Equity Strategy · 6 min read · 2026-03-05
The 9-rule rebalancing discipline.
Rebalancing is one of the few free lunches in investing. The discipline is doing it without the trades that consume the alpha.
Rebalancing alpha is structural. Most retail captures none of it.
Disciplined rebalancing adds 30–60 basis points of annualized return through systematic contrarian behavior. Most retail does not rebalance — they let winners run and losers stay losers. The opportunity cost compounds across decades.
The nine indicators
The nine rules of rebalancing.
Each defines a specific aspect of disciplined rebalancing. Together they preserve the rebalancing premium while minimizing tax friction and trading cost.
Threshold-based rebalancing (5% drift)
Threshold: 5 pp drift
Calendar rebalancing forces unnecessary trades. Threshold rebalancing only acts when allocation has drifted meaningfully.
Annual review with mid-year tolerance
Pattern: yearly check-in
Most retail benefits from annual review with execution only if drift exceeds threshold. Quarterly review is excessive for most allocations.
Tax-aware execution — tax-advantaged accounts first
Pattern: rebalance in IRA
Rebalancing trades inside IRA/401(k) generate no tax. Use tax-advantaged accounts for the rebalancing flow when possible.
New contributions used for rebalancing
Pattern: directional buying
Direct new contributions to the under-allocated asset class. Adjusts allocation without selling.
Tax-loss harvesting integration
Pattern: harvest while rebalancing
Coordinate tax-loss harvesting with rebalancing to capture losses while rebalancing positions.
Avoid wash-sale violations
Threshold: 30-day window
Rebalancing can trigger wash sales when re-buying recently sold positions. Use correlated alternatives if needed.
Cost basis lot selection
Pattern: specific identification
When selling for rebalancing, select highest-basis lots to minimize realized gain. Most brokerages support specific lot selection.
Asset location coordination
Pattern: tax-efficient placement
Rebalancing should preserve optimal asset location. Don't undo location optimization in pursuit of allocation precision.
Volatility-adjusted thresholds for high-vol assets
Pattern: wider bands on volatile
Single-stock or sector concentration deserves wider drift tolerance. Broad index allocations rebalance at tighter thresholds.
Why rebalancing produces alpha
Rebalancing forces contrarian behavior. As equities rise relative to bonds, the rebalance sells equities and buys bonds. As bonds rise relative to equities, the reverse. The result is selling assets that have appreciated and buying assets that have lagged — exactly the opposite of the typical retail pattern of chasing winners.
Across long horizons, the rebalancing premium has been documented at 30–60 basis points annualized for typical 60/40 portfolios. The premium is structural, not behavioral skill: it captures mean reversion that exists in asset returns. Higher correlation between asset classes reduces the premium; lower correlation increases it.
Threshold versus calendar
Calendar rebalancing — every January 1, for instance — forces trades regardless of whether allocation has drifted. The result is unnecessary turnover and tax friction. Threshold rebalancing acts only when allocation has drifted beyond a defined band, typically 5 percentage points from target.
The empirical evidence consistently favors threshold over calendar rebalancing. Threshold rebalancing has lower turnover and similar or better risk-adjusted returns. The overhead is checking allocation periodically (quarterly is sufficient) and acting only when triggered.
Tax-aware execution preserves the premium
Rebalancing trades in taxable accounts generate capital gains. The friction can consume much of the rebalancing premium for active traders. Two operational principles preserve the alpha. First, prefer rebalancing inside tax-advantaged accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s) where trades are tax-free. Second, direct new contributions to under-allocated asset classes, adjusting allocation without selling.
When taxable selling is necessary, use specific lot identification to sell highest-basis lots first. Combine with tax-loss harvesting where possible — selling at a loss can offset capital gains generated elsewhere.
Behavioral resistance
The hardest part of rebalancing is doing it. Selling appreciated equities to buy lagging bonds in a bull market feels wrong. Buying equities after a 30 percent decline feels reckless. The discipline is following the rule, not the feeling.
Pre-commitment helps. Set the threshold and the action in writing before the rebalancing decision is needed. When the threshold triggers, execute the rule rather than reconsider it. The pre-commitment converts a difficult discretionary decision into a mechanical execution.
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Common questions
Questions.
How often should I rebalance?
Threshold-based: quarterly check-in, action only when 5+ percentage point drift. Most years see 0–1 rebalancing trades.
What about target-date funds?
Target-date funds rebalance internally. The fund handles drift mechanics. The investor's only decision is the choice of fund.
Should I rebalance during a bear market?
Yes — rebalancing during drawdowns is when the premium is largest. Selling bonds to buy equities at depressed prices is the canonical contrarian act.
Does volatility-targeting count as rebalancing?
Different framework. Volatility targeting adjusts allocation based on realized volatility, producing different dynamics than threshold-based rebalancing.
How does asset location interact?
Don't sacrifice location optimization for rebalancing precision. Use new contributions and tax-advantaged accounts to maintain both as much as possible.
Is monthly rebalancing better?
No — research consistently shows monthly rebalancing has too much turnover and underperforms threshold-based approaches on after-tax basis.
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