Rebalancing Threshold
Rebalancing Threshold
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.
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.
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.
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?
B is correct. First, calculate current allocation: Stocks = $420,000 / $550,000 = 76.36%, Bonds = $130,000 / $550,000 = 23.64%. The stock allocation has drifted 6.36% above the 70% target (76.36% - 70% = 6.36%), exceeding the 5% absolute threshold. This triggers rebalancing. Target amounts should be: Stocks = $550,000 × 70% = $385,000, Bonds = $550,000 × 30% = $165,000. To rebalance back to strategic targets: Sell $420,000 - $385,000 = $35,000 of stocks and buy $35,000 of bonds.
A is incorrect because portfolio value increases do not prevent the need for rebalancing; allocation percentages matter, not absolute gains. The 6.36% drift exceeds the 5% threshold. C is incorrect because the current allocation has drifted 6.36%, which exceeds the 5% threshold. D is incorrect because increasing equity exposure would be a tactical allocation change (market timing), not rebalancing to the strategic target specified in the IPS.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to calculate when rebalancing thresholds are breached and distinguish between systematic rebalancing (maintaining strategic allocation) and tactical changes (market-based adjustments). Understanding that rebalancing maintains portfolio discipline regardless of market performance is critical for fiduciary investment management.
What is the primary purpose of establishing a rebalancing threshold in an Investment Policy Statement?
B is correct. A rebalancing threshold specifies how far portfolio allocations can drift from strategic targets (e.g., 5% absolute drift or 20% relative drift) before triggering a rebalancing trade back to the original strategic allocation. This maintains portfolio discipline and risk/return characteristics consistent with the Investment Policy Statement.
A is incorrect because rebalancing thresholds do NOT change strategic allocation; they trigger a return TO strategic allocation. Changing strategic allocation based on market conditions would be tactical asset allocation or market timing. C is incorrect because rebalancing typically requires selling (not increasing) outperforming assets that have grown beyond their target allocation. D is incorrect because rebalancing thresholds measure allocation drift, not maximum loss or liquidation triggers.
The Series 65 exam tests understanding of the fundamental purpose of rebalancing thresholds: maintaining strategic allocation discipline rather than making tactical market-based changes. This distinction is critical for evaluating whether an adviser is following a client's Investment Policy Statement or engaging in unauthorized market timing.
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Access Free BetaAn 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?
A is correct. Calculate the absolute drift for each asset class: Stocks drift = |58% - 50%| = 8% (exceeds 5% threshold - BREACHED), Bonds drift = |35% - 40%| = 5% (exactly at threshold boundary - borderline), Cash drift = |7% - 10%| = 3% (within 5% threshold - no breach). Only stocks have clearly breached the 5% rebalancing threshold with an 8% drift above the target allocation.
B is incorrect because bonds are at exactly the 5% threshold boundary, not breached beyond it; most policies require exceeding (not meeting) the threshold to trigger rebalancing. C would be correct if bonds were considered breached (some advisers might rebalance at the boundary), but typically "breached" means exceeding the threshold. D is incorrect because stocks have clearly drifted 8%, which exceeds the 5% threshold and requires rebalancing.
Rebalancing calculations are common on the Series 65 exam because they test both mathematical skills and understanding of how portfolio maintenance works. Advisers must accurately identify which asset classes have drifted beyond acceptable ranges to execute appropriate rebalancing trades while considering transaction costs and tax implications.
All of the following are considerations when establishing rebalancing thresholds in an Investment Policy Statement EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). Current market trends and momentum indicators should NOT influence rebalancing threshold decisions. Rebalancing thresholds are strategic portfolio management tools designed to maintain the target allocation regardless of market conditions. Allowing market trends to influence rebalancing defeats the purpose of disciplined, systematic portfolio maintenance and introduces market timing bias.
A is accurate: Transaction costs are a critical consideration because tighter thresholds (e.g., 2% vs 5%) trigger more frequent rebalancing, increasing trading costs that can erode returns. B is accurate: Tax implications matter significantly in taxable accounts where selling appreciated assets triggers capital gains taxes; rebalancing in tax-deferred accounts or using new contributions may be more tax-efficient. D is accurate: More volatile asset classes may warrant wider rebalancing thresholds to avoid excessive trading while still maintaining overall portfolio discipline.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to distinguish between strategic portfolio management (setting thresholds based on client circumstances, costs, and portfolio characteristics) and tactical market timing (adjusting based on market views). Understanding that rebalancing should be systematic and disciplined, not reactive to market trends, is fundamental to fiduciary portfolio management.
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
B is correct. Statements 1, 2, and 4 are accurate.
Statement 1 is TRUE: A 5% absolute drift threshold means if the target is 60% stocks, rebalancing triggers when stocks reach 65% (60% + 5%) or 55% (60% - 5%). This is "absolute" drift as opposed to "relative" drift (which would be 20% of 60% = 72% or 48%).
Statement 2 is TRUE: Quarterly reviews (time-based) combined with 5% thresholds (drift-based) create a hybrid approach that ensures portfolios are reviewed regularly while only rebalancing when meaningful drift occurs. This balances discipline with cost efficiency.
Statement 3 is FALSE: Rebalancing to strategic targets is NOT tactical asset allocation. Rebalancing maintains the original strategic allocation (returning to 60/40), while tactical allocation intentionally changes the allocation based on market views (shifting from 60/40 to 70/30 because stocks are expected to outperform). This is a critical distinction.
Statement 4 is TRUE: During rebalancing reviews, advisers can identify positions with unrealized losses that could be harvested for tax benefits while simultaneously executing rebalancing trades. This enhances tax efficiency in taxable accounts.
The Series 65 exam tests detailed understanding of rebalancing mechanics and the critical distinction between strategic rebalancing (returning to targets) and tactical allocation (market-based changes). This question demonstrates how rebalancing procedures, tax efficiency, and portfolio discipline intersect in real-world investment advisory practice.
💡 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.
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