Rebalancing Threshold

Client Recommendations High Relevance

The percentage deviation from target strategic asset allocation that triggers portfolio rebalancing. For example, if strategic allocation is 60% stocks with a 5% threshold, rebalancing occurs when stocks drift to 65% or 55%. This returns the portfolio to its strategic allocation, not a tactical adjustment based on market views.

Example

A client has a 60% stock / 40% bond portfolio with a 5% rebalancing threshold. After a strong market rally, stocks grow to 65% of the portfolio. The 5% drift (from 60% to 65%) triggers rebalancing: the adviser sells stocks and buys bonds to return to the 60/40 strategic target.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse rebalancing (returning to strategic allocation) with tactical asset allocation (intentionally changing allocation based on market views). Also, the threshold percentage (5% drift) is commonly confused with the target allocation percentage (60% stocks). Rebalancing maintains discipline; tactical changes reflect market timing.

How This Is Tested

  • Calculating when a rebalancing threshold is breached based on portfolio drift
  • Distinguishing between rebalancing (return to strategic target) and tactical allocation adjustments (market-based changes)
  • Understanding that rebalancing thresholds are specified in the Investment Policy Statement
  • Recognizing tax considerations when rebalancing in taxable vs. tax-deferred accounts
  • Identifying appropriate rebalancing frequency and threshold levels based on client circumstances

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Common absolute drift threshold 5% deviation E.g., 60% target triggers at 65% or 55%
Common relative drift threshold 20% deviation E.g., 60% target triggers at 72% (60% × 1.20) or 48% (60% × 0.80)
Rebalancing frequency (time-based) Quarterly or annually Often combined with threshold-based rebalancing

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Michael, a 55-year-old investor, has a $500,000 portfolio with a strategic allocation of 70% stocks and 30% bonds. His Investment Policy Statement specifies a 5% absolute rebalancing threshold. After a market rally, his portfolio is now worth $550,000, with stocks valued at $420,000 and bonds at $130,000. His investment adviser reviews the portfolio for potential rebalancing. What action should the adviser recommend?

Question 2

What is the primary purpose of establishing a rebalancing threshold in an Investment Policy Statement?

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Question 3

An investor has a portfolio with a strategic allocation of 50% stocks, 40% bonds, and 10% cash with a 5% absolute rebalancing threshold. The current allocation is 58% stocks, 35% bonds, and 7% cash in a $400,000 portfolio. Which asset class(es) have breached the rebalancing threshold and require adjustment?

Question 4

All of the following are considerations when establishing rebalancing thresholds in an Investment Policy Statement EXCEPT

Question 5

A registered investment adviser is reviewing rebalancing procedures for client portfolios. The firm's standard practice uses a 5% absolute drift threshold with quarterly reviews. Which of the following statements about this rebalancing approach are accurate?

1. The 5% threshold means rebalancing occurs when an asset class moves 5% in absolute terms from its target allocation
2. Quarterly reviews with threshold-based triggers combine time-based and drift-based rebalancing strategies
3. Rebalancing to strategic targets is a form of tactical asset allocation
4. Tax-loss harvesting opportunities can be identified during rebalancing reviews in taxable accounts

💡 Memory Aid

Rebalancing threshold is like lane departure warning in a car. When your portfolio drifts 5% outside target lanes (strategic allocation of 60% stocks), alarms trigger and you steer back to center (rebalance to 60%). You're not changing your destination (strategic plan), just staying on course. Drift = Threshold. Return = Rebalance.

Related Concepts

This term is part of these clusters: