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Should I pause rebalancing during extreme volatility?

Financial Toolset Team6 min read

Stick to a written plan. If your policy uses bands, rebalancing into underweight assets during selloffs can improve long‑term outcomes. Ensure your emergency fund and risk tolerance are adequate fi...

Should I pause rebalancing during extreme volatility?

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Should You Pause Rebalancing During Extreme Volatility?

The market is a sea of red. Your phone buzzes with another negative alert. What’s your first move?

For many investors, the instinct is to freeze—or worse, to abandon their strategy altogether. A common casualty in these moments is portfolio rebalancing. But hitting pause might be the biggest mistake you can make.

The Role of Rebalancing

Think of rebalancing as routine maintenance for your portfolio. It’s the simple act of selling some winners and buying more of your underperforming assets to get back to your target asset allocation.

This discipline keeps your risk level where you want it. In fact, a rebalanced portfolio can be surprisingly resilient. One Vanguard study found it can experience 16% less volatility than a portfolio left to drift. We saw this play out during the 2008 financial crisis, where disciplined investors saw significantly smaller losses.

Why Pausing May Be Tempting

So if it's so effective, why does anyone stop? When stocks are plummeting, the idea of selling your "safe" bonds to buy more falling stocks feels completely backward. It's easy to get spooked.

  • Transaction Costs: More frequent trading in a wild market can feel like you're just racking up fees.
  • Emotional Stress: Let's be honest, it's psychologically painful to buy something that's losing value.
  • Fear of Bad Timing: The ultimate fear is selling an asset right before it rebounds or buying one just before it drops further.

But letting fear take the wheel can be even riskier. An unbalanced portfolio can expose you to far more risk than you originally signed up for.

Framework for Decision-Making

Instead of making an emotional gut call, walk through a quick, logical checklist. This can help you decide whether to stick to the plan or make a calculated adjustment.

1. Assess Your Risk Capacity

Has anything fundamental in your life changed? A job loss, a major expense, or a shift in your retirement timeline can reduce your ability to take on risk.

If so, the problem isn't rebalancing—it's that your entire investment strategy might need a tune-up.

2. Confirm Alignment with Risk Tolerance

How are you sleeping at night? If the market swings are causing you genuine panic, your portfolio might be too aggressive for your comfort level.

Rebalancing is what keeps your portfolio aligned with the risk tolerance you chose when you were calm and clear-headed.

3. Evaluate Market Outlook

What do you believe will happen over the next 3-6 months? If you have a strong, research-backed conviction that things will get worse, a tactical shift to reduce risk might make sense.

But if you're just reacting to scary headlines, it's usually best to stick with your original plan.

Strategies for Volatile Times

Okay, so you're not going to stop completely. But you don't have to rebalance the exact same way you do in a calm market. You can adapt.

Real-World Example

Let's make this real. Imagine you have a $1 million portfolio with a classic 60/40 split—60% stocks, 40% bonds. A nasty bear market hits, and stocks drop 30%.

Suddenly, your stocks are only worth $420,000, and your portfolio is now closer to a 50/50 split. The disciplined move is to sell some bonds and buy stocks to get back to 60/40. It feels scary, but you're buying low.

This isn't just theory. According to an analysis by T. Rowe Price, a rebalanced 60/40 portfolio would have lost about $200,000 less than an untouched one during the 2008-2009 crash and subsequent recovery.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Even with a plan, it's easy to stumble. Watch out for these two classic blunders:

  • Selling Low: The biggest mistake is getting scared during a downturn and selling stocks, effectively locking in your losses. This is the opposite of what rebalancing is designed to do.
  • Letting It Ride: The opposite error happens in bull markets. Remember the dot-com bubble? Investors let their tech stocks grow to dominate their portfolios. When the crash came, they were wiped out because their actual risk was way out of line with their plan.

Bottom Line

Market turmoil is a test of your strategy, not a reason to abandon it. Sticking with your rebalancing plan—even if you adjust the frequency—is what separates disciplined investors from emotional reactors.

It keeps your portfolio true to your goals and ready for the eventual recovery. Want to see if your portfolio has drifted off course? Use our free portfolio analysis tools to get an instant snapshot of your asset allocation.

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