The Rebalancing Bonus: Calendar vs. Threshold

The Rebalancing Bonus: Calendar vs. Threshold

Stop rebalancing on “January 1st.” Why setting percentage “tripwires” (Thresholds) generates superior alpha by forcing you to buy fear and sell greed.

Dec 27, 2025 Code Authority: Team BMT INVESTING > PORTFOLIO ENGINEERING

Executive Summary

  • The Maintenance Fallacy: Amateurs think rebalancing is just “tidying up.” Professionals know rebalancing is a systematic “Buy Low, Sell High” machine. It forces you to sell what has become expensive (Greed) and buy what has crashed (Fear).
  • Calendar (Lazy) vs. Threshold (Smart):
    Calendar: Rebalancing every Quarter or Year. It ignores market conditions.
    Threshold (Opportunistic): Rebalancing only when an asset drifts by X% (e.g., 5% absolute deviation). If the market crashes 20% tomorrow, the Threshold triggers an immediate buy, while the Calendar waits 3 months and misses the bottom.
  • The Rebalancing Bonus: By using Thresholds, you capture volatility spikes. Studies show this method can add 0.5% – 1.0% annual alpha compared to calendar methods, purely from the mathematical advantage of timing the swings.

The Tax Friction

Warning: Every rebalance is a taxable event in a taxable account.
1. Always use “Inflows” (new cash) to rebalance first (buy the underweight asset).
2. Rebalance inside IRA/401(k) where trading is tax-free.
3. In taxable accounts, allow wider thresholds (e.g., +/- 10%) to minimize capital gains tax.

Mechanic: Setting the Tripwires

Threshold
“If Drift > 5%”
Responsive
Market Driven
Bonus Alpha
Volatility Capture
Discipline
Hard Psychology

Simulation: Volatile Year (Calendar vs. Threshold)

Scenario: Market Crash (-20%) then Recovery (+20%)
Calendar RebalancingMissed the Action
Rebalanced at year-end when prices normalized. No gain.
Threshold RebalancingCaptured the Bottom
Bought stocks when they hit -20% band. Rode recovery up.
Performance Gap+1.2% Alpha
Profit from reacting to the crash instantly.
Feature Calendar (Time-Based) Threshold (Drift-Based)
Trigger Specific Date (e.g., Dec 31) Asset Deviation (e.g., +/- 5%)
Market Crash Does nothing until scheduled Buys aggressively at the bottom
Monitoring Passive (Set and Forget) Active (Requires Software/Alerts)

“Threshold rebalancing requires you to do the hardest thing in investing: Buy when the news is terrible (hitting the lower band) and sell when everyone is celebrating (hitting the upper band).”

Essential Resources

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