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Rebalancing to manage portfolio drift without timing the market

Portfolios drift when one asset class outperforms another, changing the allocation you originally set. Rebalancing restores balance, locks in gains, and keeps your risk in check. This article explains how to monitor drift, decide when to rebalance, and implement the adjustments without trying to time market swings.

Know your target allocation

Start with a clear allocation—for example, 60% stocks, 30% bonds, 10% alternatives—based on your goals and risk tolerance. Document the allocation in your command center or investment dashboard so you can compare the current mix to the target.

Rebalancing matters because drift changes your risk profile; if equities surge, your portfolio becomes more aggressive than intended. Rebalancing brings it back to your intended risk level.

Monitor drift thresholds

Define rules for rebalancing:

Use a spreadsheet that calculates current allocation percentages and highlights where the drift occurred. If domestic stocks drift from 60% to 68%, trim them and add to underweight categories like bonds or international exposure.

Rebalancing without excessive trading

You don’t need to sell winners:

This minimizes transaction costs and tax implications. Keep rebalancing moves intentional—document the action, reason, and outcome in your investment log.

Tax-aware rebalancing

In taxable accounts, selling winners can trigger capital gains. Strategies:

Note the tax implications next to each rebalancing action in your command center so you keep the strategy visible.

Rebalancing during volatile markets

Market volatility may tempt you to “wait for a bottom.” Instead:

Keeping a rebalancing log helps you revisit the decision—if you hesitated, note why; this reflection deepens your financial resilience.

Closing reflection

Rebalancing keeps your portfolio aligned with your goals without bad timing. Monitor drift, rebalance when thresholds trigger, use contributions to buy underweight assets, and keep the tax implications in view. When you treat rebalancing as a regular habit—not a reaction—you stay calm through market swings and maintain clarity on your long-term plan.