonus. But a 40-10-40-10 allocation drops the bonus to 0.66%. And an allocation of 85-05-05-05 drops the bonus way down to 0.27%.

Thus when an option is investment worthy, it merits a significant allocation. A good rule of thumb is to only skew an investment choice as much as two thirds to one third. Always invest at least a third into the smaller allocation.

The remaining lessons come from the terms inside the curly brackets of the formula. The allocation product is multiplied by the sum of these two terms. Maximizing their sum augments the bonus gained from rebalancing. Either of these two terms might be zero under certain circ*mstances. Each term has lessons to teach the savvy investor.

The first term depends on the correlation between the two investments. That is, the lower the correlation, the higher the bonus. A correlation of 1 has no bonus. Our example had a correlation of 0.5 and a bonus of 0.5%. If the correlation drops to zero, the bonus doubles from 0.5% to a full percentage point. At negative 0.5, the bonus becomes a full percentage point and a half.

So lesson 4 teaches us that the lower the correlation between two investments, the greater the importance of rebalancing. Rebalancing at the asset class where correlation is the lowest is more consequential than rebalancing between suballocations with a higher correlation.

Fifth, we learn that the higher the volatility of the investments, the greater the bonus in actually rebalancing. In our original example, both investments had a SD of 20%. The higher each SD, the higher the rebalancing bonus. By raising the SD of both investments from 20% to 30%, the rebalancing bonus increases from 0.5% to 1.13%. At 40%, the bonus is 2%. At 50%, the bonus is 3.13%.

Emerging market investments are extremely volatile. When they appreciate, an excellent strategy is to trim the position and take some profits off the table. When it drops precipitously, it is equally critical to reallocate and invest some more. Volatility equals opportunity if you rebalance regularly.

The last term is the difference between the SDs. It was zero in our example because the SDs were both 20%. To consider the contribution to this term, take the case where one of our investments has a 20% SD. But the other investment is as secure as possible and has a SD of zero. The first term becomes zero, but the second term makes up the difference.

With half invested in stable investments, the rebalancing bonus when the other half has a SD of 20% again is 0.5%. As the equity investment becomes more volatile, the bonus increases. At 30% SD, the bonus is again 1.13%. At 40%, the bonus is 2%. And at 50%, it is 3.13%.

Thus the greater the difference between the SD of two investments, the greater the bonus from rebalancing. Moving money from bonds back into stocks after a market correction yields substantial gains. A recent study from Fidelity shows exactly that: “Millionaires who used past recessions as buying opportunities now boast an average of $1 million more in investable asset than millionaires who shifted into more conservative investments.”

Finally, we must learn to recognize when rebalancing provides a good chance of boosting returns and when it is unimportant. Rebalancing between two categories of U.S. stocks with a 0.85 correlation only gains a 0.15% bonus. In contrast, rebalancing between fixed income and emerging markets gains nearly 1.5%.

I asked formula creator William Bernstein how he might caution investors. He answered, “Rebalancing works best with high-volatility, low-correlation assets with similar long-term returns. Although this usually boosts the return of the equity part of the portfolio, if the returns are different enough, as occurred with Japanese equity over the past two decades, it can actually reduce return. This is not a free lunch.”

The markets are inherently volatile. Rebalancing works best for categories that qualify as asset classes or subclasses. Next week we explore which investment categories do not warrant rebalancing because you are more likely to reduce returns than boost them.

Rebalancing is always a contrarian move, selling what has done well and buying what has done poorly. Many investors don’t have the discipline to take that step when it is appropriate. But regularly rebalancing your portfolio offers expected returns about a percentage point better than buy and hold. Rebalance your portfolio regularly, and take advantage of this bonus.

See Also:

  • Investment Strategies Part 1: Rebalance into Stable Investments in an Appreciating Market
  • Investment Strategies Part 2: Use Correlation to Define Asset Classes
  • Investment Strategies Part 4: Don’t Rebalance at the Sector Level
  • Investment Strategies Part 5: In Defense of Diversification

Related Articles

  1. Investment Strategies Part 2: Use Correlation to Define Asset Classes
  2. Investment Strategies Part 4: Don’t Rebalance at the Sector Level
  3. Investment Strategies Part 1: Rebalance into Stable Investments in an Appreciating Market
  4. Rebalancing Asset Classes and Subcategories
  5. Rebalance Accounts Regularly

We have no secret ingredient at Marotta Wealth Management. Instead, we openly and publicly publish our strategies as articles on our website.

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Investment Strategies Part 3: Rebalance Regularly Between Asset Classes and Subcategories (2)

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David John Marotta is the Founder and President of Marotta Wealth Management. He played for the State Department chess team at age 11, graduated from Stanford, taught Computer and Information Science, and still loves math and strategy games. In addition to his financial writing, David is a co-author of The Haunting of Bob Cratchit.

Investment Strategies Part 3: Rebalance Regularly Between Asset Classes and Subcategories (3)

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Investment Strategies Part 3: Rebalance Regularly Between Asset Classes and Subcategories (2024)

FAQs

What are rebalancing strategies? ›

Portfolio rebalancing is an investment strategy that aims to adjust your asset allocation based on current performance and goals. Here are common strategies that you can use to keep your investments on track.

What are the three key asset classes used in investment asset allocation? ›

Historically, the three main asset classes have been equities (stocks), fixed income (bonds), and cash equivalent or money market instruments. Currently, most investment professionals include real estate, commodities, futures, other financial derivatives, and even cryptocurrencies in the asset class mix.

What four types of investment asset classes can make up a portfolio? ›

In finance, asset class is often used to describe a group of investments that are similar and are subject to the same regulations. There are four main asset classes – cash, fixed income, equities, and property – and it's likely your portfolio covers all four areas even if you're not familiar with the term.

What is a constant proportion rebalancing strategy? ›

What is a constant proportion portfolio insurance (CPPI) rebalancing strategy? A constant proportion portfolio insurance (CPPI) strategy involves holding a minimum safety reserve, either in cash or risk-free government bonds, and investing the rest in risky assets, such as stocks.

What is an example of asset rebalancing? ›

Now, imagine that the market value of your stocks grows, but your bonds don't, and you end up with 70% of your portfolio value in stocks and only 30% in bonds. To rebalance, you would sell some of the stocks and buy more bonds—enough of both to bring the percentages back to 60/40.

How to rebalance investments? ›

Steps Needed to Rebalance Your Portfolio
  1. Step 1: Analyze. Compare the current percent weights of each asset class with your predetermined asset allocation. ...
  2. Step 2: Compare. Notice the difference between your actual and preferred asset allocation. ...
  3. Step 3: Sell. ...
  4. Step 4: Buy. ...
  5. Step 5: Add Funds. ...
  6. Step 6: Invest the Cash.

What are the 3 classifications of assets? ›

For accounting purposes, assets are commonly classified as current, fixed, financial, or intangible.

What is the best asset allocation strategy? ›

There is no such thing as a perfect asset allocation model. A good asset allocation varies by individual and can depend on various factors, including age, financial targets, and appetite for risk. Historically, an asset allocation of 60% stocks and 40% bonds was considered optimal.

What are the 3 main investment categories? ›

While the types of investments are numerous, it is possible to group them into one of three categories, equity, fixed-income and cash or cash equivalents. The term “equity” covers any kind of investment that gives the investor an ownership stake in an enterprise. The most common example is common stocks.

What is the key benefit of rebalancing a portfolio regularly? ›

Hence, portfolio rebalancing helps you readjust your portfolio's allocation as per the original or desired asset allocation. In addition, if your investment strategy or risk tolerance has changed, you can use portfolio rebalancing to readjust the weight of each security or asset class in the portfolio.

What are the 3 classifications for investment accounting? ›

As time elapses and the fair value of the assets change, the accounting treatment will depend upon the classification of the assets, described as either held-to-maturity, held-for-trading, or available-for-sale.

What are the asset classes and asset categories? ›

An asset class is a grouping of investments based on shared behaviors, characteristics, and regulations. Equities and cash are two of the asset classes, for example. Equities have their own risk, return, and liquidity profile, which is different from the risk, return, and liquidity profile of cash.

What is the best frequency of rebalancing? ›

How Often Should I Rebalance My Portfolio?
Rebalancing FrequencyAnnualized ReturnStandard Deviation
Quarterly8.91%8.80%
Annual8.97%8.76%
2 Years9.12%8.95%
5 Years9.18%9.34%
1 more row

What is strategic rebalancing? ›

The second alternative is called strategic rebalancing, which uses smart rebalancing timing based on trend-following signals—without a direct allocation to a trend-following strategy.

What is the automatic rebalancing strategy? ›

Automatic rebalancing is the process of restoring the ratio of stocks, bonds and other assets when gains or losses move them out of alignment with the original portfolio design.

What is the 5/25 rule for rebalancing? ›

The 5/25 rule for rebalancing indicates that you ought to adjust your portfolio if the proportion of any asset deviates from its intended initial allocation by an absolute margin of 5% or a relative one of 25%, opting for whichever threshold is lower.

What are the options for rebalancing? ›

There are several types of strategies for rebalancing, such as calendar, constant-mix, and portfolio-insurance. Calendar rebalancing is the least costly but is not responsive to market fluctuations. The constant-mix strategy is responsive but more costly to use than calendar rebalancing.

What is the rebalancing strategy of investors? ›

Rebalancing is typically accomplished by selling outperforming assets and using the proceeds to invest in opportunities in another asset class.

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