What
is it?
It
is adjusting the weightings of the different asset classes in your portfolio,
usually by buying and selling holdings to bring the overall allocation of
assets back in line with your risk profile and goals.
Why
is it important?
A
well-diversified portfolio that is effectively rebalanced has a role to play in
mitigating market volatility and ultimately risk. If you do not rebalance, you
could expose yourself to too much risk which you might not be comfortable with
or cannot afford to take. Conversely, you might not be taking enough risk to
achieve the returns you are expecting or limiting your portfolio’s growth
potential.
We
are in a period of market unrest and over the past year we have seen the US
stock market and US Treasuries, usually uncorrelated sectors, fall in unison.
This is something that we have only seen happen 5 months in 50 years, 2 of
those months being April and June 2022. Likewise, certain market sectors have
unexpectedly over/underperformed e.g. the US tech sector has seen astonishing
returns over the pandemic (48% in 2019, 42% in 2020 and 33% in 2021) only to be
down 27% in US dollar terms by June 2022.
We
all know we should sell high and buy low, but the markets are notoriously
difficult to time - even the professionals get it wrong, but regular
rebalancing can be a highly effective mechanism to manage the highs and lows of
markets.
From
the tech example above, you can see how easy it is for portfolios to fall out
of balance relatively quickly. If your portfolio has 10% invested in tech and
this grew to 20% during the pandemic, it would be prudent to rebalance this
sector back to 10%. Allowing it to grow leaves the portfolio poorly
diversified, potentially increasing risk and volatility, and in this example,
you would be highly exposed to the future downturn in 2022 – a potentially
short-term loss that you may not have the stomach or the capacity to
experience.
How
often?
This
is a personal decision. You can take a time-based approach by doing it
quarterly, biannually or annually, or you can choose to rebalance once your
portfolio weighting reaches a certain tipping point e.g. once equities exceed
60%.
Having
said this, you should not overdo it as it may be counterproductive e.g. if
there are costs/taxes involved and the portfolio has only shifted minimally.
Conversely, not doing it regularly enough may mean you go a year with an asset
allocation that does not align with your risk approach or goals.
Benefits
of professional advice
There
is a certain discipline required when investing which somewhat goes against our
natural human instinct and many investors allow their emotions to guide their
actions.
This
might be clinging onto investments in the hope that they will ‘go back up’ to a
previous high, holding on to strong performing stock believing that growth will
be indefinite, or panicking and pulling out of the market completely, only to
miss out on an eventual upturn.
It
is important to have a clear long-term plan for your portfolio, rather than to
worry about the daily ups and downs. We believe that having an independent
professional adviser on your side can help take out the emotion, provide
clarity during difficult periods and enforce a rational approach to your
investments during all market conditions.
If
you would like to discuss your investments or how best to build your own
portfolio, please get in touch.
Debrah Broadfield and Mark Quinn are Chartered Financial Planners with
the Chartered Insurance Institute and Tax Advisers, qualifying with the Association
of Tax Technicians. Contact Debrah and Mark at: +351 289 355 316 or mark.quinn@spectrum-ifa.com/debrah.broadfield@spectrum-ifa.com