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The S&P 500 index (^GSPC) was below 2,300 points in late March after hitting a high of 3,386 on Feb. 19. Since then, it’s returned to pre-pandemic levels — an increase of over 50%. From April, it’s up over 22% and 9% since June.
Gains are great for people who own stock — and didn’t sell it during the plunge, a group that for the most part is retail investors — but they also throw people’s portfolios completely off track.
When stocks crashed in March, a 75% stocks/25% bonds long-term portfolio would have changed dramatically. A 30% hit in the stock market (let’s say the S&P 500) would have resulted in a 53% stock position in your portfolio. In the spring, financial planning experts recommended investors rebalance if their target allocations weren’t where they should be.
“One of the things that we like to do in these periods of dislocation is rebalance,” Great Hill Capital Chairman Thomas Hayes told Yahoo Finance on March 23, at the bottom.
The market’s seismic shift back up to February levels means that for people who did rebalance, things could be out of whack once again due to the market’s gains.
When to rebalance
Brett Horowitz, a certified financial planner at Evensky & Katz in Coral Gables, Fla., told Yahoo Finance that his firm is always looking to rebalance clients’ portfolios when they deviate from target allocations — for any reason. Back in early 2020 when the markets were at all-time highs, Horowitz said they rebalanced many portfolios to target allocations and used the opportunity to make sure people had appropriate emergency funds.
"In March, we rebalanced the opposite way by selling bonds, which had minimal to no losses, and using this money to buy stocks,” he wrote an email. “If the stock market had continued to fall, we would have done this again and again.”
Now, with the S&P 500 positive year-to-date, Horowitz says he's approaching clients once again, selling stocks to refill cash reserves or buy bonds, and bringing their stock exposure back in line with their targets. During the financial crisis, Horowitz said, there was enough market volatility for the firm to rebalance clients three times.
More people are rebalancing these days, survey data from Charles Schwab shows. In a recent survey conducted in late May and early June, 401(k) participants said they’ve been paying more attention to their accounts and two in five made “defensive and opportunistic changes”: 14% rebalanced, 12% increased contribution rates, 8% increased equity exposure, and 7% decreased equity exposure.
Since the coronavirus crisis has so far seen both a huge crash of over 30% (S&P 500 at 2,290) and a huge gain of over 50% (to more than 3,360 points), adding or subtracting stock exposure could be correcting upwards or downwards.