Allocation Check-In

Strong equity market performance this year has provided a welcome boost to the total market value of many investment portfolios. As we approach the start of a new year, it is a good time to take a fresh look at your portfolio to ensure that it still aligns with your long-term goals. Many things can cause a well-aligned portfolio to fall out of alignment, such as a shift in risk tolerance, a change in financial goals, a life-status change, and the focus of today’s commentary: market performance. Even if nothing has changed with your personal financial situation, goals, or risk tolerance, market performance can dictate the necessity to rebalance a portfolio. Uneven performance between asset classes can cause a portfolio to move out of alignment from target allocations (known as drift). Regularly rebalancing your portfolio to re-align with target allocations can help to ensure that your portfolio performs as intended within appropriate risk levels.

At a high level, many portfolios are diversified between growth assets (primarily equities for many investors) and assets targeted to preserve wealth (typically invested in fixed income). The S&P 500 Total Return Index is up over 29% year-to-date while the US Aggregate Total Return Index (a broad market measure of bond market returns) is up by under 3%. The strong outperformance of equities this year relative to the bond market means that many investors are likely over-allocated to the growth/riskier portion of their portfolio. While being over-invested in equities might feel good when markets are going up, it can expose investors to undue risk and a more painful experience if/when there is an equity market pullback.

A hypothetical example may provide some context. The below chart illustrates an investor who had a $2 million portfolio with a 50/50 allocation at the beginning of the year. Given the year-to-date performance of each asset class (equities: +29.24%, fixed income: +2.76%) the current portfolio would be out of alignment from the target 50/50 allocation. As shown at the bottom of the chart, this portfolio could sell $132,400 of their equities and reinvest it into fixed income which would realign it to the desired target allocation/risk level going forward.