How Do I Rebalance Efficiently?

One of the most important things anyone can do as they get close to retirement or even start thinking about retirement is to re-evaluate their entire financial portfolio. For most people, this means rebalancing everything so there is some level of safety against market volatility.
In the case of one Redditor posting in r/ChubbyFIRE, there is a question about how to best handle their after-tax asset allocation. Halfway to financial independence, the family is looking at whether their current asset allocation can be better balanced.
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The family has $2.6M at age 42 and saves $100K annually toward a $5M goal by age 50.
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They hold 90% in stocks but want 60/40 by retirement. Gradual rebalancing over 8-10 years avoids forced selling in a down market.
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Directing new $100K annual savings into bonds or international assets rebalances the portfolio without triggering immediate capital gains.
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Have You read The New Report Shaking Up Retirement Plans? Americans are answering three questions and many are realizing they can retire earlier than expected.
As it stands today, this 42-year-old father of two and his wife have a current net worth of approximately $2.6 million. Their goal is to double this number to $5 million in the next 10 years, so by the time his 40-year-old wife hits 50.
To achieve this goal, they are currently saving around $100,000 annually, and given their current after-tax bucket, they have around 90% of their current investments in stocks. The challenge is that by the time they retire, in 10 years or so, they want to be close to a 60/40 allocation between stocks and something else.
The current problem is that to rebalance everything, they know they need to work within the confines of what is possible tax-wise. The Redditor has considered selling some of their portfolio to pay off their $700,000 mortgage or shifting a large percentage of their net worth to bonds. Still, awareness of the potential tax implications is causing them to pause.
The concern is that waiting until 50 to rebalance the portfolio feels too late. While this may or may not be true, the Redditor is certainly entitled to feel a certain way about how to manage the family’s financial portfolio best.
First and foremost, there doesn’t really seem to be a need to make any radical changes right now for the Redditor’s portfolio. Having $2.6 million at 42 with the ability to continue adding another $100,000 every year is fantastic and feels financially stable.
It really does feel as if hitting $5 million by 50 is a very realistic, even if the markets are only modestly favorable toward investors over the next 10 years. The real issue isn’t a question of whether or not this family is on track financially, but there is a concern over being so overexposed to US stocks, which make up much of their portfolio right now.




