| Rebalancing Act |
| Written by honorvise | |||
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March 2010 Global diversification gives investors a valuable tool for managing risk and volatility in a portfolio. But smart diversification has an important side effect. It requires maintenance. At first glance, rebalancing seems counter-productive. Why sell a portion of outperforming asset groups and acquire a larger share of underperforming ones? Intuition might suggest that selling previous winners may hinder returns in the future. This logic is flawed, however, since past performance may not continue in the future-and there's no reliable way to predict future returns. In the real world, portfolio allocations are usually complex, incorporating not only fixed income and equity, but also the multiple asset groups within equity investing. The more complex a portfolio's allocation, the greater is the need for maintenance. Determining when and how to effectively rebalance requires careful monitoring of performance and awareness of your tax status, cash flow, financial goals, and risk tolerance. Rebalancing also incurs transaction fees and potential capital gains in taxable accounts. Thus, while there are good reasons to rebalance, the benefits must outweigh the costs.
Rebalancing incurs real costs that can detract from returns. We can help investors define ranges within which investment components can acceptably drift, and adopt cost-saving strategies during rebalancing, paying particular attention to tax-sensitive transactions. In helping our clients rebalance, we strive to develop a structured plan that remains flexible to each individual's unique blend of goals, risk tolerances, cash flow, and tax status. Endnotes 1 Gilbert L. Beebower , Gary P. Brinson, and L. Randolph Hood, "Determinants of Portfolio Performance ," Financial Analysts Journal 42, no. 4 (July/August 1986): 15-29. Gilbert L. Beebower, Gary P. Brinson, and Brian D. Singer, "Determinants of Portfolio Performance II: An Update," Financial Analysts Journal 47, no. 3 (May/June 1991): 40. Disclosures Although investors may form their expectations from the past, there is no assurance that future investment results will model historical performance.
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"Any chance that mutual funds as a group could outpace a suitably weighted market index (including large and small stocks alike) is, simply put, ‘gone with the wind.'"
~Jack Bogel, Vanguard, Ex-Chairman -
"The only way an investor can get killed is by high fees or trying to outsmart the market."
~ Warren Buffett -
"The stock market is designed to transfer money from the active to the patient."
~Warren Buffett -
"The S&P index benchmarks outperformed their active peer funds in all nine Morningstar style boxes over the past ten years."
~Gus Sauter, Vanguard Group -
"The only consistent superior performer is the market itself and the only way to capture the superior consistency is to invest in a properly diversified portfolio of index funds."
~Rex Sinquefield, Director, Dimensional Fund Advisors -
"For most of us, trying to beat the market leads to disastrous results."
~Prof. Jeremy Siegel, author -
"It is basically impossible to beat the market."
~Prof. Eugene Fama -
"I was not always an obnoxious indexing zealot. Ten years of believing in and selling active management strategies in the brokerage industry made me this way."
~Rick Ferri,CFA, author, financial adviser -
"The media focuses on the temporarily winning active funds that score the more spectacular bull's eyes, not index funds that score every year and accumulate less flashy, but ultimately winning, scores."
~W. Scott Simon, author -
"A low-cost index fund is the most sensible equity investment for the great majority of investors. My mentor, Ben Graham, took this position many years ago, and everything I have seen since convinces me of its truth."
~Warren Buffett -
"Only about one out of every four equity funds outperforms the stock market. That's why I'm a firm believer in the power of indexing."
~Charles Schwab -
"Of the 355 equity funds in 1970, fully 233 of those funds have gone out of business. Only 24 oupaced the market by more than 1% a year. These are terrible odds."
~Jack Bogle -
"The fund industry's dirty little secret: most actively managed funds never do as well as their benchmark."
~Arthur Levitt, Chairman, SEC
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