Adding cash
Moderator: Global Moderator
Adding cash
In a few months I am thinking of increasing my PP by about 40%. Would you think it would be better to add enough cash to each component to make them equal again or to add the cash prorated by each component to keep the same ratio. In other words rebalance as you are adding the $ or maintain the current ratio. I am leaning toward the latter. What do you think?
Re: Adding cash
Someone did a backtest in another thread and found that the highest returns were made by putting an equal dollar amount in every asset (dollar cost averaging) rather than trying to rebalance. It seems like this would be mainly due to capturing the momentum of the winning asset (example, stocks are up one year but they still have more gains).ngcpa wrote: In a few months I am thinking of increasing my PP by about 40%. Would you think it would be better to add enough cash to each component to make them equal again or to add the cash prorated by each component to keep the same ratio. In other words rebalance as you are adding the $ or maintain the current ratio. I am leaning toward the latter. What do you think?
On the other hand, if you are in a taxable account where rebalancing costs might be significant, you could postpone rebalancing by making them all equal 4x25 again.
"I came here for financial advice, but I've ended up with a bunch of shave soaps and apparently am about to start eating sardines. Not that I'm complaining, of course." -ZedThou
Re: Adding cash
Here's the thread I believe that Storm was talking about.Storm wrote:Someone did a backtest in another thread and found that the highest returns were made by putting an equal dollar amount in every asset (dollar cost averaging) rather than trying to rebalance. It seems like this would be mainly due to capturing the momentum of the winning asset (example, stocks are up one year but they still have more gains).ngcpa wrote: In a few months I am thinking of increasing my PP by about 40%. Would you think it would be better to add enough cash to each component to make them equal again or to add the cash prorated by each component to keep the same ratio. In other words rebalance as you are adding the $ or maintain the current ratio. I am leaning toward the latter. What do you think?
On the other hand, if you are in a taxable account where rebalancing costs might be significant, you could postpone rebalancing by making them all equal 4x25 again.
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