Rebalancing is the process of returning portfolio weights to the original target weights. Rebalancing is carried out so that an investment strategy does not deviate too much from the desired risk profile.
It is important to understand the distinction between traditional securities portfolios and portfolios with a strategic target allocation.
Rebalancing example
We have a portfolio of securities in which the value of the first investment instrument has performed better than the value of the other two investment instruments. As a result, the share of the first security in the total portfolio has changed. It is now 2.2 percentage points more than intended.
Investment instrument | Target weight | effective weight | Deviation in percentage points |
Investment instrument 1 | 25 % | 27.2 % | + 2.2 |
Investment instrument 2 | 45 % | 44.1 % | – 0.9 |
Investment instrument 3 | 30 % | 28.7 % | – 1.3 |
Total | 100 % | 100 % |
Rebalancing realigns the portfolio. In our example, the following transactions are necessary:
- Sell investment instrument 1
- Buy investment instrument 2
- Buy investment instrument 3
How much of the individual securities must be bought or sold depends on the price of the securities. Or, to put it another way, the price can be used to calculate the number of securities that must be bought or sold in order to restore the target weights of the portfolio.
However, because prices fluctuate continuously, it will never be possible to map the target weights exactly in practice (unless you also do continuous rebalancing).
Rebalancing triggers
There are two common triggers that can lead to rebalancing, time or deviation from target weight.
Time
After a certain time has elapsed, rebalancing is performed.
Deviation
Deviation means the difference between the effective portfolio weight and the strategic target weight. As soon as this deviation is greater than a predefined measure (e.g. 1 percentage point), rebalancing is performed.
Combination
In finpension’s offerings, the two triggers are combined: Weekly it is looked how high the deviations between portfolio and target weights are. If the deviation for an instrument is higher than the specified level, rebalancing is performed, otherwise not.
Securities solutions with and without rebalancing
Securities solutions without rebalancing
Conventional securities solutions usually function without rebalancing. With securities solutions, you decide how much money you want to invest in a single security or fund.
Example:
Investment instrument | Investment |
Investment instrument 1 | 10’000 |
Investment instrument 2 | 15’000 |
Investment instrument 3 | 5’000 |
Total | 30’000 |
If you want to invest more later, you decide whether to buy from an existing stock or to add a new stock to the portfolio. When selling, it is the same, just in the opposite direction.
Securities solutions with rebalancing
Securities portfolios with strategic target weights work differently. They do not determine the amount of investment per security, but the share of the total portfolio that a security should have.
Example:
Investment instrument | Target weight |
Investment instrument 1 | 25 % |
Investment instrument 2 | 45 % |
Investment instrument 3 | 30 % |
Total | 100 % |
Only in a second step you decide how much you want to invest. The money that you put into the pot is then invested in the securities, as you have specified with the target weights.