Modern-day “rebalancing systems” are complex decisioning systems that automate customization, tax management and compliance.
The term “rebalancing” suggests an activity that is fundamentally conservative — returning portfolios to a semi-permanent ideal state. It reflects a static view of portfolio management that was probably never very accurate. Today, it’s not even close. Modern “rebalancers” are smart decisioning systems that take multiple inputs and produce trades that balance multiple competing goals. Rebalancers control risk, ensure compliance, generate tax alpha, manage transitions and implement customization.
The aim of modern rebalancers is not to return portfolios to a fixed stasis. We think of our own system as a “translation layer” whose purpose is to actively and quickly convert the intellectual capital of the firm into specific trades for each account in a way that adheres, every day, to each account’s customization and tax management preferences. Or, viewed the other way around, the aim is to convert each account’s customization and tax management preferences into specific trades that reflect the firm’s investment guidance.
What does this mean in practice? Someone wise once told me that the easiest way to understand any technology was to ask “what are the inputs” and “what are the outputs.”
Let’s start with the inputs. Modern rebalancing systems take inputs from multiple sources, including:
The basics. This is the basic stuff you need to know before you can rebalance a portfolio. It includes:
The intellectual capital of the firm. This is the output of the CIO and the firm’s investment policy committee. It includes the firm’s then current thinking on:
Client customization parameters. This is everything an advisor or a client may want in order to make their investment portfolio suit their needs. It includes:
Client tax management parameters. This is all the information an advisor needs to effectively tax manage their clients accounts, including:
Rebalancers have two outputs:
Trades. The first and obvious output of a rebalancing system is trades. All rebalancing systems produce trades of one sort or another. Traditional systems may do as little as calculate how to implement model weights in each account, e.g. “to get the Smith account to 2% IBM, buy 520 shares”. For almost all forms of customization or tax management, these suggestions are just the starting point of generating actual trades.
Modern rebalancing systems do much more. Their trades are not a first pass at an answer; they are the complete answer. The output of a modern rebalancing system is actionable and compliant tax-lot level trades that ensure each account is faithful both to the intellectual capital of the firm and the customization preferences of each account.
Reports. The secondary output is reports. These include:
When you look at the above lists of inputs and outputs, it’s pretty clear that “rebalancing system” is a terrible name. They don’t “rebalance”. They customize and make portfolios tax-efficient; they make sure every account gets the benefit of the firm’s best thinking. They make it possible to automate that which was once manual, and through this automation make it possible to manage portfolios without compromise.
We really should call rebalancing systems something else. Decisioning systems? Implementation engines? We’re not sure. In all likelihood, folks will just keep calling them rebalancers. That’s OK. The name’s not important. What they do is. And it’s much, much more than rebalancing.