Portfolio Rebalancing Basics
How to bring a portfolio back toward target allocation without reacting to every headline.


How to bring a portfolio back toward target allocation without reacting to every headline.
Markets move your allocation for you
If stocks rise faster than bonds or cash, the portfolio can become more aggressive than intended. If stocks fall, the portfolio may become more conservative. Rebalancing brings the mix back toward the plan.
Why rebalancing helps
- Keeps risk aligned with the goal
- Creates a rule-based review rhythm
- Reduces emotional decision-making
- Can trim concentration after strong gains
- Can direct new contributions toward underweight areas
How often to review
Many long-term investors review on a calendar schedule or when allocations drift past a chosen band. The point is not constant tinkering. The point is keeping the portfolio connected to the goal.
Use new contributions first
Before selling investments, consider directing new contributions toward the underweight area. That can reduce trading and tax complexity in taxable accounts.
The next move
Write down the target allocation, check current weights, and define what amount of drift triggers a review. The Portfolio Analyzer page can help frame the diagnostic.
Related Investify guides and tools
Use these next if you want to turn the idea into a number, a tradeoff, or a clearer plan.
Investify provides educational tools and information only — not financial, tax, or investment advice. Results are estimates. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions.
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