Q: Greetings Peter and team,
Your answers to members' questions are impressively lucid and objective. So, here is another one for you.
Jack Bogle, the father of the hugely successful concept of passive, US index fund investing does not recommend rebalancing in an individually selected asset allocation strategy. "If you want to do it, once a year is probably enough," he has stated.
Taxes and transaction costs diminish the benefits of rebalancing but Canadians have a lot of tax-deferred and tax-free room in their registered portfolios. Further, transaction costs keep coming down so that with trades above $10,000, investors can (almost) ignore them. With a million dollar trade they can do so, absolutely.
So why not rebalance every time that a given imbalance, say 10% develops?
Your answers to members' questions are impressively lucid and objective. So, here is another one for you.
Jack Bogle, the father of the hugely successful concept of passive, US index fund investing does not recommend rebalancing in an individually selected asset allocation strategy. "If you want to do it, once a year is probably enough," he has stated.
Taxes and transaction costs diminish the benefits of rebalancing but Canadians have a lot of tax-deferred and tax-free room in their registered portfolios. Further, transaction costs keep coming down so that with trades above $10,000, investors can (almost) ignore them. With a million dollar trade they can do so, absolutely.
So why not rebalance every time that a given imbalance, say 10% develops?